Strange Facts You Didn't Even Know You Wanted To Know


by Tracey Wilson - Date: 2007-01-23 - Word Count: 686 Share This!

There are books filled with strange facts, harebrained ideas, and slips of the tongue. I listed for your enjoyment below many of these sayings. Enjoy!

Most old timey bottled elixirs, liniments, and tonics revitalized the ailing sufferer because they happened to contain a healthy shot of whiskey or a strong dose of morphine. The 1907 Food and Drug Act forced many quack medicines out of business, leaving only proven remedies and new ones, to feature stoic pictures of the inventors.

Dairy cows typically give milk for five - six years, producing an average of 12,147 pounds of milk.

Meat will not dissolve if left in a glass of Coca-Cola over night, it will, however, be tender and marinated.

If all the Coca-Cola ever produced were in regular- size 16 ounce bottles and laid end to end, they would reach to the moon and back 1,045 times. This is one trip per day for two years, 10 months, and eleven days.

"Good to the Last Drop," a slogan used by Maxwell House Coffee, was first used by Coca-Cola in 1908.

On the average day in 1993, consumers drank 705 million servings of Coca-Cola soft drinks world- wide.

Coca-Cola out sells Pepsi world- wide by more than two to one margin.

The Egyptians used toothpaste as early as 2000 B.C.E, made from powdered pumice stone and wax. They also used toothpaste made from human urine, which Roman physicians insisted whitened teeth. (Oddly the ammonia in wine does work as a whitener).

Dr. Scholls of Scholl's foot- pads ascribed to his own credo: "Early to bed, early to rise, work like hell, and advertise."

A Harebrained Theory: English writer Samuel Johnson claimed, "The cause of baldness in men is dryness of the brain, and it's shrinking from the skull."

Heroin was used in cough syrups and pain medicines, prescribed by doctors for headaches and menstrual cramps. In 1910, after twelve years on the market, doctors realized that heroin is far more addictive than morphine. In 1924, the U.S banned the manufacture of heroin, but by then there were plenty of addicts to create a demand for heroin on the black market.

In 1941, when told that the Japanese had destroyed Pearl Harbor, actress Joan Crawford replied, "Oh dear, who was she?"

In 1903, British Surgeon, Sir Jonathon Hutchinson incorrectly insisted that eating bad fish was the cause of leprosy.

Myrrh, an aromatic gum resin secreted by shrubs, has been used as a wound dressing since the dawn of recorded history. Myrrh was one of the gifts presented to Jesus the day of his birth. The Smyth Papyrus, and Egyptian medical text dated 1650 B.C.E, describes myrrh as "a most efficacious salve" for Pharaoh's soldiers. Microbiologists confirm that myrrh inhibits bacterial growth and is bacteriostatic against staphylococcus aureus, the most common bacterial invader.

In the 1939 movie, "Gone With The Wind," Melanie's pregnancy, when calculated by the dates of the civil war battles mentioned, lasts twenty-one months.

In the Aeneid, the epic poem by Virgil, two characters, Chorinaeus and Numa, die, and then later reappear as if nothing happened.

In the novel Don Quixote by Miguel de Cervantes, Sancho Panja sells his donkey, then, without any explanation is seen riding it again. He loses his coat with food in the pocket, but later, possesses the food. His helmet is shattered into pieces, but later, without any explanation it reappears in one piece and unscathed.

In the novel Robinson Crusoe, by Daniel Defoe, Crusoe takes off his clothes, swims to a wrecked ship, and finds some biscuits there, we are told, put them in his pockets.

In the novel Ivanhoe, by Sir Walter Scott, the first name of one of the characters, Richard Malvoison, inexplicably changes to Philip.

In the novel War and Peace, by Leo Tolstoy, Natasha is 17 in 1805, four years later, in 1809, she is 24, having miraculously aged 7 years. Also Prince Andrei's silver icon turns to gold for no apparent reason.

I was shocked to learn many of these novel mistakes! How could all those mistakes get through so many people: the author, proof- reader, editor, etc?

I hope you enjoyed learning these strange tidbits of information. Maybe it will help you in a trivia game one day!


Related Tags: knowledge, book, learn, fun, game, words, interesting, weird, facts, trivia, strange, fascinating

Tracey Criswell Wilson is an author on http://www.Writing.Com/ Many of Tracey's writings which include, non-fiction, poetry, prose and many different fiction genres, can be found on this site, which is a site for Fiction Writing. Your Article Search Directory : Find in Articles

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