People's Pilot, Volume 6, Number 34, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 11 February 1897 — Their Peculiar Aversions. [ARTICLE]

Their Peculiar Aversions.

Most people have aversions of some* kind or ol her, and some very strange ones. The sight of a set of falso teeth makes John L. Sullivan, sick at the stomach. Napoleon did not like to see a white dptr. Ayaeaiz could mR ~r to touch polished steel. The sight of the rising moon, when it was full, always made Mine, de Stael ill. Barefooted children made Louis XIV nervous. Dean Swift has said that BolingLroko would ‘‘act like one bereft should he east his eye on a poor, harmless toad. ” Disraeli had an attack of vertigo when he saw anybody chewing gum. Dickens never liked a stiff shirt bosom, and BulVon would fly into a rage if any one put an egg on the dining table at which he sat.