Someone, or something, is killing the tulips of New South Haverford, Virginia. Residents of this small town are shocked and dismayed by the senseless vandalism that has struck their tiny town.
New South Haverford is know for its extravagant displays of tulips in the springtime, and good portion of its tourist trade relies on the people who come from as far as New Hampshire to see what has been estimated as up to two hundred thousand tulips that bloom in April and May.
Or at least the tourists had been flocking to New South Haverford until last week, when over the course of three days the flower of each and every tulip in the town was neatly clipped off while town slept.
'It started at the south end of town,' said Augustin Frouf, a retired ladder-maker who has personally planted over five hundred pink lily-flowered tulips. 'They hit the houses up on Elm Street, and moved down into town from there. After the second night, we tried keeping guard. We tried bright lights, dogs, everything. There was always something that pulled us away, and by the time we got back, they were all gone.'
Someone, or something, is killing the tulips of New South Haverford, Virginia. Residents of this small town are shocked and dismayed by the senseless vandalism that has struck their tiny town.
New South Haverford is know for its extravagant displays of tulips in the springtime, and good portion of its tourist trade relies on the people who come from as far as New Hampshire to see what has been estimated as up to two hundred thousand tulips that bloom in April and May.
Or at least the tourists had been flocking to New South Haverford until last week, when over the course of three days the flower of each and every tulip in the town was neatly clipped off while town slept.
'It started at the south end of town,' said Augustin Frouf, a retired ladder-maker who has personally planted over five hundred pink lily-flowered tulips. 'They hit the houses up on Elm Street, and moved down into town from there. After the second night, we tried keeping guard. We tried bright lights, dogs, everything. There was always something that pulled us away, and by the time we got back, they were all gone.'
What if you want to stop filling in the space and start the next line underneath
the image? A normal line break won't do it; it just breaks the line to the
current margin alongside the image. A new paragraph also continues
wrapping the text alongside the image. To stop wrapping text next to an image, use
the clear CSS property.
This enables you to stop the line wrapping where
appropriate.
Note: I tried to use the clear attribute after using class "note1"
with the <p> tag, but it was ignored.