Chullin, fol. 132, col. 2.
If a case of mistaken identity should occur between the child of a priestess and the child of her female slave, so that the one cannot be distinguished from the other, they both are to eat of the heave-offering and to receive one share from the threshing-floor. When grown up, each is to set the other free.
Gittin, fol. 42, col. 2.
From the old clothes of the priests the wicks were made for the lamps in the Temple.
Shabbath, fol. 21, col. 1.
Scripture authority is given in proof that the very garments possessed the faculty of making atonement for sin every whit as effectually as animal sacrifices. We are taught that the priest's shirt atones for murder, his drawers atone for whoredom, his mitre for pride, his girdle for evil thoughts, his breastplate for injustice, his ephod for idolatry; his overcoat atones for slander, and the golden plate on his forehead atones for impudence.
Zevachim, fol. 88, col. 2.
All this and a great deal more on the subject may be found in the Selichoth for Yom Kippur.
For seven years was the land of Israel strewn with brimstone and salt.
Yoma, fol. 54, col. 1.