Demorratc aca Bellefonte, Pa., November 28, 1919. WHEN SUN BEGINS TO COOL Humanity in Its Maturity Will in All Probability Be Able to Con- serve Heat. We can calculate the evolution of the temperature of the earth in the fu- ture. The sun will grow smaller and cooler. Thus in 160,000 years, when the radius of the sun has diminished by only one-hundredth part, our tem: perature will be not more than 26 de- grees C. (78.8 degrees F.) at the equn- tor. It will have fallen to 0 degrees 0. (32 degrees F.) at the latitude 46 degrees, and at Paris it will be be- low zero (centigrade). Finally, in 850,000 years, when the radius of the sun has lost only five one-hundredths of its ! diameter ond merely 500 degrees C. of its tempera- ture, the temperature of the equator will have fallen to zero centigrade and the entire earth will be frozen. Bio- logic evolution, which ascends into the past for a million years, may descend into the future for an equal period »? time. Moreover, the energy of the sun whence proceeds our terrestrial eo- ergy, will be then diminished by onl: one-tenth. Mankind will doubtless i that ime have long been capable ot capturing this energy directly, ot transforming it as the chlorophyl of plants so admirably does, of making it serve perhaps for several millic. years longer to sustain his life and the development of his thought. MADE FRIENDS FOR COLONIES Benjamin Franklin’s Successful Di- piomacy in France Meant Much : to Young Country. “The first diplomat to represent th- United States at a foreign court was Benjamin Franklin, who acted in Paris as oficial “agent” of the infant re publiciin France. The crossing of the At- lantic in the sloop Reprisal had oc cupied over a month, and Doctor Franklin had had many thrilling es- capes from pursuing British vessels. Franklin was given a cordial recep- tion‘in France, although his refusal to wear a sword or wig when preseni- ed at court shocked the fashionables The greatest writers and philosophers of that golden age in France deligh:- ed_to ‘hpnor Doctor Franklin, and even the venerable Voltaire paid tribute to the genius of the American. Irank- Hn remained in France nine years. At first he was merely the agent of “the American rebels,” and had vo official diplomatic standing, but even in this capacity he had sufficient influ- ence to bring about the treaty of alli- ance between France and the Colo- nies, ivhich had so profound a moral effeci on the Revolutionary struggle. He raised a large amount of money in Feaoed, and after the signing of the {reaty became the first American wiinifior to that country. < Splendid” Fossil Collection. Smithsonian institution has been enriched by a ton and a half of speci- means taken during the last suminer fromithe Burgess Pass fossil quarry in British Columbia, which was discov- ered less than ten years ago. The work was done mainly by Secretary Wolcott of the institution, and his wife. In two months a section of the quarry 180'feet square was taken out, practi- cally exhausting the site which has yielded some of the finest specimens of middle Cambrian fossils yet dis- eovered and the finest invertebrate fos- sils yet found in any formation. Large blocks of hard shale were first blasted loose, than carefully split with chisel and hammer to expose any fossil re- rains between the laminae. The shale has preserved for some twenty million years animals that were as soft and nonregistant as jellyfish, worms, crabs, etc, notwithstanding all the vicissi- tudes these rocks have since under- gene from the time they were simply hardened mud. They have been sub- jected to much pressure and profound chemical change, but the fossils re- main perfect. 5 Law Officer's Perquisite. " Kissing the policeman Instead of the Bible, Mrs. Ameiia Thompson, who was called as a witness for the de- fense in an assault case, at London, Eng., by her evidence got the accused ‘acquitted. In the witness-box she ‘took the Bible in her right hand, “Kiss it” said Sergt. Mason. “Must I?” inquired the lady. “By all means,” responded the sergeant. “Well then, here goes; if it must be done, it must be, but it's a curious thing this law, as much kissing and hugging as if one was christening a baby,” and she put her arms around the sergeant’s neck, and gave him such a violent kiss that it resounded throughout the court. The magistrate called her a “stupid little thing” for misunder stantling what she was to do. Uniform Type for the Blind. American libraries for the blind are rejoicing over the fact that they will no longer be obliged to have books In five different kinds of raised letters in onder to accommodate readers taught in different parts of the country and at different periods. After many years of discussion a uniform type, to be knojvo as “revised Braille,” has been agreed upon, and hereafter all books embossed in this country are to be in the new type. “Phe Deserter,” by Richard Harding Davis, was the first book to be published in revised Braille. —~8clentific American. BEFORE DAY OF "GUNPOWDER Soldiers Were Capable of Doing Con- siderable Execution With the Bow and Arrow. The first “gun” used in warfare was undoubtedly the crosshow—arbalest-— of the type having a reflex composite bow made of wood, sinew, horn or whalebone, and wound up with 12 rachet or “crannequin,” which slipped on over the stock and was held in place by a loop controlled by a trans- verse peg in the stock just behind the Tock. This weapon reached its highest development in Germany under Maxi- milian, when it had a steel bow of immense power. There is one in the Boston museum with a bow of over two and one-half inches wide and near- ly three-fourths of wn inch thick. In central Europe, France and Spain the bow was not used much save by the people who came under Mohammedan influence. The cross-bow being a much casier weapon to use, it was forbidden in England to anyone not having a certain income, in order that the yeo- men and common people should be forced to use the long bow, which in | military purposes was vastly superior on account of the rapidity of its fice, although outranged by the crossbow. It had one great advantage of light- ness. A military crossbow with wingd- lass weighs about 20 pounds.” REVOLUTION IN OLD EGYPT Records Tell of Uprising Which Evi- dently Ended Unhappily for the Rebellious Citizens. A recently deciphered papyrus shows a pretty revolutionary spirit | among the Egyptians in the year 2000 B. C, or nearly 4,000 years before | the Freneh thought of an upheaval. | The period is between the old and the middle kingdom, and an Egyptian sage plaintively invites the king to save his people in telling him of the conditions of the country. He tells him that “that is past which yester- day could be seen. The land turns like a potter's wheel. The noble cry out and the poor are full of joy. Each town says, ‘Let us drive the strong from without our midst?” Those who wore clothes are now in rags, Noble women trail through the land, and housewives say, ‘Had we only some- thing to eat! The poor pos- sess lordly things, and those who could buy themselves no sandals now Lave treasure. The people have dethroned the king and perse cuted his officials.” That the revolu- tion was a success seems hardly to have been the case, for the papyrus goes on to say that laughter has gone; misery is in the land; big and small say, “If only I were dead.” While in Africa recently Mr. A. 8. Le Souef, director of :the Taronga #00 (Sydney), saw plenty of elephants, which were destructive to the crops ' put in by the natives of the Uganda country. He also observed the body of u small antelope about 14 feet up a tree. The carcass of thz antelope had been put. in this position for safe keeping, by leopards. “These members of the cat family are hand- rome, and extremely active,” says Mr. | Le Souef. “They play about in clear places in the forest, tear up the | ground, and spring far up the trees. ! They are most active, but they do not readily attack humanity, nnless it be a child at evening, and they are hungry. The beauty of their fur makes them desirable for a zoo and for rugs, but the number that may be killed is limited. I saw the beautiful (‘olobus monkey, which, in spite of its : difficult to observe among the juniper : trees from whose branches hung ‘ong | pieces of lichen.” No Man’s a Hero to His Wife. While the fire that destroyed the four-story Stillman department store in Muncie recently was at its height an excited woman called police head- quarters, saying that her husband, a workman, was supposed to be repair- ing the roof on the Stillman building and she feared he might have perished in the flames. A policeman who in- vestigated found that the man in ques- tion not only had escaped but had helped to save a woman clerk who was in danger. The officer informed the wife of this, thinking she would not only be relieved but proud of the hus- ! band. Instead she snapped back: “What was my husband doing on the roof with a woman?’—Indianapolis | News. i but ' completely sober, instead of passing Up a Tree. ' striking black-and-white coloring, was I | 1 OUE TO DIGESTIVE TROUBLE Condition of Narcolepsy Revealed by Victim’s Absolutely irresistible Desire for Sizep. Even after a meal of moderate size taken by a normal subject there is a siight tendency to drowsiness, which becomes much more pronounced after + heavy meal or in dyspeptics. When sleep under such conditions is irresistible we have narcolepsy. The patient may fall asleep so abruptly that he may endanger himself or oth- ers. It is characteristic, however, ot narcolepsy of whatever kind that the attack is of brief duration. The vie- tim never collapses, for he always has time to assume a posture suitable for sleep. He may even announce that he must doze for a few minutes, after which he will awake refreshed. He may be kept awake or readily awakened. Hence there should be no likelihood of mistaking narcoleptics for epilepties of any kind. The diges- tive troubles are of no particular type —cases have been seen of alcoholic castritis, hyperchlorhydria, atony, ete. In these patients indigestion is only ! a determining cause, but relief of the mischief seems to lead to complete recovery. Possibly akin to these gastric cases are others In which a subject falls into an impera- tive sleep after indulgence in alcohol, who wakes in a few moments stomach into a stupor.—Rocky Mountain News. GULL HAD GOOD APPETITE Veracious Observer Asserts Bird Swal- lowed Fifteen Smelt Within Space of One Hour. Sea gulls never visit the Cowlitz the | rivers except when Local fishermen and Lewis smelt are running. now when the fish are at hand by | seeing the big white birds in the air wheeling and diving and uttering ; their plaintive cry. They sound like complaining children with ‘rather weak lungs. When the gulls are tired of flying they settle on piles along the shore or they whiten like a fall of snow. When the sharp eye of a gull sees | a smelt he plunges for it, submerges afs bill and head, and brings it up squirming. The bird swallows his prey in full flight, seldom or never perching to dispose of it. A most observant young man relates that a friend of his at Kelso, on the | Cowlitz, selected a guii which he could | on sand banks which | . identify and watched it for an hour to | count the smelt it caught and swal- i lowed. The number was surprisingly | large—fifteen. ! Perhaps this gull was more expert or luckier than ordinary. It must have been an exceptional bird in color at least or the Kelso naturalist could not have told it from the rest of the flock. Perhaps it was exceptional in other ways. And perhaps it had a double personality.—Portland (Ore.) Journal. Obituary of a Jellyfish. One jellyfish at least became world famous, and when she died, after liv- ing for sixty-seven years in the most intellectual society, under the protec- tion of five successive learned gentle- men, she received the honors of an ' obituary notice in the Scotsman. “Granny” belonged to the jellyfish family, but was, strictly speaking, a sea anemone whom Sir John Graham Dalyell picked off the rocks and kept in sea water all the years of his life. Sir John fed his protege regularly with one-half mussel a fortnight, and she bore a large family. The Scotsman “In Memoriam” no- tice stated that 600 of Granny's off- ! spring were known. When Sir John died his anemone was passed on to an arctic explorer, and at his death she was bequeathed to another scien- tific man. Granny throve and bred lit- tle ones; she outlived four protectors, and died finally because of the neglect or ill-treatment of a botanist. Length of Life Extended. In 1348-50, 25,000,000 deaths from the plague or “black death” occurred, | which was one-fourth of the entire population of the world at that time. | The average length of life in the six- teenth century was only 21 years, while in this, the twentieth century, | the average life is forty-five years. In i India, however, the average life today is only twenty-four years. We are enabled to see what the sci- ence of medicine is accomplishing in more civilized countries, where igno- _ rance and superstition do not prevail '! to any great extent. Precocious Youth. Mary and Ruth were discussing plans for playing house and Mary sald, “I'll be the mother and you be my lit- tle girl.” “No,” said Ruth, “I want to be the i father.” “Oh,” said Mary, “let's play we've got plenty of money, and then we \ ALGOIOL-3 PER GENT. 1 AVesclable Preparationfords | simifativg theFood by Regula § | ting the Stomachs and Bowels of | LITT Cheerfulness an | neither Opium, Morphine nor Mineral, NOT NARGOTIC Recipe of Od DESANVELPITGHR © PAST ln Seoan . § 4 dou Seett, i 7 Carbonte Sods i Warm Sea. (larilied Sigar Wintergreen Flavor = | A helpful RemedyIor 38 Gonstipation and Diarrhoea, and Feverishness an TFacSimife Si¢nature of flan! . em—" Tue GENTAUR COMPANY. won't need a father.” Children. For Infants and | Mothers Know That Genuine Castoria Always Bears the Signature of In Use For Over Thirty Years ASTORIA THE CENTAUR COMPANY, NEW YORK CITY, rear wheels track. and rear axle. on. Chain Driven Exclusively. every ta" Just received a carload of Conklin Wagons. 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