EE Se “Bellefonte, Pa., September 21, 1923. STUDY MAN-MADE LIGHTNING Engineers Confident That Experiments Going On Will Prove to Be Successful. Two-million-volt artificial lightning is being created in the research laboratories of the General Electric company, Pittsfield, Mass.,, in order that buildings and high power electrical transmission lines may be protected against the powerful “electrical dyna- mite” that nature discharges during storms, reports the Kansas City Star. F. W. Peer, Jr.,, engineer in charge of the spectacular experiments now in progress, explains that in addition to the trouble that engineers have in keeping power current from escaping from the conductors there is the very important problem of lightning pro- tection. A few million horsepower are released in a fraction of a millionth of a second when lightning crashes. Elec- trical engineers must know how to prevent this destructive force from reaching the conductors of power lines or they must arrange so that it will discharge harmlessly tc the ground when it does get to the line. The highest voltage actually used at the present time for the commercial transmission of power is 220,000 volts on a line in California, but the General Electric company has an experimental millien-volt line. Mr. Peek declared that it is too early to say whether such * high voltages will ever be acquired in - practice, RETORT WAS RATHER GOOD Evidently There Were Humorists In the Missouri Legislature of the Year 1887. W. O. L. Jewett of the Shelbina Democrat tells an incident in the legis- lature of 1887, in which Mark Twain figured: “Henry Newman, representing Ran- dolph county, was the wit of the house, and was trying to secure the passage of a bill to amend the stock law. This, Robert Bodine, represent- ing Monroe county, was opposing. Mr. Newman said in his humorous style: “‘lI was in the gentleman’s county once. I made a speech at a big picnic in Florida, and I thought I made a good one. In it I referred to the fact ! that we were close to the place where Mark Twain was born. After I was through, one of the gentleman's comn- | stitutents, a tall, raw-boned long- haired, unkempt individual, came u and shaking his finger in my face ca, “What liars you-politicians are. TI have lived here nigh onto fifty years and there was nary a man named Twain about here.” “The gentleman from Monroe county immediately was on his feet to reply: “‘Mr. Speaker, I want it distinctly understood that when the gentleman from Randolph was in Monroe county it was before the enactment of any stock law.’ ”—Kansas City Star. Not Prepared. The old deacon was the kindest of men, deeply religious and always ready with 2 good word. One day while he was driving to town he overtook an Italian peddler with a large pack on his back. Stopping his horse, the dea- con suggested that the man ride. The Italian carefully stored his pack in the back of the spring wagon and then climbed to the seat beside the good deacon, For some time the two talked pleas- antly. Then there was a rather long pause, and, thinking to improve the occasion in a religious sense, the dea- con turned and nee “My friend, are you prepared to die ‘With a shriek the Italian sprang to the ground and! disappeared into the nearby woods. The calls of the deacon only hastened the fellow’s flight, and neither the deacon nor any one else ever saw him again in that neighbor- hood. It seems that the peddler was not prepared. ° Sentiment and Sense. It was evenifig by the sea and the poetess walked with the professor along the margin of the ocean. “Don't you love to see the phosphorescence on the waves?’ she said. “What can it be, T wonder? Is it the mermaids lighting up their lamps, or the glow from the sea fairies’ ballroom? Or can it be the reflection of golden treasure stored in the vasty caverns of the deep?” “I think not, madam,” said the pro- fessor. “It is only quite recently that the discovery of ‘luminous bacilli has rendered possible any general explana- tion of the phenomenon, and even yet its wide applicability remains to be proved. It 18, however, generally at- tributed to the decaying organic sub- stances of diseased fish.”—Boston Herald. - She Had it Right. Two Irishmen had visited St. Paul's cathedral, One was from the country and had ‘been taken to the famous building by lis friend, who wished him to be duly impressed by its gran- deur. As they came out, the resident of the city said: “Well, Mike, and phwhat* do you think of ft? Ten't it grand?” “Pat,” sald the one from the coun- try, “it bates the divil!” “That,” sald his friend, intention.” “was the —Get your job work dome here. $100,000 STATUE BRINGS $50 ttalian Farmer Who Found Marble Torso of a Venus First Sold It for $5. The history of some pieces of marble which were found buried in a field at Sinnessa, near Naples, in ancient days the site of a Greek colony, has formed the subject of a long-drawn-out law case in which the government has at length secured an important verdict. The fragments were apparently of no particular value and the farmer sold them for $5. They were on their way to the new purchaser when the govern- ment director of antiquities, Professor Spinazzola, ordered him to return them to Naples for examination. The profes- sor, having looked at them, exercised his powers of compulsory purchase and bought the fragments for $50. Under his direction they were cleaned and put together, when they appeared as the torso of a beautiful Venus, un- doubtedly by the hand of Praxiteles (the greatest of the Attic sculptors of the Fourth century B. C.) and worth about $100,000. The farmer sued the government for half the value of the find, and after gaining a verdict in two courts lost his case when the government took it to the court of appeals. The statue is now one of the most precious possessions of the Naples National museum, BIRD ENTOMBED BY MARTINS Sparrow That Had Grabbed Martin's Nest Is Made the Victim of ~ Dire Revenge. An English ornithologist, G. Garrett, makes a specialty of observing the manners ghd methods followed by birds. He recently recalled the story of a sparrow which, finding a newly bullt martin’s nest, took “possession” in the absence of the owner. The martin, seeing the usurper, called for help, and soon a thousand martins came, at “full speed,” to attack the sparrow; but the latter was invul- nerable. After a quarter of an hour's conflict all the martins disappeared. The sparrow thought he had got the better, and the spectators judged that the martins had abandoned their un- dertaking. Not In the least! They immediately returned to the charge, and, each of them having procured a little of the tempered earth with which they make their nests, they all at once fell upon the sparrow and inclosed him in the nest to perish there, although they could not drive him out. The Split Infinitive, One thinks of that solemn warning against the enormity of the split infini- tive which has done so much to aggra- vate the Pharisaism of the bad writers who scrupulously avoid it. This su- perstition seems to have had its origin in a false analogy with Latin, in which the infinitive is never split, for the good reason that it is impossible to split. In the greater freedom of English it is possible and has been done for at least the last five hundred years by the greatest masters of English; only the good writer never uses this form help- lessly and involuntarily but with a defi- nite object, and that is the only rule to observe. An absolute prohibition in this matter is the mark of those who are too ignorant, or else too unin- telligent, to recognize a usage which is of the essence of English speech.— Havelock Ellis, in the London Mercury. Odd Way of Drawing Water. f took notes while we were at Epa, New Guinea, of a rather curious meth- od of drawing water from the com- munal spring, half a mile from the vil- lage, writes Reginald Pound in the Wide World Magazine. Twice a day the women went down in chattering groups to the spring, carrying bamboo pipes 12 feet long. These pipes were made by forcing out the pith at the joints, and held about five gallons of water aplece. When full, the drinking end was plugged with leaves, the pipe being stood in a shady spot near its owner's house and used when needed. Incidentally, drinking from these weird receptacles was a rather hazardous business, care being necessary lest a too copious supply should gush out when the pipe was held to the mouth. Blueberries an Inch Thick. A blueberry an inch in diameter is aot a dream but a possibility. At the government testing plantation at Whitesbog, N, J., about 25,000 hybrids have been fruited. Berries three fourths of an inch in diameter have been produced on many of them, and one of them this year reached almost seven-eighths of an inch. The Depart- ment of Agriculture will ¢ e the expéFiments until berri nch in diameter are obtained, ‘ Needed Awakening. A Yankee tourist was being shown over an old church wherein hundreds of people were buried. “A great many people sleep between these walls,” safd the guide, indicating the inscription-covered floor with a sweep of his land. “S80?” said the American, “Same way over. in our country. Why don't you get a more interesting, preacher?” She Would Hold the Ladder. A very loving couple had just re turned from their honeymoon. “Hilda, dearest,” said George, “I ‘see thers is sone asparagus ready for cooking. Shall we go and pluck it together, love?” To which Hilda replied, cooingly: “George, dearest, it will be heavenly! Yot shall pluck'it, and T will hold the ladder.” INDIAN LEAGUE OF NATIONS Organization fer Promotion of Uni versal Peace Existed Among ine dians Back in Stone Age. New York gtate Indians In the Stone age had a constitutional league of nations for tke promotion of uni versal peace which was based on and dominated by woman's suffrage and in which the initiative, referendum and recall werq employed, so J. N. B. Hewitt, ethnologist of the Smithsonian institution, who has just returned froma an investigation among the Iro- quols of New York and Canada, de- clared here, says the New York Eve- ning Post. Chieftainesses among the confederated Mohawk, Onondaga, Oneida, Cayuga and Seneca tribes had equal rights and titles with the male chiefs, who were nominated by women's votes, his most recent re- searches into the governmental plan of these five nations reveal. The scope of the league formed among these Indians in the Sixteenth century, Mr. Hewitt said, was not limited to the five Iroquois tribes, but they proposed to bring under thelr form of government all known tribes of men. The league was based on peace, righteousness, justice, power and health. Laws were provided to stop family feuds and regulatiaas for thie promotion of mental hygiene were laid down. Hiawatha was one of the league chiefs selected by the wonien and sub jected to recall by them, he said. Mr. Hewitt found that the automobile, the phonograph and other modern prod- ucts are rapidly causing the Indians to forget many of their former laws and customs. LIFE ON THE OTHER WORLDS Astronomers Less Optimistic Regard ing Existence of Life Than the Enthusiast, mins Discussing planetary life, so fas as it bears on the planetary system of the sun, we may state the average as- tronomical opinion; it is far less op- timistic for the diffusion of life than is the opinion of the enthusiast. (1.) Venus, so far as we can see, more nearly fulfills the conditions than any planet other than the earth. Its mass and orbit are certainly favor- able, its distance, rotation, and chem- ical constitution, are probably not un- favorable, though we cannot penetrate its dense covering of clouds and seek out the mysteries of its surface. (2.) Low forms of life may exist on the planet Mars, where the thin at- mosphere does permit our telescope explorations. High forms of life at the present time are, however, gen- erally deemed improbable, and beings comparable with man and other ter- restrial mammals are considered ut- terly impossible. (3.) The other planets of the solar system are now quite unsuited to protoptasmic life—Harlow Shapley, director of Harvard College Observa- tory, in Harper's. Couldn't Wait Longer. An old lady was on a visit to her married daughter. One day there was company, and little Theodore, the hope of the house, was doing his best to amuse his mother’s visitors. Present- ly he left the room, to return soon afterward with a zinc bucket. This he planted right in front of his grand- ma, while the others sat wondering what was about to happen. “Grandma,” said little Theodore, “will oo kick it?” “Bless the child,” said the surprised old lady, “why do you wish me to do that, darling?” “Because,” replied the young hope- ful, “I heard pa say we should be aw- fully rich when oo kicked the bucket I” His Boss-y. All good farmers like their cows, but Lewis Owen either carrieu matters to extremes or else he must have had an especially likeable cow. This is the way they tell the story down in Craw- ford county, Indiana, where Mr. Owen, a Kentuckian, recently bought a farm. One of his neighbors was James H. Clay, also a Kentuckian, and from him Owen bought a cow, but the cow didn’t want to leave her family pas- ture. She liked the Clay farm, she was contented there. So they traded farms and Owen moved over with the cow. Everyone is said to be satisfied, especially Bossy. Yes, Why? “Do you think I shall live until I'm 90, doctor?” “How old are you now?” “Forty.” “Do you drink, gamble,’ smoke, or have you any vices of, any kind?’ “No, I don’t drink, I never gamble, I loathe smoking; in fact, I haven't any vices.” “Well, good heavens, why do yeu want to live another 50 years?” The Test. Villager (standing at his gate hold mg a dog on a leash, to passing neigh- bor)—Won't you step in and chat a moment, Monsiéur Paul? Neighbor—You're sure your dog won't bite me? Villager—That’s just what I want to find out. ' I only got him this morn- ing.—Petit Parisien, Paris. Impending Catastréphe. It was in the midst of a nose dive. and Reginald, who was making his first flight, tugged frantically at the pilot's sleeve, . ' “We better get away from if he shrieked; “the earth's swelling up like a balloon and it's liable to bust any mipute,” REWRITING THE HOLY WORD Diitch Historian Explains Why He Hae Undertaken the Task—Makes Ap- peal to the Masses. Fancy the nerve a man must have to suggest that our grand old Bible should be rewritten. And yet Dr. Hedrick Willem van Loon, famous Dutch United States his- torian, has undertaken this task, very seriously and reverently indeed. He explains: “I firmly believe that 90 per cent of the world’s Christian population never look at the Bible. After all, it contains neurly two mil- lion words, and much of it is written In a language which only the educated man can understand. “My book, which I have called ‘The Story of the Bible,” only contains 120, 000 words, and the whole of it is writ- ten in the simplest language. “In the States, and probably the whole world over, there are a large number of the working classes who want to learn. But until they find something that they can easily under- stand they are at a loss where to start. “It is true that my way of retelling the old story may rob it of some of its charm, but I have tried to be rev- erent throughout, while all the time speaking in a language that is easily understandable. “This work has taken me nearly two years and I have spent much labor and thought on it. I feel confident that the result will not only appeal to the masses, but it may Induce them to study the Bible for themselves.”—Ex- change. HABITS OF FALL WEBWORM Explained by Official of United States Bureau of Entomology—Question of “Intelligence.” The familiar ugly brown patches which appear on trees in the city, or- chard and forest in the fall are the work of the fall webworm, whose hab- its and life history have been thor- oughly studied by R. E. Snodgrass of the United States bureau of entomol- ogy. These little worms, which are the progeny of a small, night-flying white moth, construct bags of glistening silk among the foliage in the spring and begin to eat the leaves inclosed in their houses. As the leaves are con- sumed, the houses must be expanded to cover more food, until at length brown patches of several feet in ex- tent appear in the trees. The author gives many interesting details of the life cycle of this little creature from the time the moth lays its eggs on a leaf, through its various stages of de- velopment as a worm, until it spins a cocoon and goes into confinement only to change to a pupa, then a chrysalis and - finally emerges a full-fledged moth. In concluding, the author speculates as to whether or not such insects have any so-called intelligence. “Can the caterpillars have appetites, a sense of touch, fear of danger, and show resent- ment at an interference with their natural rights without some conscious- ness at least of their own existence?’ What Insulin Is. Much has been said in the news- papers lately about “insulin,” the new remedy for diabetis discovered by Dr. F. G. Banting, of Toronto University, but few people knoy exactly what it is. Insulin is an extract of fresh, healthy beef pancreas, a solution of the internal secretion of the pancreas of the ox. The extract is made by soaking the fresh organ in a mixture of alcohol and diluted hydrochloric acid. One reason for choosing this sol- vent is that while it dissolves the in- ternal secretion, the external secre- tion (whose chief constituent is tryp- sin and which is of no value in the present connection) is left undissolved. The solution so made is sterilized. In- sulin has caused sugar varying in quantities from 2 to 7 grammes to be utilized in various patients per diem. The effect, apparently, is evanescent and lasts only eight or nine hours, so that injections are necessary every day. Crossed Shoes Cure Cramps. My mother suffered at night with cramps in her feet and ankles. One day a sewing-woman told her that if she would cross her shoes when she took them off she would have no more trouble. Ry mother tried it, and we all laughed and teased her whenever we saw her little crossed shoes; al though she assured us that the cramps had departed. Some time afterward, in the uppel berth of a sleeping car, I was seized with a violent cramp in my right foot. I was undressed and could not get down to go to the dress- ing room, because it was early and people were walking about the - aisle. Meantime the pain became unbearable, Suddenly I thought of crossing my shoes which lay near. I crossed them and the cramp magically disappeared. ~—Chicdgo Journal. 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