fi ‘ #4 A THE MEYERSDALE COMMERCIAL, MEYERSD ALE, PA. HEAT OF THE SUN. its Source of Supply 1 a Puzzling Problem to Science. ARMORED VESSELS Probably the most puzzling problem ° We have in connection with the sun is to account for its tremendous output Of heat, which we are told has varied no more than a few tenths of a degree in 50,000,000 years, the period general- ly given by geologists for the duration of life upon the earth. If we accept the theory mos gener- ally advanced in the past that the sun was formerly a vast nebula extending at least as far as the planet Neptune | i and that its heat was maintained by ! slow contractions, computation shows | us that only 25,000,000 times the pres- ent output would be maintained from this source—that is, if its heat were supplied by contraction alone it would have lasted only half as long as life has been known to exist upon the earth. This is plainly impossible, and though contraction undoubtedly sup- plies part of the solar heat, there must be seme other source of supply as well. “The discovery of radio-activity in re- * cent years may have much to do. with explaining this mystery. It is interesting to consider that if the sun were composed of coal and its heat were kept up by the process of combustion more than a ton of coal would be required per square foot of surface per hour to supply the present output of heat. The sun would be en- tirely burned up in 5,000 years if made of coal.—New York Sun. OUR UNPAID LABORERS. Birds Do Great Work, Yet We Do Not Properly Protect Them. One form of national waste which is far more serious than the American people realize is a result of the deplor- able neglect to conserve bird life in this heedless and ungrateful country. Ornithologists and other intelligent observers of nature who have made a study of the subject say with the sanc- tion of crop experts that insects de- stroy one-tenth of the products of agri- culture in the United States. More than 100,000 kinds of insects have beep enumerated in the fields, orchards, meadows, pastures, vineyards, gardens and woods of this chief agricultural country of the world. A very large pro- portion of these insects are injurious to crops. Birds are the insects’ worst enemies. Nearly all birds destroy insect life. “The federal department of agriculture has examined the stomachs of forty kinds of birds to determine: accurately ‘what they consume. It was found that among the birds which most effectively aid the farmers are phoebes, kingbirds,. catbirds, swallows, brown thrashers, rose breasted grosbeaks, house wrens, viroes, native Sparrows, shrikes and meadow larks. Even the