SCIENTIFIC MISCELLANY,
MARTH PROTECTION FRÖM TIRE-BOLT TION OF ▲ PHYSIOLOGICAL PUZZLE-LĦAVING TRACKS
ÓF THE SHA—THE NEWEST ELECTROCULTURE
TRAM MEASURING BY DTNAMO CATRE
+
· FILL· R-KOOTED PLANTE--LOCOMOTIVE IM-
· PROVEMENT-MOUTH HATCHED EGGS,
Late experimenta kare proven that heat in transmitted downward-into the earth very, slowly, pad that a this covering of soil is alloient to protect even explosives and in-
Bre
very curious manner. The female lays shout.» dosed egge, and these Immediately swallowed by the male and deposited in a pouch in his throat, where they remain, until hatched and solently developed to emerge into the outer world. The look of external gills is a remarkable characteristic of the tadpoles.
A new wire of special advantage in electrical industries is obtained by a Parisian metallurgist through a perfected process of welding copper to steal wire. Great conductivity is combined with twosile strength and elasticity, giving a wire stronger than copper and smaller and les exposed to wind action that iron or steel of the Samo capacity,
flammable liquids from the highest tempera- tares of burning, buildings. In tabs of the Fire Department of Honorer, Germany, three flat piles were made of dry saud, alightly moist gravel and building debris, the sides having a alope of 45 dog, and, the top of each being RIP VAN WINKLE OF THE NAVY. large enough for a farnsos 32 inobes high of brick walls. Uoko firea. were maintained for several days. The heat at the base of the furnaces, was estimated at more than 259 deg... bas the riva in temperatura was slight in the piles of fill," avon alter several days, and at a depth of 40 inches only 60 deg. F. was reached after 36 hours, this being abut the boiling point of benzine. In the pile of building debris thess were the temperatures after 21 hours. At 4 inches of depth,518. deg. F.: 1 inches, 185 deg., 20 inches, 192 dag; 30 inchée, 88 dog. ; 49 inchas, 61 deg.
The reason why the stomach and intestines do not digest themselves was ones thought by Weinland, a German experimenter, to be that they defend shommalvos by nolienzymes, or auti ferments, Dr Fander Klug, of Budapest; now reports there anti-ferments not to be found, but that the mucin present in the inner half of the gastria mucous membrane resists the digestivo notion of the trypsin and the gastric juice. The digestive organs, therefore, protect themselves by the mucin they secrete.
To lesson risk of loss of submarines, torpedoes used in aaral practice and other objects liable to sink in the sea, a French coeanographer attaches a vosoul of oil having a long and a short tube 1/10 of an inck in diameter. When sub- mergence softens the gum seals of this tubes of rises from the long one drop by drop, testing the sunken object by the Big-on-the-wator's surface.
THE HONGKONG DAILY PRESS, SATURDAY, MAY 23rd 1908.
«MR. DOOLEY" ON PHILOSOPHERS.ides plain to me but to himself. Bas I: 'I am not like s lamp rick, an' th' warald 'in ng more like a churn thin it's like a coughdrop. If ye can't pint out th" way ir life without steerin' me into blind alley, I'll ask a polis man. If I do what he tells me I'll not go far wrong
They talk a diffrent language fr'm th' likes irre an me. In philosophy is minority has th deniver so much in th minority as whin it thries to assert its rights. What is a philoso; pher, saya ye? A philosopher. Hinnissy, is s zona that is thryin to make a livin' bo thinkin' about things that no man can think about with- out the top is his head blowin' off. It's good thing they have an exhaust valve. If they caddon't talk they'd surely explode, with grrent damage to surroundin' thought. But, thank th' Lord, whin they get to a point whin they can think no longer without crackin," they blow ont in pothe Pother kind iv. headache cure fra philosopher.
Ye niver hoord is a philosopher! Iv. corne ya de didn't.
How shad ye Nobody irer thought is callin' in a philosophor whìn thỉ baby had the group, or th2stovepipe needed to be took down au' cleaned. If ye were in distress A STORY OF AN ABANDONED SHIT. ir wind yo vndden,t call up four-iliven-forty- A story of the greatest interest in told by the four Cambridge, Mam, an' ask if Doctor Daily Telegraph concerning the reappearance James was there an ad he come on an' look ye of the long-lost, H.M.S. "Inve ligator.
over. Nol zir. But ye're as gr'reat a philoro- "In the autumn of 1851 ber Majesty's shippher as Willum James. Ye know, f'r instance, ***Investigator was frozen in the ice in "The that if ye gat ye or foot wol yeʻil: bare a cold in Bay of God's Meroy, in the Far North, while ye'er head. It is a suryons phenomenon.
Ye endeavouring to find traces of Sir John ought to have th' sold in ye'er ankles, but instead Franklin and his courageous companions," is that it's in yo'er nose. But ye don't thrry to age the Telegraph. Now all the memories find out why this hero ancanny misfortune has of those antique, heroic times hara boon once happened to ye. Te takes dose ir rock-an' rys, more revived by the report that whalers which affects irrybody slee's nose but yo'er ow, have found the abandoned ship, and hope it sa' wrap :up all iv po'ersilf hut yo' Far nose in may bs possible to free her from the ice-grip blankets, an' th' next day ye'er nosa ia well, after the lapas of Afty-six years. The New Yo'er own philosophy which. York Correspondent of Pabile Opinion" has silf-protection tells 30 that is vry day's suggested that the old mau-of-war may even be sold in th' head yo'll keep yo'er feet dry. But suficiently sound to be cavigated across the if yo come around an' told me about this as Atlantic to ber old home untry:
something wonderful, it isn't a philosopher I'p be callin'. Fe:
PACKED IN THE FROZEN NORTH, "Pooked away in the froses North, she has been practically in a refrigerator, maintaining timbers, while in less frigid zones the world her youth and the stout heart of her fvenerable has been getting older and older; saile have back superseded by steam; wood has been replaced by stoel; the old sit of Captain Marryat's novels has had to make way for the modern sailor-mechanic. In the lore of the sea everything has changed since her Majesty's skip Investigator" began her long rest in the ise. If she is really rescued she will be the Hip Van Winkle of the world's flavis. She will naed to be refitted, of course, at some Canadian or other British port on the other side of the Atlantic, and theu, under sal with the White Ensign and the Union Jack battling with the breeze, she should make her farrow onde more serong, the water to her long-lost home.
"Practically all who sailed in her have gone, though Admiral Sir V-Ray Hamilton, who we the mate of the comp saionekip “Arsistance, is still alive to tell the story of the struggle. with the elements over fifty years ago. The harces of Arotic exploration the late Vica "Investigator was commanded by one of the Admiral Sir Robert Jobs L, Mesarior Me Clare, who was born at Werford fifteen months after the battle of Frafalgör.
IN SEARCH OF FRANKLIN.
The most perfect imitation presible of the natural forces at their best has been sought in the artificial plant-growing at the Royal Botanic Gardens, in, London, and Mr. B. H. Thrratie points out that the iciple combination of water-screened aro light, electrostatic stimu-
1848 he was offered and scoopted ius and highly fertilizing atmosphere can be appointment as first lieutenant in her Majesty's sontrolled in a wide range of experiments to ship Inventigator-the Rip Van Winkle show the maximum accoloration of granth made of the British Fleet. She had been pureliased the bigbest quality of product. The necessary from the merchant service, and was about to hext and actinic light, as well as carbon dioxide, leave England to make the first of many efforts to pieros the veil which hid from the world's moisture and nitrogen fertiliser in the form of view all traces of Sir John Franklin and his `ammonia`sulphate, are all derived from coal. companions. England at the moment was in Perfect combustion is outured by bringing the a fever of nervous excitement; all eyes were on the pathetic but courageous figure" of fuel inte gaseous condition by a motion gas Lady Franklin, hoping against hope and per- producer, and a gas engine gives power for pared to risk her all on the faint shares of electrical energy, while the water from the resoning har husband and his daring party from #ylinter jacket supplies heat for the glass house, death, or at least Guding some traces of them. and the exhaust gases are led through earthen- Sir James Clark Roan was the captain of hor Majesty's ship Investigator." This offer, ware pipes to the plants, furnishing arbonio fiest Heatensat, and Admiral Sir Leopold dioxide, water vapor, oxygen and nitrogen in McClintock, one of his most daring assistants, heated condition. The power, best, moisture | have all passed away. The "foveatigator," in aud gases are easily controlled. The are lights, company with the Enterprian," west out by with hood and water-screen, are slowly moved land, near the north-east point of North -way-of-Lancaster Sound, and wintered at Leopold to and fro along the entire length of the glass Devon. The two shipe made a fruitless search, house, and an electrostatic machine electrifies and in the following year came back. plants and roots as well as the air.
LAHY VOYAGH TO THE NORTE,"
"By this time as Gvernment and the whole nation were in aondition of reckless deter mination to solve the mystery; it had to be
ye don't want a
'RUBBERNECK' MOTOR WAGONS.
BRING LONDON WITH A MEGAPH✨NH MAÍ. The rubberneck" wagon has come to London, For the benefit of the uninitiated it may be well to mention that "rubberneck in an Americas descriptive word for the persça who twists his neok-up and down, left and right, in his endeavour to see things.
Mr. Sebree, the pioneer of the "rubberzeek" wagon in America, has taken offices in Adam- street, Strand, where seats were being booked for the first tour on Easter Monday.
He guarantees to teach the tourist more about the city in three days' than be could learn in any other way in a year. It is all done by megaphone. Thirty-seven people sit in the motor-wagonettes, and
the mea behind the megaphone whispers things to them about the lower of London and West- minster Abbey.
The seats of the wagonetten slope upwarde, so that; to quote Mr. Sebree, "every-seat.ás n frops sent,”
The "rubberieoks” bare discovered London. They know where W. Penn was baptised, and where Captain J. Smith is buried. They know where B. Franklin lodged, and where Mr. William Waldorf Astor's office is
The greatest work has been done by Mr. Irring Hey, the prince of American "rub berneck" guides. It was Mr. Hey who took Prince Henry of Prussia through the Now
York "Chinatown."-
A MATRON of the Y.W.C.A. HOME
Mr. Hey has written the patter for the Neuritis, Lassitude, Neuralgia-
"rubberneck" guides, and three “collegabred words of pare description. Nothing has been young men bare learnt it. There are 15,000 omitted from the Crown jewels to the Cheshire
Chaeno.
They had been rehearsing the tours on foot for weeks, walking eleven miles a day and talking to imaginary tourists. They had also been rehearsing the megaphone business.
The mag, phosely the way, in fifteen inokas long, the uth piece thirteen inches in diameter, and the noisy and is eight inches wide. The idea is to concentrate the voice. There is no need to shout, in fact, if anybody shouted through a megaphone the noise would stop the the traffic.
"But supposin' ye were a reglar philosopher, how wad ys put it Ye'd say: 'I observed th, foot wet. As a philosopher me first thought other day that in crossin' th: sthrest I got me was, "Ye'll have cold in th' foot to-morrah:" Bibrange to say, that night me feet ware per- fectly all right, but I had a slight suitta' in those. In short, th' sold was oot in me feet at all but in me head. How did it get there I must've run ap me leg At Brat I didn't know what to do about it. Instinat told me to complain to me wife. What is intioct? It is the natural tendency it was whin filed with disasy to turn to his wife, She remarked, "If ye will go out without rabbare, ya old fool, how do ye expect to ssospo a cold in th' head Crawl into bed an' I'll give ye some hot rum, an' yo'll be all right in th' mornin." "An' sure
two "rubberneck," cara w21 to start from anough, I was. Mow, this is what I will the offer in Adam-street on Ester Monday call th' 'veryfication
ir verity. I heard in other people havin' a cold in ta'
have one at 10 am, the other at 2 p.m. They were head, but not till it happened to me WAJ
round trip was 79, 6d, `to 10m. 6d. I some it was thrne. Now I know it. This simple happenin' has convivoed me is leads me onto the whole subjiek ir sb' trath. th' truth iv rubbers, colds, nu' hot ram. This What is trath It is something that hap pans to be truth. A truthis not a truth till iti truthided. Take th' banen race; it is like me clock.
Wad ye not say rabber that it is more like a watch says Profissor Bunst is the University iv Stulogen, like-a-watob-that-s- traveller has found on th' shores ¡y a desert island? He known that somebody has left it there, an therefore it ain't a good witch.
I will have no verbal quibbles,' says Pro-fissor. I refuse to take th' case ir th watob. I tako th' caso ir th' clook. “I know th' truth is the clook becansa 1. have wan in th parlour. I am informed be Pro-fissor Bobilier, Fro-fliser Dewey, an' me aunt Abygail that they also have observed clocks. But me sunt Abygail bas observed ghosts an' fast dayé, an' I don't know Profesor Schiller, an' Profissor Dewey is connected with th University iv Chicago. So I must discard all their fvidence an rely on me own, which 1 can trust. I soo me clock in th' mornin'. It is on. th' wall. "That night whiu I come I can't see it. It has disappeared. Bat if I light th gas. it
that clocks are gas, an' I presume are many returns to th wall, I therefore conclude
faethered be th gas comp'ny, although this is a matther I haven't fully invistygatod. Do yo follow the P. But, says Pro-fissar Babat, I seen clock also. Do go belive in Inturo life P' says our frind, I do says Pro-fissor Bunst Thin,' saye Pro-faser Hinaisy, don't
The steam-consumption meter patented in Germany by P. Weller is a small electric solvad, Plans for a ronewed effort woro immebeli ve ye iver see a look,' says he. „terastor, with a magnet wheel built into the toam-pipe, and rotated by turbine blades fitted to its peripbary, -The current generated in tha.,
14
"What's it all about P says yo. Faith, is fine exercise f'r th' wind. 16's like a Türkish bath. It is good f'r th' Pro-fissor an' it don't hurt th' victim much. Hogan says this here philospepker has some no ideas about the truth. I thought iery bodoy kaew what was the truth Th truth was something I ballover, an an' what wasn't. It soomed aisy to me.
dintely settled. Captain Collinson was giran the commond, with the "Enterprise so the senior ofsers ship, and MoClure, who had shown himself well fitted for the post by his armature shows on a voltmeter the pounds of resourcefulness and energy, was given the som steam consumed per hour, or strain of wheels mand of the companion vessel, the old "fn can be arranged to give a continous record aligaton it which Admiral Bamilton The expedition also included the Connection to the pressure gauge gives riserved, and the Resolate" but the latter ships divvie th' bit 1 cared whether sauy wh tions in the resistance of the volimeter-oirosis, bad a more or less independentcommission, ander else believed it or not. Twaddan't tako and shus atomatically correcta for variations Capta a Austin, they were to soareh the Barrow wan minyit to tell ye all about it. in steam pressure: {**
Strait. Our concern is with McCinre and the But ye ak th Pro-faser about it and be Eavestigator and "Enterprise." The vesels says: Th' truth in something that warrake. If it don't warrak it ain't the truth, A frath that is lying off is net half as true as a good murrakin' lie. Whin th' truth stope warrakia' it's a lie, whio a lie starts goin' it's th' tra h. ›₺ is onforçhnit, that buman nature is such that it overwacraks Ih' truth to such an extent that truth knocks off an' says 'twud rather slarve thin go on settin' up all night waitin' f'r people
A vegetable caterpillar from the planting-of-sailed from Plymouth on January 20th-1355 trus caterpillar is among the marvels of the and siues that eventful day no one in England
has cast eyes on the former little man-of-war- Pink Terrace region of Now Zealand. Eting she is only of 50 or 600 tons d'splacement, see tempting fungus spores on its way to its inal burrow, the creature becomes transformed into a wood-like mase of fungus, wilk form and structure preserved. The caterpillar is For a veritable root, from which a stem shouta zp 8 or 10 inches, dropping other fungus
HAT OF GODS MERCY, *Ultimately the "levestigator" was forood into what proved to be half a century's banish- mat in an inlet on the northern shore of Banks Laud. MoClure had been so buffeted to same bome; an' thin ba shused because it about that be hospted this fate with some monet of satisfaction, because bis lot might have been worse, in the feeling of relief be named the inlet 'the Bay of God's Mercy and there *Investigator" das lain, absolutely
the
RESCUED!
1.
hasn't ivrything comfortable. Freivrybody. Thin is th time to call in a few find an stärike breakers. They'll do well enough fe availe Th' rale test iv truth is dan ye cash it in ? F'r barometer to his out in adding process of refrigere We have the best le coutimpy vidiosond a gr-coat manny Dineries th warrold was fat. fuel burned would seem be a my no to foreshadow quite a revolution. The
for up wards of half a contury
tast potas. Foolish people say it was round From September, 1851, until the following all th' time. I say not, an' I have th' mat Brotan locomotive, boiler, the invention of an
+ummer the frozen in strip was MoClure's head scc'rate records in me lib'ry, Suddenly, some engineer of the Imperial Rahway Ministry of quarters, Al inat the situation begda to assume time ago, it became round. There ye have th Austria, was first put to work in Austria in the crew were anfering from illness. There value. What can yo get on it? If it ain't a grave aspect. Food was running short, and. But th' rate teat, iv-truth is its cash Jaunary, 1901, and it is claimed that the two was no prospect of relief. Mo Ciure at length sang good to ye, shnok it away. If its some- comparative taste made have oslablished decided that he had no cons but to abandon thing ye can't ourry in ye'er head, so far as ye superiority over ordi isry boilers of 27 and the little vessel to her fate, and seek safety for are concerned, don't thry to think shout it. It 20.7 per cent, respectively in coal per locpipotive found anywhere in these silent wilds.
himself and his companions, if such wore to be is not th' truth onless ye can go down with it to th Exchange an' trade it franother truth, or if mile, and 23. and 19,5 per echt. per ton-mile,
ye're good at tradin', fr two or three.. Don't be Of these boilers 21 are now in operation He had come to this determination when afraid to take a trash because it looks sus- and 29 are building, 14 of the former Lasntenant Bedford Pim appeared on the pisyour new. Nearly all th' old truths are and -17. of the latter being for Ans.
scans by phunce. He had come across from bein discarded be us Pro-fissors as too large an' Irian roads. The water chambers or water-
the Resolute, which by this time had got cumbersome to handle. Don't refuse to accept into Melville Songd, McClare found all is a truth because it looks like a Mexican trath or lege around the fire-box of the old
double-coms to life no more. His hopes because it is made iv Babbitt metal an' gisse Iocomotive are a source of auch troubl”, sad were centred on waiting to save the "Investi. Te may be able to paa it off on somebody else.” the chief improvement consists in replacing getor," and he thought of getting stores from these by a series of thin-walled upright tabes
the "Resolute," and seeing the incidens ont an each side of the fire extending in an arohi to
to a finish. Before coming to a final decision, form the roof of the fire-box. A steam collector 23 to 30 inches in diameter is placed over the entire length of the boiler, giving the appear-gator" to her fate, and ange of a large boiler surmounted by a smaller the ine to the land, rey his men nordss one. The water-tubo fizé-beż can be tied to Thus it came about that the "Investigator any locomotive, and this greatly increases the was left in the ios peak, while her captain and elleienay of the old pagines.
orow took passage.in the "Resolute." They were afterwards transferred to the North Star," and reached England on Sept. 28th, 1854, after an absence of four years and eight months,~ It' { means, an' sɔya: 'To put it plan th" "pome" was an eventful voyage, and now the home lamp-wick, or I might quote! coming of the Investigator, after half a century, will prova an appropriate sequel, to the discovery of the North-West Passage,"
Some small frogs of the species known as
·Rhinoderma darwini bave reached London from Chili, and have received must attention from naturalists. The tadpoles are developed in a
"An there ye are. I'm a philospher in a small way, but if I thried to lestare qn tb2 truth. th' last man in th' najcanoe wuddau't have found
he went noross to the "Resolate," where he con place andher th2 choir f'r his hat befare I'd ferred with Captain Kellett. By this time be sayin Thankin ye, wen en all, f'r yo'er the illassa among his son bad incressed, and kind attention. I'm like a máu phyin at
屁
he had no alternative bet to leave the Investi-philosophy with wan nger an' batin' out a small thin chune. Th' Pro-Essor oss slang, ruas his hand through his hair, an' plays th' shane with varistions outil ye oud hardly pley it out with needs. That's wan reason why ye sudden't drag me to lecture en philosophy. I want ma observations on annoy subjick handed frills. When a man thries to explain to me what he ye are like
Almost everyone has known that feeling of relief and thankfulness when they have found someone who could be depended upon without doubt or disappointment, whose word can be accepted unquestionably-well that is what the writers of these letters are, men and women who are to be depended upon. A wide and practical experience makes such statements, for instance, as those of Miss Morris, who is matron of a Young Woman's Christian Association Home, worthy of the closest attention, for, knowing how greatly girls and young women workers suffer from Neuritis (nervous: exhaustion), she positively affirms that Phosferine may be absolutely depended upon- to speedily dispel the disorder, and restore the flugging health. Miss Morris knows how unfailingly Phoslerine has given the energy and vitality which has made work easy and profitable to her young girl charges, and in her own case she found that Pliosterine thoroughly expelled Neuralgia, Lassitude, angf other nerve pains, and considers her present vigorous health is entirely due to the energising, and recuperative properties of the famous nerve tonic.
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13
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"THERAPION, No. 2-A Sovereign Remedy for primary, and secondary skin proptions, vilcerations, pains and swellings of the junto, and, all these complaints which mercury and arearilla are popularly but erroneously supposed to care. This preparation purifică the. whole systems theyugh the blood and thoroughly cliuitate all noisinout datter from the body, "THERAPION NO. 3-A Sovereign Remedy for debility, nervouscièss, impaired vitality, sleeplessness, distaste and incapacity for business or pleasure, long of solitude, blushing, fadigestion, dajns in the back and head, and all disorders resulting from dissipation, early ex- germeke, which thefaculty sopersistently ignore, because so impotuit to cure or even reliezes
THERAPION issold by princi, alchemists throughout the world. Pice in England2/9 and. In ordering, state which of the three numbers required, and observe that- the word THERATION appears on British Government Stamp (in white fetters on a red ground) affised to every package 'hy-order of 11 Majesty's Hon. Commurinners, anal without which it is a forgery,
Fold by all principal Chemists 25
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Miss I. M. Morris, Matron, Y.W.C.A., Hoine, 2, Poplar Walk, Croydon, writes? There is nothing in my estimation approaches Phosferine as an unfailing Bestorer of flagging health. In my experience I have found it so great a help that I cannot tell you hall the good. it has done, nor the number of young lives it lis brightened, that had previously been subject to these tenible nerve complains Nemitis and Neurasthenia The personal benefit 1 obtained from its use in the e' distressing affections was surprising, and now I always have a 476 bottle lany, as amongst so many hard working girls (our boarders being mostly clerks and touches) Lis a boon to know of something that will quickly restore witality and give back. to the pain-racked-workers-renewed unerly-and-officierej; whichris sa essential la their success in business life. In cases of Neuralgia all. Nervous Breakdown 1. have found it equally useful, and in my opinion it stands univalled as a reliable restorative."-January 30, 1908.
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None
Its energizing effects are shown tâm thợ
· Best day of its administration byà Remaṭkable Increase of Nerve and; Intellectual Power, with a Reling of Courage, Strength, and, Comfort. Digestion is Invigorated. The Appetite increases, wonderfully, Skep becomes célra, and refreshlag The Face- becomes fuller, the Lips fed the Eyes- brighter, and Skla clear and peaky Beware of vlla filiations genuine wiboat the British Government Stamp with Dr. Laler's Phosphodyne,. London, England," ecgraved thereon, by order of her Majesty's Honourable Commissioners
Thousands of unimpeachable testimonialm fzora, all parts of the World, wand, from the bighest Medical. Authorities. No other Phosphoric Preparation has received anch „distinguished recognition:
HEALTH, STRENGTH & ENERGYÝMSU Bold to Bottles 44.6.11 cach, by all Chemists throughout the World,
– MANIBPACTURED ONLY ** DR. LALOR'S PHOSPHODYNE LABORATORY, HAMFSIGAD LONDON, ENGLAND.
Agents in HONGKONGA. S. WATSUN & CO.
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