.THE v OREGON . SUNDAY ' JOURNAL PORTLAND, SUNDAY ' MORNING. OCTOBER 12. a IF inn T c 1 H' U ' 4 Tips f or Humanity in flying Gliding Parachnfin and Scudding Creatures ' Esamed'tb-'FLY . ' 1 , , . , - , . Aizs B eiore Ma fins future- of aviation may: depend ;upon what I ' cciescd may learn from the observation of tat flight of makes and lizards. It Is now believed ; that these flying reptiles mar furnish a better object lesson for human birds to follow than the v birds and " Insects which have hitherto been their principal models. N The Wright brothers owe their success in aviation almost exclusively to the study they made of birds and -Insects In flight,. tut It Is now suggested that their Success might have been greater had they p armed their y Investigation Into nature's methods as revealed in the Clght of reptiles and other animals other than bird and Insects. , f ' . J, J.r For the benefit of those who are seeking to Improve f epon our present methods of aviation, the British Mo-.u aeum of Natural History hae placed on exhibition a nunv w tier of raluahle specimens Illustrating the modification . f the structure of animals In relation to flight. Borne Some Remarkable Specimens Exhibited at the British Museum ef Natnxal Elsteryl .. . t uuum "e Moiuucmuvn ox me structure mi xijing Axumais v ' i V 1 ; Toe exhibition is not limited to animals that caa truly fly, but Includes also examples of animals which, more through, the air by scudding, gliding or parachnV in, without expending energy from the time when they leap off to the time when they alight, anon as the as. of the more remarkable of these exhibits are illustrated v called flying eaulrrels. flying phalangers, ete. - une ot tne interesting exhibits Is that of ft curious in. - fin vui jpkb . v . In all the human attempts at aviation that hare met with any degree of success the part of the apparatus that sustains the weight la the air (planes, or gasbag, as the case may.be) Is distinct from the driving appara tus (propeller and Its engine), bnt a study of the sped ' tnen displayed at this novel exhibition shows that la Eying animals the energy Is generated by the contrac tion of muscles connected with the wings, and that the latter, by a regular beating or flapping action, both, sup tort the body la the air and force the body through It. beetle with large elytra (the wlngsheathg which font , the superior wings la bottles and serve to cover and pro tec( the true wings) which, act as "planes--while the wings supply the driving power. The edges' ef the elytra are produced Into flat leaf-like expansions, so thai the elytra as a whole are larger than the wings. The wings fold cp beneath the middle part of the elytra, act under the lateral plates. ,( . . - - But much more Interesting are the Tsrioas sped mens of flying snake from Borneo from which aviators might perhaps be able to leara ; lot Wfeen gliding downward the body Via kept rigid and perfectly straight. ZZow the'snake shapes Its body when Cylng ts piustrated by the cross section. ; . . The flying gecko Is another Inter.' : estrng oxHlblt, For breaking lis fall " whea leaping from bongb, to bough, this animal has lateral expansions of the skin on the : aeck, body, taO sad tbnbs and -betweea . the toes. : - s n t . v. The raying Hsard" l displayed tm ' various positions. ; This early aaces ' tor ot man Is able to glide through. ' sae av us perfect safety. , V ' . ' 'Bah: ' ; . : : Hts Otast MAHytAi. Tfurr Cam KkaIxy Cln Chimneys with Pptato Peel J ,- YOD MIGHT TPa- O the peelings of the potatoes you use for food. When the stove does not draw well plaoe a Quantity ot these potato skins in the Are and their burning will clean up the soot and clear out the fine to such an extent It will not seem like the same chimney. They do not need to be dry. Damp peelings Just cut from potatoes, will burn eilte read lly where there Is considerable fire, and it Is astonishing how oilckly they; will do the de sired work. .' '' Potato skins will dry easily. If spread out fa a warm place, and these make excellent kindling to be used In recruiting ft sluggish, fire or la. starting one with paper, , It Is no difficult matter to start a Are without wood whea dry potato skins are used with a little paper. The burning of the peelings dears out the fire, and ao difficulty Is experienced that day .from the line not drawing or the stove not acting satisfactorily. ' ' ; These peelings are first class for clearing furnace whea slow fires have caused the , place to become clogged op with soot, r . Flues of boilers can be cleaned with, perfect safety with potato skins, and little potatoes are useful where the Are Is hot sad the boiler '1 LWATS keep half ft lemoa In readiness to rob flues are clogged, as the small potatoes will bum quickly, producing a condition that clean t w a gooa oraugni. " v v Ia' cases of sictaess7!w'u'tmiu wbea'ft root becomes foul It may be made much beter If ft very Uttls piece of poUto skin Is burned laJJie room. It Is always best to nave a window or door opea whea this Is done, so there will be an opportunity for the ?Sap?r3LtT 10 9 wT The air la rooms so treated Is much purer. '? tTo Kexaore Paint Spots. ; IfZZ oaual parts of turpentine aad ammonia and anniv td h,ti. . 1.- spots with a piece of cloth the same color as th garment Bub gently yuat renurveo, taea sponge with warm water and a Wnitenlnr the n&ndx V Tegetables or fruit and soft Oa the bauds after eeaUns This removes stains sad keeps the bands white ( FonPfttentX&therSiioea. FT0 Inurtbcft the life ef patent leather shoes, the dirt should always be re- and polish wita a soft cloth. . Taea carefully dry. apply little rasellne To Harden Bristles. ; ymm the bristles of your hair brush become aaftwaan thm hm.Ti t. a J'iln JlSl!1 S" '?de1 Poo"! Ammonia. Thea dissolve wTE?i?5?.S! !i,a.?old ai the brush la this several times, sad ; GRADUATION Exercises j Make ANARCHISTS r-T-i HB dose relationship betweea the excessive ego ;1 Ism of the homicidal anarchist sad the.mcreas 1 lag egoism ot children; la; American schools-; pabllo and private has led Professor Browalng, a weO' knowa New York nervous specialist, to point out some of the dangers das to lack of proper teaching. Btrfk , I&tfy be points out that the child's desire to be -the J whole thing" should be curbed and held In proper check, especially under the peculiar conditions of liberty that American life allows, and draws attention to the "ela borate dressy graduating exercises ot every school at V the present day. declaring that these "accelerate this - vain egotistical paranoid U.f'iZ-xx; From almost every oorner of the compass there has ' been raised a chorus ot objections to the foolish gradn, ' atloa display la the schools, aping the sufficiently ua aeceasary college graduation ceremonies. . In the latter case. It Is true, there Is more excuse, since such gradu fttloa ceremonies arc ttsuaUy attended, with the grant- ! ln f honorary degrees to some man or womaa whose I fame Is so great that the nation delights to honor such , . one. Besides which, the college graduate-though ftea, foolish eaough-tt of maturer age than the school eattd ftad Is supposed to bave sufflcleat latellectual development to be able to esteem the "dressing up., pi bis graduatloaiat Its proper valuatioa. - v iuwunawjeasaruy eiaDorate performance of the chool, however. bM been regarded heretofore as foot ish rather than as dangerous, i But Dr. Browning points out that the child la 1U earUer .years Is wholly, con, ceraed with Itself and Its own Interests, and that one of the chief needs ot education is to give ths child ft proper regard for others. Anarchy Is truly an exag geratloa ot the liberty and license of the ladMdual, and the graduation exercises are often ot ft kind which seems apt to cause this very exaggeration. Is especially unfortunate, moreover, for it ' comes at aa fM p,Blon Peculiarly vivid, and because lducao strain thU sort of thing because of the vulgarity of te SeaIMl SSdlftSfa country rather llA commencements are not aecessary, tteyservenS cr la the educational scheme and h fj.pir" let It dry la the open air. era or Junk dealers gather them up and pack them away la barrels until they have ft car' load or so, whea they ship thea away. 11 ' There are several concerns that buy these old, tin cans, regardless of shape or also or condition. . ; The batsjsred tin can,! tho can" that had been run over by a train or dented with a workman's pick Is Just as valuable to these concerns as the bright new, can, undented. : , . - - . v , ; ' 4-', All these old cans are damped Into ft grent furnace where the heat , trrst melts off the tin.' Although It should be remembered that Youfim't Be !aM&H ' ma Taiuauon of overvthlnc on a money basis.- This spirit should be cherfidbVtt2 schools, not aggrandlsei And when It canw ZJZ urea ju uin war is aestrncuva t .... sens and suggestive ef Individual lawlessness aTt ease Is made out against the 5ssy? exe?c2eV ftST be as necessary to demand a -sate and JXT tlon a. it has been ft -safe and .Fourth i Bjr XHv LEOPTAKD K. HntSnBERO. A.r mrvi Johns HoplExna, IN the primeval days, when the present and before the ; present memories of maa runneth not to the coa . 4 trary, of the Pleistocene man, the anthropoid and ' homoalmlaa precursors, If not anceitors, the Question of -pabulum varied according to tho progress ot the animal i' kingdom toward the superman. More and more steadily It approached the much coveted animal victuals, eon- s slating ot insects, grabs, reptiles, eggs, birds and ' smaller game. . ... . , , , M 1 Gradually flesh-eating replaced the non-carnivorous diet, sad soon hunting sad Ashing vied with the tilled soU and the vineyards. Then came the domestication . of the hunted beast and the nomad tribes that trained them. : Thea the meagre output of barrea laads re-, ', nained ao longer bar to the forward rush ot the human tribe. Stony ground could aot deter them from living. ; Finally:: life Iras really made ; worth while the laTentor of cooking. i The Introduction of cooking, like fttt aew Inventus, even ot the present day, Jed at once to aa overconsumptloa of the thing thus placed enticingly wlthla the reach of alL Maa soon aad since " thea began eating himself Into Bright's disease, clrrho sis ot the Uver, heart ailments, high blood pressors, ar teria sclerosis, cumbersome rotundity and obeso em bonpoint 'u . t 0 J ' 4 1 I Like the ebb and flow of the tide, maiiktad's ahmt t digest coarse and acrid victuals rose and fell with bis bablta, bis Indoor or outdoor life, his consumption ot raw or cooked foods. "TJp td the origin ot cooking, the muscles of the whole body, not to speak only of those ta the mouth, throat and bead, wers ftggresslve. much used, and, you might say. In training. With tho lux urtous Invention of cooking there was less ad less can for muscular exertion upon the part ot the sous- 1 cular tissue, k AH of the mouth muscles concerned la . the. busy attack upon raw foods fell Into Innocuous ,' desuetude. They became coddled, spoiled, pampered. -almost entirely unused. -V-. . , A t&2" time the saliva, the Juices ot the mouth that act as solvents upon vigorously chewed pabulum, became much reduced In power. With disastrous bmu 7, papand soups slipped Into the stomach, sad the human tissues started upon their toboggan ot catty degeneration and waste. . The digestive powers became ' J" Wo t cope with the coarser. sortTet . food, and the Jaws, teeth and muscles shrank eorre. spondlngly la sls strength and usefulness.' Nowadays most people are accustomed to bolt their f,,oftev Mdj fre(iuently swaUow largs Slumps ot -whoUy unchewed food. It Is. however, wry easy to trala a child to properly masticate its diet The mouth ' EUiS!5 ,ba"tted bycorrect physical exercises to grind up all that passes betweeathem acquire such r2neflettat .tha tt0meat klt ood approaches ; them there Is not a chance In the world at it " passing their threshold, " f - Cms sf the most Important func tions of the physical culturlst ths. gymnast and ' other experts of the new muscularity, is to train the mus cles of the young children sad older 1 " Tho Jlosdes That Chew Tour Food i i. V- i v The) Cplendld Chewing llnsdet ej me American Indian. ...v.- flymg flsh. There Is a South American fresh water flsV v ' Which darts out of the water and Into the air lnia man f ' t aer aot PaUk that la which the hydroplane operates. f'x'iy "For comparative studyr there Is shows ths skeletons of many of the animals exhibited. ; The structure of tho . . " bones of flying animals baa always been considered ft . matter of considerable Importance for the aviator to 1 vjftodyltost Birds have -hoUow or pneumatt boass. " - " t r.' f f uis is not true ox other flying animals. ' J - ""toration of the dlmorphodon'macrony 'ta in' Another taterestlag exhibit Is that of the African fly . tlnct flying reptile, wbioh Is shown at this exhibition jng saulrreL These animals glide rather thaa fly, but . gives a very dear Idea of how man's earliest flying an they might teach aviators ft whole lot Tho skin-told; :I cestors looked, and there are lot of restorations ot which oennects the fore and bind limbs does not extend ; extinct birds wbic shed new light on nature's methods, along the tan. These squirrels In flight resemble the , ; The exhibition Is Interesting because It briags out true flymg soulrrels, " ,i trtelesrt-thr fact' that ;tt nwavmtsaAS'to''fly' b t The exhibttloa ladudes many speclments ot bats, the . j win only, be repeating what his ancestors did millions The Useful End of OIJ) TIN CANS IN every vacant lot In ft city and all over, ft rtln" can is really" an Iron can. there Is a the great dumpmg places wherever holes; thin coating of tin over It aad tin Is an ex- and hollows are being filled la, you may ceedlngly valuable metal : The tin, aeltlnai ; oount anywhere froin half j ft" dosen to halt ; much sooner : than the Iron, runs - down a thousand old tin cans. It Is very seldom through the mass and Is saved br mouldlnsr these are buried, for the) ever busy rag pick-; Into blocks when It Is as mod . .... 7! - recpatlag more cans. T it may fo the bright -tin on your can of .tomatoes or corn has been used ft'dosea or a hundred times pre ' - vlously on othr,can: ' After the tla runs off, the sheet Iron or ;whlch the cans are made melts, andf this' Is run off Into Ingots," or pigs," and sold for the cheaper quality of Iron, It la need la making window weights, cheap cast Iron toys and S. tMn5B' V ?,Uim ta wUr lost Except perhaps the labels which are burned off in the furnace It Is said the Iron from the cans Just about pays for running the fur aaces, .leaving the tin. thus secured as the profit for the enterprise. c; BIETAt BOOfiS HOR a long whfle it has been believed by maay that Thomas A. Edison would -l. penect metauio paper suitable i for Printing upon and binding Into books, but it now appears that the great Inventor la far .too busy with other labors to undertake this Important work. t.. i.-v , ;,...:.,,,, .:y. i V11. "50rt bouV 5 Mr. Bdlson' ex- 'i plained to a committee from the American " Library Association delegated to ; have ft . statement from him on the matter, through 5.iJtment h to ft newspaper man while discussing thin metil material to be !fBS4J,,.Wf batteries. The Inventor ' had perfected such thin sheets of nickel that the ideal ot metal -paper" occurred to him. i- The committee ot the American Library Association was engaged In aa Investigation ;on the deterioration of paper, and a possible ' means of preventing It whence newspaper stories came to their attention. After a long wiiwi tiuurmauon as to wnat progress had -been made In making metal paper from the Inventor himself, and ho ttorn.- a letter of explaaaUon. " ' 1 "r. Edlsoa explained that he was seeking ' ' 5?. f0.rv toaurln Perct electrical con! ductlvty ta the poslUve tube ot his storage battery and after many laborious experiment! sscured such thin iheets from puri xuetaUlo S?S m.ot Pm vers only' the thickness of a business card. He wrote tte.commlttee that these would be tothta for books and that it would take alotof '2fS21,?llM,,tta rodttce the proper 'tdek" ' III il.tuch Wrpose, adding that ho could f11' experimented on metal -paper but the Idea had merely occurred tohlm. 019 Jtteo. of the American U brary AssociaUon is wondering who will have the courage to attack this problem and per- r feet a. process for the making of m itfble ' &TL tor Prtnting'and Jnto books. This would solve lh .hZ or iteeping books. - Rare old edition; , Tho Typical Face of the Athletaj showing me strong jaws. ' wyngnvifiv IZ s Btar Company, ; - grown-ups as soon as they have teeth ' to completely tttUlso tho muscles ot their months and Jaws." rC . Ths time has forever gone by whea men will merely masticate their "victuals uccordlag to some epidemic . Fletcherlzlng theory. They needs must have something more than beautiful hypothesis or Idea. True enough, . Fletcher's theory mads men use their j muscles, - and lience. Independent of the poetlo aspect of his scheme, f the practise was according to Hoyle. But lt.is far bet- " ter to have men know the tiuth, to wltthat It li notJ r so much the counting of forty, sixty or hundreds before swallowing as It Is to cultivate the physical endurance and therefore the adaptability of the muscles of the mouth. Just as you dot your biceps, your tennis arm or! , r your other muscles of peculiar skilL -r ; -. - It Is unnecessary to .say at this late day and date, that the musical regularity of muscular contractions add sest and activity to the flow of blood thronrtont - the Whol Af Tnnl' tf a.iioa Yxru.vM 4 . V - L P1'111' wlmmlng, rowing, walking, or the ex cellent exercises of physical training classes or from the muscles of mastication, the tonlo and stimulating effects upon your whole body ts certain. ' 0 ( The muscles conoeraed la chewing your food are far . snore massive than Is usually understood Indeed, it Is aot too much to say that ft man who Is able only to vigorously manipulate his muscles of mastication and does so will achieve the same Improvement la his gen oral health as such aft athlete as a baseball player or a . pedestrian.. Even the habit of chewing gum, a modern' custom that calls down anathemas and social ostracism. " i J,?t.tr toaa ths prevalent guxzllng of predlgeBted. son, fluid and soupy meals. v Those who Ijrom childhood's happy hour have been , accustomed to properly chew their meals will J have - sound muscles all over the body; their eyes will have a noble color; their cheeks will be filled even despite te,VwUa o bloom of youth! teeth, Jaws and mouth will be shapely and attractlve.and finally the 1 muscle-generating juices that are formed will influence for good each and every other muscle In buman frame, i The American gum-chewing habit unromantio and com- 0kai cam honestly and sanely to the white man of to-dav from thn Amrioi tkhi.. The preeminence of the Indlaa tor musculature goes unchallenged. His muscles were made of iron and his Xft UJ th tbt 0f the lion and the gaselle. But the Redskin did not develop his hamstrings at the expense of funny, bone, nor his biceps at the cost of his facial muscles. : He was wont to hie him to the gum-gum tre there to scrape off some of the resilient tasty eubstance,,and between meals as' well as in periods of famine to pracUse masUcaUoa for the double purpose ol. strengthening his Jaw and mouth as veil fts his stomach muscles, -y-; : : . mV1!!1 toat things are not always what they seem, and chewing, gum is not nearly so wicked and ( uncosmeUo as Certaln-prudes of the polite world would ' . ? 1' 0D?er- Moreover, digestive troubles and tendertooted incompetency of the flabby muscle sort are not the only punishments of faulty chewing. If ttere " ttan or woman with soul so dead that he or she will not thoroughly, vigorously and for a good period masticate their nutriment, the penalty of a lonjr scell n -.11 . . . """ vruiuu prey 10 insects, nixeiy. of nervous disorders may be the nrlca. Preat Brltaia Rights Resryed, . - tWIT It, fall 1 bUt COUld . h Van Of course, fir miM but they would stand more" h.a7 "ffi '23 n "ywiy moisture would havej no effect upon them. '. i JJ'J lniPortant sUte documents.' new Ti?ddM,8?j,money' leaI "Ports and such things, would prove of areat vain a Inrf that It would not be so very long before) toe LakTlt Ia.Uid r,ectod i.heP to print all books Y"7r' ;fJL-!in committee from the . i anxiously about for some lnventor-o, manyi' s.empi to do jthis. very thiari'