THE OREGON SUNDAY JOURNAL, PORTLAND, SUNDAY MORNING, MAY 2, 1913. t ! . ' " . ' "mi" i'i ii ' mmhm iinn .him liO i ii i i lini nin in Yin i mV.iVi v . iT.-i" - v ;.rr 1 ;r i n r- " wmiJn 1 , ' . You May Not Know I ' Take Warning Scientists Say Flowers Hear and See Some New Facts hpUE largest cyanide factory is the world 1J. Is located in Glasgow. .:::) ,.) EUROPE has 50,000 less miles of railroad than the United States. E TEN when thawed and cooked frosen beets have been found to contain a poison deadly to lire stock. ' - v.vn' i ' ' i 31 V' : K r- MORE than 24v00O,0tM)00 tons of. coal remain to be taken from the fields In Wales, according to geologists. : ' ' ' 4 ' -f -f ANEW knife invented for the use of elec tricians is equipped with a guage in dicator that measures the size of wire. , . rv 8TEICH eggs are being successfully ! V batched in an incubator by a German : reeder.'..V wV' : r; 1 ; ? - , :.' I IWTNE made from the Juice of bananas Tlis being made by two Frenchmen living j i Cochin China. " I : ; i : ; H'S. V: . I -N THE Samoan Islands Is a breed of cat- I .tie: the bulla of which seldom weigh more . j aan! 20Q pounds and the cows 150 pounds, t t -pHE use of an electric soldering iron as a '.. LL surgical cautery has been demonstrated i jy a 1st Louis physician. J ' " t :: npH$ production of gold in Australia has - JL declined steadily since 1893, the output ' aat year being 150,160 ounces less than the r: before. '.- ; ,.'! Jr 0 MORE eavesdropping on telephone IN Jines if a new invention works out as jlanhed. A novel receiver shuts out the ould-be listener. HE best lighted cities In Europe, in pro Portion to! population, are Petrograd, . jlenins, Parlsaind Ixradon, in the order ;amed. U N AUSTRIAN scientist has invented a ; r. method oi sterilizing , against Insect, : ana and fungus life the ground Into which ostji are to be set THE United States produced 29 of the 66 JL je poch-making inventions, England 17, ranee 10, Germany 5, Italy z, wrazii, Aus- rla and Sweden 1 each. Naturally Colored ; hbtos Now Possible H OW can I make photographic prints in the trus colors of tb original sub- This question has been asked by every in- jondor In the photographic field for many. anjylyears. And it remainc unanswered ptll recently J when Frederic Eugene Ives, ne Amencarr inventor or the half-tone rocess of printing and the 'three-color altjtone procpss, took out patents on this sw photographic method. The ; taking iof photojripha In colors, as i rented by Jfr. Ivea, is said to be so simple pa any intelligent amateur can master it fr. Ives has 'also Invented many devices the fleia or applied optics. iberty Bell Has hr"IIE Liberty Bell is sick. , I I ' "lt no hyperbolical figure of I . RTIPPOh to MT that tha vonprn hlo T AU- tyj Bell is affected by a serious disease," kyf E. Outerbrldge Jr., an expert roetal prgist, who was -called; in to examine the bll' In 1009 and who recently , examined it , second time when it was planned to snip tp ' the Panama exposition at San Fran- sco. . . 'Metallurgists have 'adopted Into tech- ical phraseology the term 'diseases of met is' and recognizes several such,, maladies. myself hare no hesitation In saying that lie bell has a distemper, which should in ure It most careful preservation from all ubeka such as it would be subject to in a log journey," The famous bell was badly cast in the fst instance and was recast thrice by ama ursp who changed the composition of th4 etal.with each recasting. The first crcfe bpeaxed when the bell was tolling on sthe pcaslon of the funeral of Chief Justice iarsball. In 190Q it was discovered tat hisi crack had extended to double Its orig laij length..; ; ;.. S-f' ; . 1 . : The Iron 'Age say enat with each of the Unalrinn tn mrtttoh flu, hall waa mMaMMl 5o! years ago it lost largely, in : tensile uncle Sam Makes use o New ' Gun B ; British. water-cooled, automatic- machine gun, used In the present war several of the European, coontries, has a adopted by the United States army, hlch receafiy completed a series of testa,. fhU Vbm British gun is adapted fox gen. ral military sexrvice. It may also be used. ItJi r against air craft, . . - j This weapon la operated by recoil, and S a maximum anna; speed of approxl- ately 600 shots per minnte. This Is slower the water-cooled gun now in use, but time conarorted in inserting, the short strips used by the new gun ia ma less, therefore it S contended thatriaed to waa "V9 "nt of reaKty it can fire a greater- number of tats in m given period than its predecessor. The new : gun "has sn effective range from 14500 to 1300 yards; and also ses the .30-caliber cartridge employed by ,! of Site service rifles. The ammunition 1 fed Into it by means of belts holding 250 bunds each. The weight of the gun is K pounds, and that of its adjustable :poa arrcNCmsjsiy4Q pounds. P TOU love flowers have a care! Yon: have been wont to look upon the fair blossoms In plant life a things of mere beauty. But now it's different They; are more. , ! - - '. k , " , jThe lily tolls not and neither does It spin, but who can say that it does not talk? And maybe the humble rubber plant can see. So you had better be careful about the kind of powers you take into your home or what you" say to that young lady in the shadow of J some conservatory palm, j Metal Ailment strength, resilience and - other essential things. : - Mr. Outerbridge's experiments show that pure copper loses 50 per cent of its tensile strength by three remeltlngs. The liberty -Bell .was recast three times, and perhaps t even at that time It had already been at tacked by the disease: that has been eating ' into its copper and tin vitals ever since. J The bell has been transported to a-distance on six occasions and has been clipped by many vandal souvenir hunters. Its trips did it no good, as more or less rough han dling was scarcely avoidable. Parcel Post as a Moving Van AND now the parcel post has been 'put to another novel usethat of "mov ing." A. family in Nevada, desiring to re-"-irlove :tq; Grass Valley, CaL( used the service in this .way for tha first time, and it Is said that they saved-considerable in transportation charges, The furniture could not be shipped by "parcel post since It did -not ' come within the ,T2-lnch limit pre scribed by the Post Office Department tut . a.11 of the smaller articles were packed in square boxes and turned over to the mall man. 'Soon after the "shipment . reached Grass Valley, S the postmaster was ' sur- the postoffice and hear the driver call for his household goods. loading "his boxes into the wagon, the man hauled them to his home. " Here's a New Head Fan. A TINY electric fan operated by a dry battery has been Invented for .use as a head cooler and is intended to be worn In side th hat ' ; - ; " ' H -. . Science has discovered that the mimosa, which Is a dainty bush, with email, delicate oval leaves, and is commonly known as the - sensitive plant ia not only sensitive to touch but sound. Sir Francis Darwin is credited with hav ing taken a sensitive plant' one of the Mimosa species, to an iron foundry where much hammering and harsh noise was con stantly going on. The plant was watered and given plenty of sunlight but it could not live. Had Sir Francis lived In a modern apartment with wheezy graphophones on several floors, a budding young pianist on the second, and young babies on the third and fourth, doubtless he could have proved his case without the rouble of visiting an iron foundry, . : ' ! The majerlty of botanists are willing to . agree that many plant possess some senses found in bumiua bodies. There are many authorities who declare that plants not only hear, see, feel and taste, but that they pos sess certain mentality and spirituality. M. Jean Tlaud-Bruant the - celebrated ' nurseryman of Poitiers, France, published a pamphlet entitled "Bapteme de Fleurs," in ,,which he says: "When, as a young man, I studied natural science at Poitiers, I became Intensely interested in all the phenomena of vegetable life, and I tried to reproduce them in my gardens. It was my purpose' to understand the real life of the flowers I was beginning to grow. . ' "I eannot but think that the rose can the beautiful woman who inhales its per fume, and I base my belief on the observa tions ef Professor Wagers of Cambridge University and on the absolute conviction of M. Cuniaset-CarnoJL "And plants can hear. The sensitive plant folds up its leaves in fright if. a loud noise is made near It. This same plant, too. What Missing: Link G RANTING : that we are descended from the ape, what would the Missing Link look like were he to return to earth? G. P. Scott Elliot . ; noted scientist who has been making an extended study . of the Pithecanthropus E rectos (that was his name, and we are all supposed' to be members of the Erectus family),: says: "His body would be covered with hair . or fur except on the .palms or soles . of v his feet On his head the hair grew Wg and thick and was continued. In all prob ability, down his cheeks and chin to form a combined beard and whisker fringe. We do not think he had much of a mustache, ' .but probably , hla eyebrows 'beetled.' , rThe hair was wavy 9r; curly ; it may have had ; a tendency to be lank, straight . and stiff on his head, but this Is doubtful. -tit was not so woolly as that of the negra Ills children probably had a rich Titian red . or bronzy coat of fur like that, which one - sees on young -Galloway cattle. In the epidermis as 'well as In the hair were both black ; and orange pigment but on - the ; whole he - was probably moderately dark ; broad, as compared with modern races. . skinned. -' t 1 t .j "The face ;would probably i be low' and . "His nose would be as broad as it was ; long, with nostrils wide apart and fadns; a little, upward and utwaad. l- .The bridgv : with the impressionaDle nature of a nervous ; woman, is rendered insensible by anaesthet- ics, particularly by ether, which proves that it has a nervous system." 1 " . M. Viaud-Bruant was also inclined to be- lieve that plants have a system of speech peculiar to them.' He says It Is well known that the scent of flowers is a manifestation : of "their vegetable life a living variation, i . j "Scent considered as a olfactory sensa tion is a vibration," he adds.- "Scent then is the sound uttered by flowers,: and a bou quet i a song without words. Every scent or rather every sensation of a scent'Corre sponds to a certain speed of vibration . Which Is peculiar to it Here we see an -Analogy between the , perception of sound, light and scent. Strong scents correspond to low notes delicate scents to high notes." The "worm has turned." We all know of the potato bug and, other insects that lives off plants. Well, at the International;, flower -show held recently in i New York ; under the auspices of the Horticultural So ciety of New York and the New York Flor ists Club a number of jtreak . plants were shown. Among them wtLs a remarkable col lection of Insect-eating plants, including pitcher- plants, nepenthes,; sarraceda man daiana, sundew and others. W,oe be to the' insect that lights on them In quest of a meal I ' . Certain varieties of garrace.nia are said . not only to eat insects, but will stretch to ward the spot where the Insects are. Just as the sundew. They Eave been found, ex,, tended in the direction of a tree upon which insects were found feeding on sap running from an incision. , ' That leaves of certain plants could hear insects or were conscious of their nearness . was proved conclusively by Mrs Treat an : Would Look Like would: be almost concave xipward and the nose Itself all that there Is of the most retrousse. The eyes were small and deeply sunken under the . rather prominent eye-' brow ridges. It would not be easy to dis- tlnguish the peculiarities of his Jaw on ac count ;of the hairy beard, and perhaps It was best so, for he had 'no real chin, and a , very retreating lower Jaw; a long. arid nar yotrj as-well as projecting or prognathic "opperj" ; jaw, heavy cheekbones and ex tremely large teeth, often with, fire roots -' to them. Those muscles which are' at work . when j chewing hard food would 'be enor " mously developed, bat those 'which are used in spesklng would be - feeble and . weak. t ' ' . "Seen from in front his appearance -would be the reverse of prepossessing the narrow, receding forehead, beginning with Its strong eyebrow ridges, would seem-to disappear under the mop of dark, .thick hair, out of which the little ape-tike ears could J hardly ; be , seen. He might have stood about 4 feet high, with hands, when so standing-, reaching to the knees;Vboth hands' and feet would be large,' chest nar- row ; :be would r be . slightly j bandy-legged, but nothing to' signify for even at this period he probably chased small animal and hunted on foot.-' ' - American wbman. She i showed 'this was true even when there was no contact ' be tween the plant and the body of the insect and demonstrated it by pinning a live fly half an inch from a leaf of sundew, where upon the leaf moved Itself within the suc ceeding two hours near enough to fasten Us tentacles upon, the Insect. . Possibly this was due to the sense of smell, but the fact that the buzzing of the fly's wings as it died made a hum would indicate that the sense of hearing actuated this carnivorous plant . Brake Stops Train in Own Length BRAKE - that will stop a train of ; twelve steel cars weighing 2,000,000 - pounds going at sixty miles an hour within 1,000 feet practically in its own length, and. do it without Jolting the pas sengers, has been adopted by the "Pennsyl vania Railroad, according to a bulletin issued recently. One has to know how air brakes work before it Is possible to understand how an almost instantaneous - stop can be made without ' a Jar. ' This is well explained in one of the railroad's recent bulletins ; v ' "The air brake apparatus controls a flew Fighting Bad Luck With WedfSiiig Bells A, marrlage i. lucky in certain parts of India. A fourth marriage Is not jSo when a ma.. wishes to become a benedict after two previoas trials and still evade supersti tion he evokes a very clever scheme. Mr. Man of India goes through a cere mony with a bird or animal or flower, as the bride in order that bis next wife will i be ' the - fourth and not the third . venture. Though this may 'sound ridiculous to many of our American people is it. any more so' than the lengths to which persons inl this ' country will go to avoid the number ,18. or "unlucky bogies? days" and ' other household I A School for Foresters. A, SCIIOOIi of forestry will be established st Nanking University by the govern ment of China and will be under the super- vision ' of two experts from the United States. I: I isi considered nn- TWENTY-FIVM to thirty-five pounds of soot for every inhabitant in London falls during the course of a year, according to careful 'estimates. ' t BRITISH Honduras is now in comniuni-. cation with the rest of the world.. A wireless station has been "established at. Belize. ' WANT a safe candlestick? Drive a small nail into the bottom of a candle to make it float upright then place in a tumbler of water. ; ' 4 -f : " ; THE highest temperature, ever known in a human being was recorded in the case of an Italian recently. A victim of lung disease, his temperature was 138. r ---?' r - '.: I -:: THE copper mines of Cyprus, in ancient time among the richest in the world, may be reopened, backed by United States capital. . --:-; - '- ",.t : . - ; " : - - -. Resuscitating Device Keeps Woman Alive t RESUSCITATING machine such as Is used byj the United States government in mine rescue work recently kept a young woman alive "under water tor one hour and ten tnlnutesL 3 "3 - ... This remarkable feat was performed dur ing the session of the Safety and Sanitation Exposition in New York. Conducted under' the direction of a former : surgeon of the United States bureau of mines, the test was performed for tie purpose of Illustrat ing the efficiency of mechanical respiration. The .breathing mask, which has a double rubber tube extending to a band-operated j lung apparatus, wss strapped over the girl's noae and mouth,' and she was then In a :1,m irltu-frnnt tank. ' - Though submerged tor one hour and ten minutes, she. did no breathing of her own, accord.' I ' : . , "' ' i ':' ' of com Dressed air through the train and to and from the brake cylinders on each car. A system of levers transmits the force ex erted by the compressed sir to the brake shoes that part of the brake which comes in contact with the wheel. As the control ling force of the brake is air and the con trol Itself ts givesfrom the engine, brskee on the firs4 car apply first, on the second ' i a. m . l . . car im(, i(iu au uu tu uio mi l ui iraio as the flow! of air travels from car to car. About eight seconds elapse from ! the time the brake application Is started by tbe'en glneman until full braking force is obtained on the lastj;car.of a twelve-car train. This, serial action results in surges and shocks, throughout; the train during brake applica tion, the shocks increasing in severity as . the train length Is Increased. "The nw brake differs from the old mainly in ; that the control of the com pressed air is electric with the result that ; tha brakes are applied at the same instant, on all cars; the full braking power of the train is exerted ( in two seconds after the englneman turns his lefer." . .....- j-- ... ; : if..,,. .' .; ' ' ' ' '.. ' . Thus It is not the sudden stopping of a train that causes i the Jar, but' the slowing down of the cars one after another, those tn the rear of the train not feeling any of the brakes; until about eight seconds after, those near the engine have slowed down. ' ' '' ' li I' II I Mill M II I ' j lrMM.....M...Mli all I li V. M mJKJK . ' Radium Gains as v , Cure for Cancer OF 746' cases; of cancer treated In the Radium Institute of London last year there were 6$ apparent cures, while 828 were reported improved. Many of the cases came to the attention of the institute In too advanced a stage to be remedied. The comparatively new curative known as radium is especially useful In dealing with ' superficial cancers of the1 skin and with cases .that are not easily operable. Conveniently handled, It. gets at growths which cannot be reached by mean a of the X-ray a. . Because the patient can take radium in the mouthcancer of the mouth, Mm '' . i L ...ill . : dealt with by radium. -: . ' Those birthmarks commonly known as "port wine stains' seem to. be effectively treated with .radium. A (porter suffering from this disfigurement : had repeatedly been refused employment lie went to the ; institute and after a time the mark was nCtnlK-radlcater '