MARCH 1, 19211 “y; QQFO'FQ sclnuluc ulscnunv - 4 0 §‘%¢§%H W .”.‘ . Se of |_| u“; ‘Qxyush... in. a century. The beautiful and "zlaréfiifl: Mo“ 51"". Dljpljy ‘significant phenomena. presented __O,| and Cement - The ure studied at a greater cost in Auroral: Green Llne-Durabtl- effort and money than anything "y c, Timber__D°g w,“ chm, else so fleeting. l'rof S. A. Mitchell __,.'1a1\|,_g Aystsflu Safe - mentions that ho has travelled charcmfl as a Guam" Qub- more than 40,000 lll|l€~5 to witness slitutc—-Llffi in the Desert. four of these eclipses, and the total ‘ _____ time for scientific observations m- ummy “if 1n bpggklng was less than elcne unliuuttrs. O , the most important 'l‘ests by the U. S. Bureau of plltfllll 1i f it so tar make. Prof. Mines indicate that contact with . reminds us in Nature oil tl0€~s not affect the setting or “s. [pug ago u.» 1897 tho strength ui’ properly mixed ,1 with the liquid in culncn. weakening obsi-rvcil in .|_ while he was un~ (lemming underground water from _ iui- idea of llfBpilflbg oil wells has probably been due to qpgg hy dipping an gliLJVhlCll by agitation has pre- idm» of curbonaco- vcntetl normal hardening‘ ul the _ .| hm; liquid oxygen was cement. ‘ in, .1, ilj.‘ others. and the‘ Since the founding lust year of FUN h improved, notably by tho oyster nitrification Dlllllt at ln< lamp, H, ill-hung and Kowafsch in wood, Long island fifteen thousand u \\'ll~l found that to be bushel-s of oysters have been treat- ~ liquid should contain ed and sold to consumers. The rc~ 51,. cont. 0f oxygen. The port of tho New York State (‘on- i; nitrates caused Ger- servutlon Commission describes . the Will‘. to- _ make the plant anconslsting of two con- liquid oxygen exploslv- crate basins, each with a capacity and this was ' so of six thousand gallons, amt each ...t iu several Lorraine capable of handling two hundred u... m-eitch have not bushels of oysters. The sterilizing l the system but agent ls hypochlorlte of sodium, d it. Liquid olzyflflll Dfflduced by electrolysis of sca- - v0 certain striking ivnter. _in the preliminary ax. hey are safe, for they perlments, it Wits shown that the ry a magazine of oyster closes its shell when ex- r the mine, while in poised to an excess of [ran chlorine, ire the charge soon and it is thus possible to nlllily a low. through evaporu- dos of chlorine strong enough to iiquiil. They are not completely destroy and infection on 21in coal mlccs, how‘ the external shell without affect - l ilruwhuck being that lng the inside. Place in clean salt THE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN l PAGE NINE The Queen's love of things in miniature, well ‘known to her intl~ motes, has led to the production of one ofthe most unique and fascin- ating products of present day art and industry. It is the Queen's Dolls’ House which is now com- piste, and which is to be llltlfftltl on view at the British Elupirc Exhib- ition, near London, in April. Tho Dolls‘ I-louse is a perfect model of the best in domestic architecture, and in the art in this decade- After the exhibition it is to be preserved at, Windsor Castle, and eventually in some national museum to pr serve for future generations a means of viewing the accomplish- ments of post-war British Empire, it is an unusual idea, and if it had occurred to our forefathers in gen- erations pnst we could now have on record the sort of homes. they lived in and tho surrontlings of their daily life. The suggestion of such :1 lllllilb turo home came from ‘tin- aged Princess Louise, Duchess of Argyll, a daughter of Queen Victoria, who founded the lloyal Canadian Acad- her husband, who was at that. limo thoMarquis of Lorne, as the Gov- ernor General of Canada. Sir Edwin Lutyens, who dnsigxiezl the famous cenotaph in London, has directed the work and designed the housu itself, which is just five feet high and eight feet six inches long. The walls can bn raised, so that cat-h of the beautifully proporlioizctl rotmis is visible. The picture above shows a corner of the library, where two hundred books, each one inch high, have been contributed by fitmous oi yet flameless. water. tho shellfish disinfected 'y two years, but the a natural manner from lnfectedi ,. ty is so short-usually luaterlul within the’ shell. Thei u or rm. .- minutes and never as purification process is claimed to? 0119* "glut minutes-that the be very simple thoroughly effec-. - mnvxit can be visible tive, and so low ln cost as to bei mall section; of the commercially practicable. With the. watorg along most coasts, it is lie-i lleved that it will soon be necessary" to have oysters, like milk' duly certified as they can only be after proper sterilization. _ The charcoal automobile fuel brought out by lnrbert, n young French engineer, is curried in tin- rogulnr gasoline tank. A piece oi‘ burning waste ignites it, when it gives off a gas containing carbon monoxide, hydrogen, nitrogen, and carbon dioxide, and this gas-wool- od and freed from dustmls passed into tho carburetor. ltllxetl with air. tho gas is then drawn into the cylinders. For the same power, a larger tank is required than is uscd for gasoline, but it is stated that. the onglne needs very little change. and that the cost for fuel ll reduced to one-third of that of the gasoline engine. About eight insects are found to % i be lble to endure the bare ground ‘nl-I ‘s. < -l- r heat in Palestine under tbc summer luh at midday, whn the surface temperature may rise to 1300 to Hi0 F. P. A. Buxton reports that the - internal teiuperaturo of caterpillar was i040, but that of the e Nobel chernintry prize of ground surface was 1110, both ‘759 minim, " , plants and animals when living. ’ " i“ . being cooled by evaporation. A ahlad- had-l’ ‘n ' “i? dead caterpillar was hotter. When m“ m“, hm“ w?“ “a therelatlve humidity rises ubovo a! authentic! walked In and qo per cent, as happens constantly tlaimed lhly par cent. ~ at nlghtI-ln nearly all deserts, deml r. Fritz Pregel, profeuornot emistry in Austria, received U writers who have in some cases total eclipse of the suu outside soon clense themselves in “rule” the “"“'“9°"Pt5 Wm‘ the" own hands. Altogether, 600 artists have contributed to the making of the library. Each room is equip- ped with electric light; pictures in scale with the rest of the house, adorn all the walls. 0n the desks lbucd is only elsht day! rapidly increasing pollution of?“ minute despatch cases’ tmmmm pens, half an inch long; in the bed rooms are tooth brushes, three- ciny of Art during the regime ot“ MINIATURE HOUSE WILL PRESERVE - COMPLETE EXAMPLE OF 1924 HOME quarters of an inch long, and tubes soldiers, about as large as a mos- of pasta in proportlon- In the klt- quito. The jewel room holds cop- chen is a vacuum cleaner, racks of ies of soihe of the crown jewels, in dishes; _in the trunk room are real gems; the- fruit cellar has trunks, suit cases and golf bags, all stocks of preserves. and the wine made to the tiny scale- The walls cellar has bottles of real wine. The are exquisitely painted, the wln- garages hold models of all the best (lows bung with the finest of silks, known cars, and there is also a per- the nursery has toys, including lead feet in every detail. plant-s absorb moisture grecdily, and those form an overlooked water supply for desert animals. The gratin line of the spectrum of tho aurora borcalls, due to the presence of-somo unknown gas, seems to hold much "of the mystery of the upper air. L Vegnrtl finds that the aurora is emitted chiefly at helgh-ts ot’ 60 to 75 miles, the top of the streamers ex- tending upward to 250 to ‘sou miles, and that the green of the spectrum continues as the most prominent line throughout the en- tire range. Though most of the line-s agree with those of nitrogen, the green and three other lines are not in the table of nitrogenlines determined in the laboratory. They cannot be attributed to hydrogen, helmlum or oxygen. Vendard con- cludes that nitrogen must be tho predominant gas throughout the auroral region, but at the upper limit of the atmosphere the nitrogen frozen into a dust of fine bald c ' reels, redwood, and catalpa crystals. The electrification produc- a“, D1530“, M 125 to 17; Chestnut “*3 m“ "‘“'°_r“l “gm i“ evldemly wind black walnut are entitled to duc to radiation from the sun. The 1mm‘ M m0 w 139; dense summer“ dust crystals, moreover, scatter the lypnmv 1mm so m 10g; d-Qnsu Doug. sun's light. anti offer an extilanuqhlfl m.’ 75 m mo; whm, ‘qua 7o tron of the blue color of the sky. ‘Pm 90; ask and mckory, h) u, 55; Almmer Frolic!‘ Physimsl- H- |hcmlock, 35 to 55; maple and birch. Bongurds, has suggested that tho I40 m 50; wmuw and basswood’ 30 green. line isalue to argon. lie 4o 40. and true firs, 25 ‘u, 35‘ thinks that this gas, despite its Hail. from any arctic desk,“ density, uray be carried tar tipwurd ‘qpccles of the Samoyed, u; north. by yolcunic eruptions, and that ‘Om Aim and E,n.ope__“,as use,‘ for other argon particles may be l"'°' the beautiful white cloth lately ox- jected from the sun, becominglhibithd to the London Royal dearth?“ ‘"1 emefl"? m" lSoc-lety of Arts. The’ raw material illlllllflllllere- was (lflllllltltl from the fine under of "alive Anlefican wood! the coat that grows naturally twice Forest: Products Laboratory at each yew.‘ - ' Madison. Wis, shows the black locust and usage orange to be the _ ntost durable, and that tinder con- Laughtel ditions favoring decay these will _ _ probably last twice as long as “bile there is infection lll dis- whlte oak, and from three to four ease and sorrow, there is nothing times us lomras red oak. Rating|ln the world so irresistibly contag- tho group of whltooaits a t 100 in ions, as laughter and good humor.~< durability, most of the cedars, the Charles Ilickens. ~ A mllllon dollar hydro-electric developed at Malay Fllll 0h "W" ice» “Mr ... *.,lr.i..;,-~" '7 aw: i a- auzhr... dramatist"..- _ _‘:__....._...._=.-.._, , .0 -_ _ , v “Qa MALAY FALLS HYDRO- gow, Bullet-ton. Wntvllla. Trenton, , , I . n dlmna of llftrthrce mlleuhftzu otxizwfigiowwhgie“ v "$M"kk.."w'.lry.“ o’ ‘ Q tn-nfuhldmrftifihslzvfhd theta: llLdlfll, ll In wlntbrmimt l‘ no‘! vlcw of the mhln dam. n a vluw of the power noun under o animation. ' m. p, . or-zvstormzu? roa PIOTOU cdunrv. N. s. pllnt n bum,- built to supply ugm and new" toltvftal °f NW’ m" and Plmu ln Piston aanmho va Imelda. The power ll t» 5° Harbor River 1M hr u I “geek! he ‘vlncc by tranumlaulnn line, U. .1. . _. . . _ ,. . _ .’ » ' 1 " - . l" l l I