THE BELL IN THE SEA How Ocean Liners Hear Their Way In Thick Weather. FOG SIGNALS UNDER WATER. Method by Which the Submerged Gong Is Operated and the Apparatus by Which the Sound Is Picked Up Miles Away— Port and Starboard Lights. To those who go down to the sea in ships probably no discovery in recent times has been of more importance or tends more to save life than that of the possibility of signaling from ship to ship and from ship to shore by sound, writes Sidney P. Walker In the London Mail. It literally, when fully dev eloped, will enable steamers to "hear" their way under all conditions of weather and particularly in fog just as w ell as they now see their way on clear nights by the aid of the lights that each ship carries and those dis tributed round the coast of every civ ilized country. The whole apparatus hinges upon the fact that water is a good conduct or of sound. The readiest example of this of which the writer is aware is to be found usually at mineral baths. There is nearly always pumping going on in connection with the baths, but under ordinary conditions the pump is not heard. When undressing, for in stance. to enter the bath one can very rarely hear the pump, but immediately one is in the bath if one places one's head under water the pump is almost painfully evident, and an engineer could easily count the strokes had he a watch at hand. For signaling purposes a bell Is em ployed, immersed some distance under the water and inclosed In a chamber, the hammer being worked by com pressed air operated from the surface. The sound of the strokes on the bell Is transmitted to a distance of several miles and can be heard by suitable ap paratus. The hearing apparatus con sists of a microphone, a modification of that we use every time we speak to the telephone, inclosed in a chamber Inside the ship and connected with the bridge by wires in the usual way. The microphone chamber Is filled with a special liquid which the inventors have found to answer the purpose best, and there are, as at present ar ranged, one chamber and one micro phone on each bow below the water line. In the chart house on the bridge are a pair of telephone receivers, sim ilar to those we put to our ears when we talk through the telephone on shore, and a switch, enabling the receivers to be to either of the two microphones. Several of the lighthouses on the coast of America and some, the writer believes, on that of the United King dom are fitted with bells as described above, which are rung at certain inter vals, each lighthouse having a different number of beats, so that any particu lar lighthouse is distinguished by its bell, just as in clear weather it is dis tinguished by the arrangement of its lights. An approaching ship can tell within a very close approximation, as mathematicians would say, how it lies with regard to the lighthouse, because the bell will be heard loudest in that microphone on the side of the ship on which the lighthouse is. and the officer of the watch can steer accordingly. All ships carry a red light at night on the left hand, or port, side and a green light on the right hand, or star board side, while all steamers carry in addition a white light showing on both sides. Neither of the lights can be seen astern or for some distance toward the bows, the limit being what sailors call two points abaft the beam, a little astern of her middle point so that when approaching a ship from astern no lights are visible to the ap proaching ship, but her full light 3 are visible from the ship approached. When two ships are approaching each other from opposite directions end on, each ship will see the other's two or three lights and can easily steer to keep out of each other's way. There is a simple rule for this, and incidental ly it may be mentioned that the dan ger is least in this case, provided that both ships are properly handled. The danger of collision arises principally from ships crossing each other, and for this also there are simple rules gov erned by what is called the rule of the road. Leaving out the question of sail ing ships f"r the moment, the ship which has .the other, the crossing ship, on her own right hand (starboard) side has to keep out of the way, and it does so by turning slightly to the right, or to starboard, presenting her left side to the other ship. Whenever a ship has to give way to another tlie color of the light of the other ship is on the same side lis that to which the helm must be moved. Thus when a 1 light is seen on the vjo-ht hand l arboard) side the helm is put'to port the «T * the light seen. Similarly when .• ' Pi' 4 crossing from port to s • -^-ov. * ing her green light, that ; :v. . «.-•! on her starboard side, the steamer puts her fcelm to starboard to clear. This rule could be followed quite as easily with eound signals. Recommendation. "It seems to me that I have heard most of the ideas advanced In your speech before." "That," said Senator Sorghum, "merely goes to show that they are good Ideas which will stand wear and tear "—Washington Star. CROSSING THE BAR. Dying Words of Some of the World's Famous Men. Nothnagel, who died alone in hi.s room, noted his own symptoms to the last. A letter to his assistant is said to have ended as follows: "Written late on the evening of July 0 just aft er experiencing these severe attacks died of calcification of the arteries." Traube also made observations 011 him self to the very end. Locock expressed a wish to be present at the postmor tem examination on himself, and among Cuvier's last recorded words is a re mark, as his fingers twitched involun tarily: "Charles Bell is right: 'Ce sout les nerfs de la volonte qui sont mala difs.'" Dyce Davidson, professor at Aberdeen, died immediately after say ing to his class, speaking of the next meeting, which was never to take place, "Four o'clock on Monday, gen tlemen; 4 o'clock." Several doctors have taken their leave with a blessing to those around them. Astley Cooper's last recorded words are, "God bles§ you, and goodby to you all!" He had previously said to his physicians, Bright and Chambers, "God's will be done; God bless you both!" adding, "You must excuse me, but I shall take no more medicine." Benjamin Brodie was heard to mutter, "After all, God is very good." The saddest of all recorded last words are probably those of Oliver Goldsmith, who, when asked by his physician if his mind was at ease, said, "No, it is not!" On the other hand, William Hunter's mind seems to have been full of bright thoughts at the moment of death, for he said, "If I could hold a pen, what a book I could write!" Pasteur and Darwin, though not be longing to the medical profession, are venerated by it as teachers. Darwin's last words were, "I am not the least afraid to die." Pasteur was offered a cup of milk and, being unable to swal low -it, murmured, "I cannot." He passed away with one hand in his wife's, the other grasping a crucifix. Lastly are mentioned the last words of Mirabeau, which are said to have been addressed to a doctor. He wrote on a slip of paper, which he gave to his physician, the philosopher Cabanis, the single ford, "Dormir." Another ac count, which may be an expanded ver sion of this, is that after begging for an anodyne he said reproachfully to the doctor: "Were you not my physi cian and my friend? Did you not promise to spare me the suffering of 6uch a death? Must I go away carrying with me the regret of having confided In you?" This is rather a long and rhetorical speech for a dying man.— British Medical Journal. Japanese New Year Cakes. An annual event in Japan is the making of the New Year's cake, which every family must have if good luck is to follow it during the ensuing year. This cake is made of a peculiar variety of rice, boiled and pounded in a great wooden mortar until it is of the con sistency of dough. Although the pure white dough is often colored yellow or pink, the shape of the cake is al ways the same —that of the sacred mir ror, one of the three sacred symbols of the Shinto faith. A piece of this cake is offered to the Shinto deities because It is of the shape of the sacred mirror which wooed the sun goddess to come out of the crve where she had hidden herself in wrath and thus saved the land from total darkness. Each mem ber of the familj* takes a hand in the manufacture of the New Year's cake. Even the baby is carried out and his baby hand guided in lifting the heavy wooden mallet for a "good luck" blow. Enough is made to last nearly the whole year through, and it an important place in the daily menu.— Leslie's Weekly. Queer Fish. At first thought the electric chair, which sends the criminal to his doom, would seem to be a refinement of in vention possible only to man's genius. But the electric eel can benumb a horse so that it will drown before re covering from the shock, and the fiercest fish is rendered helpless by the gentlest touch of this creature. Small wonder these eels flourish in their na tive waters and seldom fail to find food enough and to spare! At any rate, the gentleman angler casting his fly upon the ripple is unique. Surely no animal can match the rod and line! Yet there is a fish with a long, slender filament drooping forward from its head, tipped with a fleshy, wormlike appendage. The fish lies quietly on the bottom and awaits a nibble. Soon a minnow* makes a dash for the waving luscious morsel. The huge mouth opens, and—the finny angler has dined! A veritable Shylock this, with rod, line and bait of his own flesh and bone!— Chicago Record-Her ald. ' WKsn the Nose Bleeds. When the nose is bleeding never hold it over a basin or~hold the head down in any way. This only causes further rush of blood to the broken tissues in the nose. The head should be held up and back, the flow being caught in handkerchiefs or cloths. One of the most effective and simple means of checking a nosebleed is to press on the upper lip. Near the undersurface of the lip runs the artery that supplies the interior nasal passages where the ruptures occur. If this is pressed, the flow of blood is mechanically checked, thus allowing the blood around the broken tissues to congeal and seal up the opening. If merely pressing with x'ne finger does not succeed, place a wad of paper under the lip and fold the lip over it, holding it down tight. Again, if this does not succeed and a drug store is near get some adrenalin, saturate a piece of cotton with it and apply to the interior of the nose from where the blood flows. The Rocky Mount Record, Thursday, February 13. 1908 ■ Rex all Dyspepsia Tablets form the foundation in the Bridge of Health. 1 ,1| Health is just across the river for thousands thousands whose stomachs are sick, and ilrrrf [{ 9g which grow worse instead of better. Their stomachs need a rest, until nature's forces can ¥S£3 &U H recuperate. . % v: ■ ■ HrvT. Ninety per cent of *the diseases of mankind originate from a disordered stomach, and ® not to keep the stomach m healthy condition is to court serious disease. ||jf gj|9 s§ The Kexall Dyspepsia Tablets are guaranteed to relieve immediately and cure perma- ma BE m nently all the most distressing and painful forms of Dyspepsia and Indigestion. This guar- MiMS # antee is printed on every box, and money will be refunded to all who are not satisfied. 1| Rexeli Dyspepsia Tablets are Warranted toCure all Forms of Indigestion and Dyspepsia I Money will be refunded, exactly as printed on package, in case of dissatisfaction. Price, 25 cents, at our store or by mail. m GRIFFINS DRUG STORE I ' Tl] "11MBMTTT1IIMIIIIIIII MI || Ml IP liilHHlllllll THE DIVINING HOD. No Mysterious Virtues In Lhs Dowser's V/ar.d. • In experiments with a divining rod as used for discovering underground supplies of water one of the geolo gists of the United States geological survey found that at points it turned downward independently of his will, but more complete tests showed that the down turning resulted from slight and—until watched for—unconscious changes in the inclination of his body, the effects of which were communi cated through the arms arid wrists to the rod, Xo m'wotrcnt e*" t l, • rod cau.;es oulaide the Lody could be de tected, and it soon became obvious that the view held by other men of science is correct, that the operation of the "divining rod" is generally due to unconscious movements of the body or of the muscles of the hand. The ex periments made show that these move ments happen most :-atly at places where the operator's experience has led him to believe that water may be found. The uselessness of the divining rod is indicated by the facts that the rod may l»e worked at will by the operator that lie fni'r to t ; c*"v ' o£ water running in tanner other Channels that afford no surface ir-f Jea tions of yater and that his locations in limestone regions v.ho.c- ..cuci ..s in well defined channels are rarely more successful than those dependent on mere guesses. In fact, its operators are successful only in regions in which ground water occurs in a definite sheet in porous material or in more or 1c : clayey deposits, such as the pebbly clay or til!, in which, although r. few failures occur, wells would get water anywhere. Ground water occr.iyS under certain definite conditions, and as in h .:il regions a stream m&y he wherever a valley '' T miliar with rct-Ir conditions may ground water can ho i'ou,. ance either electrical or ineel ic has yet been successfully used f . d tecting water in ph:ct. \.her: 'hi common sense or mere ;: not have shown its presence 1 well. The only advantage of e:. toy ing a "water witch," as the op of the divining re l fr ed, is that skilled sei'ykt c v ed, most men so employed lacing ' on er and better observers of the rence and mover e: J than the average —w American. A Pet Boar. Bears unless hur good natured anh. ing pets. "When I war ' .' service at Alaska," c r "we had a pet hear o . we called him Winer". :. r " climb to th over hand by the rath... .• ventured out on f there he stayed, and haul 'him down. ' . 1 over the head a* ■ went into the himself to sugar ai d tackling niad as a harness of a p-.-. p".;;. -■ . would drop him ovc:" attached, to take hi. ' ,t" landed in a native 1. t frightened the occupanh wits. ITe war ar and, although he s . he was never trc When he was I often did, we vr t # till we saw • two Ihdc These frere his. eyes and away every time." Sho Carrie;! a parcel. The laugh is on one of the ait ants at the Congressional lihrai. at Washington. One of the ruh .? is that no one shall be allowed to •: :ry a i-e.r --cel of any kind into the building. Cue day a tall young woman appeared at the door, and when tSe attendant saw that she had a parcel under her arm he told her that it was against the roles for her to take it with her. She demurred and pronounced rule absurd. There were certain parcels that people should be allowed to carry theru, and so forth, and so forth. II;:.. the ma'iTinsisted that he must en force the rule and that she would have to leave the parcel with him until she came out. That settled it. The young woman deliberately opened the parcel, took from it three pairs of black stock ings that she evidently had just bought, and, hanging them over her arm. she gave the attendant the paper in which they had been wrapped, say ing: "There, please keep that until I come out. I have no parcel now."—Chicago News. What Audiences Believe. The light suddenly went out during one of my performances in Waterbury. A panic was in prospect. However, I shouted out: "Ladies and gentlemen. I am about to perform a most marvel ous trick. I have here a lemon; but, of course, you can't see it. lam about to cut it in two and bring out of it an elephant!" The audience settled down. Squash! I cut the lemon. "And now," I said, "the elephant has gone. It has walked of? the stage. But, of course, you can't pee it. but tlifjjt doesn't matter." .enough. there was hoard a slow, i-iuhflng j ouad quite appropriate, al thraigUJfijjhvjs made by the fat stage mmr,o was shuffling" across tne boards in his slippers. The light re turned, there was much applause, and all was well. The next day a man stopped me in the street and said he considered that trick the most marvel ous he had ever seen and would I be giving it again that night! It's true!— Horace Goldin in CasselFs Magazine. ■ • # Getting His Money's Worth. A New Hampshire man tells of a tight fitted man of affairs in a town 'hat state who until recently had observed to take an inter t "eh matters. Suddenly, how ••hccaine a regular attendant • .n-vice, greatly to the aston • r oMiis fellow townsmen. '• \:t do you think of the case of GUI Ke. hum?" said one of the busi ness n : .} of the place to a friend. "Is it rrue hat he has got religion?" '\7c:!. hardly." replied the other. ; > -ct is it's entirely a matter of • with him. I am in a position ic know that about a year ago he k. :: : - pastor SSO, which the latter ':e to pay. So there remained .. .p_..ig for Ketchum but to take it out MI peyr^reat." Struck Out. " C who always employs two ...uil. man and wife, was talking to :i patient one day about a couple ; ust discharged because the man drank. re: marked: "It is so strange, but it the way with a man and .. ,A J . If one is good, the other is no .lent asked him, "How is It . on and Mrs. C.?"— Philadelphia Home Life of Genius. =o . or (before breakfast)— Where arc the papers, my dear? His Wife ac 'ess, absentmindedly)—C-curse : They are far beyond your reach,! xl, !; heaven! And I'll die a thousand / . hi-.ore you can wr-r-r-r-ring the a _ o k_er—Jack, 1 mean, the forgot to leave them this morning! ;ck. A Roason. . allied Mr. Henpeck's little boy, "r.'hy lid Patrick Henry say. 'Give me liberty or give me death?'" ' 11l may have been out five minutes after the curfew rang the night be fore."—Chicago Record-Herald. The Highest Applause. Tou would compliment a coxcomb doing a go->d act, but you would not praise an angel. The silence that ac cepts merit as the most natural thing R the world is the highest applause.— Emerson. Experience Is the extract of suffer sing.—A. Helps. ... . THE ESKIMO KAYAK. This Greenland Craft Is a Most Diffi cult One to Handle. There is no craft so difficult to bar die as the Eskimo kayak. The only boat familiar to us which in any way resembles it is the racing shell, but if a crack oarsman of one of our crack colleges were tied into a kayak and told to shift for himself even in smooth water he would have a hard time of it. The kayak has been evolved through hundreds of years of necessity. With out it the Greenland Eskimos at least would not be able to provide their daily bread, or, more properly speaking, iheir daily blubber. It is singular that all the materials used in the construction of the kayak come from the sea—driftwood for the frame, sealskin for the covering, thongs for the harpoon and dart, ivory and bone for bow. stern and keel and for the various implements. The wom en prepare the skin covering and stretch it over the frame till it is as tight and firm as the head of a drum. On such occasion there is great ex citement in the community. A regular "kayak bee" is held; even refreshments are not la eking, for the owner of the kayak treats to coffee all around when the work is satisfactorily done. The completed boat is a triumph of ingenuity and skill. It is about eight een feet long, sharply pointed at each end. Its greatest depth is six inches and its width about eighteen. It is entirely covered save for the little round hole into which the owner slips, pushing his feet underneath the skin deck in front. This hole is fitted to the person for whom the boat is designed, and his thighs completed fill it up. When he is seated in it and his waterproof jacket is tied securely round the edge he is able to defy the waves which wash over him or the rain which beats upon him.- The six thong loops ar ranged on the deck in front and the three or four behind hold his imple ments—bird darts, lances, knives and, most important of harpoon. A littlestand is arranged directly in front of hins, 'upon which is coiled the har poon line, and behind him on the kayak is the harpoon bladder, which is attached, inflated ready for use, to the line. The most expert are apt sometimes to be overturned. It may be by the attack of a walrus or even a seal, by a careless movement or an unexpected ly large wave. If he does not right himself at once, he is inevitably drown ed unless a comrade ionics io his as sistance. The usual method of turning the kayak upright again is by using the paddle as a lever, holding it along the side of the boat, pointing it toward the bow, then sweeping it through the water, but those who are thoroughly proficient are able to do it by means of their throwing stick, their arm or even their hand. The Earth and the Moon. As the original earth nebula con densed the lighter materials were dis tributed quite uniformly over the en tire surface, but these are now miss ing from one hemisphere, the reason seeming to be, as Professor G. H. Dar win demonstrated in 1879, that a por tion of the earth's crust has been thrown off by tidal action, form'ing the moon. The surface density of the present continents is about 2.7, the mean density of the moon appearing to be 3.4, or not far from that of the missing continents to the .depth reach ed. The moon, it is computed, equals a mass having the surface area of the terrestrial oceans and a depth of thir ty-six miles, and it is concluded that the crust when thirty-six miles thick must have been torn away over three fourths of the earth, the remainder breaking apart to form the eastern and western continents, with Australia and other islands. These continental and island fragments floated like great ice floes on liquid materials of a density of 3.7 or more. This great rupture gave the earth's surface its chief irreg ularities, with a mean difference of three miles between the levels of the continental plateaus and the ocean feeds, and as the water condensed in the cooling depressions, with the Pa cific where most of the moon had been, the dry land was formed that has made human life possible. We may consider that without this change the earth would be now in the condi tion of Venus, with water over its whole surface. The Oldest Forename. In ancient times people had one name only, as Adam or David, and In order to distinguish persons of the same name it was the custom to affix the description "son of" Isaac or Jo seph, as the case might be. Thus we get Solomon ben David among the Hebrews and Evan ap Richard among the Welsh, to quote two examples. Al though the argument that those names were not strictly "forenames" is not without weight, yet it is responsible to accept them as such, seeing that the application had to be supplemented by another for the sake of distinction. We are therefore entitled to Include them within the scope of the question. Adam and other early Biblical names are regarded as the oldest for obvious reasons; but, excluding these, the choice falls upon Marmaduke, which Is the modern rendering of the ancient Chaldean Meridug, also written Maru duk and jNlerodach, the god who inter ceded constantly between the angry Ea and the humble Damikna, his fa ther and mother. The Romans used*- , both forenames and family names, and of the former two that date back about 2,500 years are still with us—namely, Marcus and Lucius, represented in modern tongues by Mark and the fem inine Lucy. The old form Marcus is still retained in some families. Horses and Music. Regimental horses have been the subjects of musical tests, and nearly all enjoyed the experience, only a very small percentage of the animals re maining indifferent to sweet harmo nies, while equally few showed active dislike. The great majority were soothed, inspirited or excited by music. Most of the horses, like the war char gers one may suppose them to be, en joyed the bugle above any other instru ment and neighed gallantly jvhen it was sounded, but thoroughbreds and colts generally were found to prefer the shrill treble of the fife, which roused them to great and sometimes unman ageable enthusiasm. This was the more significant because the fife was an unfamiliar instrument to them, not being generally used, as is the bugle in the French army—Paris Cor. London Telegraph. Model of Economy. A certain farmer who lives out in the county and who is noted for his closeness in money matters has a twelve-year-old son, who is as indus trious as his father is penurious. Recently the father and son made a compact whereby the latter would re ceive 10 cents for every cord of wood he sawed and piled in the wood shed. Immediately the boy became very busy at the wood pile, and his earnings have been piling up at a rapid rate, his mother keeping her son's hard earned savings for him. "What arc you going to do with all your money?" the thrifty youth was recently asked. "Goin' to buy a new saw with it," was the reply.—St Louis Globe-Demo crat. Benjamin Constant. Benjamin Constant, having sided with Napoleon during the hundred days, felt the need of justifying him self when Louis XVIII. returned to power. He wrote the king a letter with that end in view and called upon Mme. Recamier to discuss the subject. She asked him quietly: "Have you finished your letter?" "Yes." "Are you satisfied with it?" "Entirely satisfied. I have almost persuaded myself." Marrying. Everybody is expected to marry once, and there is not much talk when you marry the first time, but people look wise when you marry the sec-, end time and roar when you marry i ♦nKlflAJi CLIaHa #