HEAT AND COLD. 



In the summing up of the matter we find that heat 

 and cold act in harmony eighteen hours out of every 

 twenty-four, and the remaining six hours we find the 

 sun working upon the particles of matter as a governor 

 in overcoming extremes in revolution of the body. 



The contraction upon land and also its expansion 

 when subjected to the action of the sun's rays tend to 

 aid in carrying on the revolution of the body, but has 

 no such power as the expansion of the waters and air 

 of the planet. 



Nature has a provision for every eventuality and 

 has more than one safeguard in carrying on her w r ork. 

 In the case of cold upon the particles of water, cold 

 tends to contract until the waters lower below 38 de- 

 grees of Fahrenheit's thermometer and then it tends to 

 expand. Expansion being in this case an additional 

 safeguard or governor in the revolving process to aid 

 the sun in keeping the revolution regular. Thereby 

 tending to guarantee the equilibrium of the body as 

 well by stopping a rush to a particular zone or portion 

 of the earth. No extreme of climate can possibly 

 bring about disaster until the final extinction of one of 

 the forces that carry on the work. 



During the absence of the suns rays of propulsion 

 on either ocean it will be found that the greater por- 

 tion of the body remains within the range of the cohe- 

 sive tendency of the waters of the globe. Thereby 

 proving that the waters are a necessity in the aiding of 

 the revolution of the body as a whole. Should the 

 revolution become abnormal and more than the gov- 



38 



