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Flesherton Advance, 1 Jul 1897, p. 2

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{ mU RRIPS THE WOELB. tas WIRELESS TELEGRAPH PER- FECTED AT LAST. itlr«ad|| Bf Him Hrni nnd Rerrlvrd )il|iiiiils W> â-  DIMancrorS* milm IUMCaiilanr«ii> lumniunKallon with Hie IHtriiUMl Parte «r IU« tUtrlh Wllliuat WIreit Ihe rmnlkle Oaldunir. At last Nikola Tteala lias reached a ^int in his invent igatiou of the pos- dbllity of telegraphinK without wires to make a poeitive annoumement of his achieveioenta. It has lieen one of his dreaoM for years. Ho lias worked at tite problem long nnd anxiously. Hut hu tAlk haa always been guarded and (ndefloite. He spoke of the possibility that the thing might be done, and once, » few months ago, he went so far as to call it a probability. He wa3 more positive and sanguine then than ever before, but still he was not ready to talk ot achievements. I!ut at last the work has rejiched a stage where the modeat attitude of uncertainty and hoi>o gives way to positiveness and as- surance, and the definite announcement of Bucoess is made. Mr. Tesla declares tbat be has produced electrical devices with which he can actually send and receive me.ssage3 by a system which can be ao applied as to make it possible for an operator in New York to commun- icate with ease and certainty with the people of any part of the earth, and perhaps, even with those of the stars. If any of these are inhabited. " Tiie machines which I have complet- ed." SHr. Tesla said, "will carry niea- Mges through the earth for a distance of twenty miles or 00. I have sent and received signnls with them, and 1 feel confident that I aim not mistaken in laying I hat the problem upon which I have si)ent many days and nights is solved. Of course it is possible ttiut I am mistaken. I have made mistakes before, but not many. I shall at once make machines which 1 expect will en- able me to telegraph to ANY PART OK THK EARTH as rtadily ua 1 can within a limited dis- tance by means of the ones 1 have. " If I have a mai'hine which will throw a stone from here to there," con- tinued Mf. Tesla, pointing from the floor at his feet to the door of his >:il>- oratory, " then I do not need to doubt that I can make one which will throw the stone fifty miles if 1 can oootrol the nece.-'sary power." Mr. Tesla was not read* to e,\|)lain In detail the devices which he u»es fur telngraphing williout wires, but he talked freely alK>ul the principles which were involved and iiuide it clear that the resulla were obtained by the u.te of same form of his electrical oscillator, recently presented. As long ago, lie •aid, aa when he was putting up tele- phone wires In Budapest he observed tbat electrjool Lmpulaes were carried long disluncei without the interven- tion of wixei. 'I'here was a telegraph cable one and a half or two miles away over which messages ware being sent by the Morse code, and at times be could read these messages Ihrougli the tele- f>hone. This set him to investignting he elec.trleal condition of Ihe air. Me became satisfied that the meH.sa,ge.i were conveyed to the teleiihoiie wilrB.^ by in- duction. la 1890 ha announced his belief that by means of electrical impulses of an extremely high rate, never yet attained at that time, bright light might be ul>- (ained from Crookes tuhes, and in 11^91 he made (his announcement in r>md»n, " I believed at tlvat time that tele- graphing might be conducted through the (NSJth without wires," he said. " but I w as afraid lo s.ay so, for fear I .should be laughed at and dlsrreilited by the older and abler men who were thelaad- •n in electrical science." It wa»i not until [H9'i, when he ap- peared l)efoTe Ihe National Klectrical Lighting ANttocialion at .St. Louis, that he first declared Ilia belief in the possi- bility of telegraphing over the whole earth WITHOUT WIRIRS. Than he explained Um geaer.il meth- od which he believed woulil make this poKsibla, if he muld gel a laacbine which should be able lo di.'^turli the etatio electricity of the earth. In that v^aT lie had an eleclrical exhibit at tan World's li'air in t'liirign. hiuI mn- ong Ilia visitor' was Prof Iletuiiiliul/. " I spoke of my project to Prof. Holm- hiolz," Mr. Tesla aiiid. "and (old him how I thought it might be accomplish- ed. 'Yes, it ia possible,' he said, 'but l( would lake much power.' I waa very niuoh pleased with this adniis-sioii by this great master, snil gratified that ha did not rondniiin Ihe idea, as many of my co-workers liad done. I did not toll him then that I had already solved that part of Ihe problem." The solution lo which Mr. Tesla re- ferred was, brought about through Ihe work which he had done In developing hia electrical oscillator, which be was working upon p.irticularly in (vinnec- tion with the (iro.luction of light from Uie Crookex tubas The energy of the eleclrio current, like tliat of flowing water, is displayed only when Ihe cur- rant is interrupted. ,\ familiar exam- ple of this may be aeen in the com- mon medical battery where the cur- rent flowing from one pole to the oth- er may be paaaed through the most â- enaitiva imtis of the Imdy, a>nd yet not he felt. I»asa the same cuirrent through a Huhmkorff coil, interrupt- ing the sacotidary current by the vl- bralionaof the commutator, and it will twiat up the miiwlea of the strongest man and make him powerleas Before Tesln'a time interruptions of Uiis sort had l>e«n produ<«d only by me- Dhaninal mean* ana could numrwr only m few baodr«4 a second. His electrical •viHatoT acrfa Upon the principle of a bell, where a single stroke of the ham- mer HeU llie metal vibratln^^ with a rapidity commensurate witn its bulk, and these vibrations can l>e continued indefinitely by repeated strokes of the tiammar at slow intervals. Mr. Tesla now makes oscillators which will in- terrupt the current MILLIONS OF TIMES. In a second. " I have perfected my maohinea and got excellent re.sults," Mr. Teala said. " J have thought ot this sy.ste.m of tele- graphing not as a mere comniercial matter, but as a means of bringing the nations of the e^irtb closer together. I conceive that the useot I'i's system will not do away with the um- of telegraph wires, but will on Ihe other band make more work for them. It is true that millions of my machines mi^hl be used without those of one lot interfering with those of another lot, but the mnn- ner in which I conceive that the Systran should be used is this: Have a machine at each commercial or political centre and send out fVom each place under an international agreement, all the poli- tical, financial, or other news, to ^)e read at every other part of the world at the same moment. The news could be di.stribuled then over the wire lines or otherwise. Financial panics and even war.s might be done away with if this were done." Jfy. Tebla says the transmission of signals ia not "the only result which may be achieved by his new scheme. â- 'This was what I at first thought," he said, "but from the results of my experiments I am ii<nv hojieful that I shall be able to substantiate another thingâ€" the transmission of power from pla<'ie to place." If it were proved possible to tran.s- mit iwwer without wires, and to con- .siderable distances, it would solve THE GItaiATKST PROBLEM which now constricts the use of eleo- tricity for uiuny purposes. " If ever we are able to communicate with the btars it would bo by this meth- od," Mr. Tesla declared. When asked what the effect of elec- trical Btoriiia would be on hia system. Mt. Tesla said they would undoubtelly interfere more or less with the work- ing of the instruments locally. ifefore the interview with him end- ed ho made a statement regarding his Crookes lubes lighting system which will interest many persons. " The system is now a commercial pos- sibility," he declared. " 1 don't Idie the word 'commercial.'" he added, "but wliat I mean is that I have succeeded in bringing down the ixist of the li^ht so that it will compare favorably with other means of lightiiij;." " Mr. Tesla tot>k ui> one of the many lighting tubes which were lying aliout, and. starling the current through one of hia oscillators, held the tube near the j>oles. The tube w.as shaped like a gridiron, and was alwut eight inches Miuare. As it drew near the electric arc of the iwcillator it began to glow, and when it was close by it was all ablaze with a iiure light. " If it were night, Mr. Tesla said. " I his light would diffuse itself over this whole room, so that you could read anywhere, although the candle power of tlus light ia low." ILs lights woulil he supplied by wires running acrocia each room, but they could lin produced without any connec- tion with the wires if desired. Another form of tube, he said, gave a light many timas more brilliant than the arc elec- tric light, and this w is suitable for such things as searchlights. SAVED BY A TASSEL. Adveolar* With 11 .HailmMU In a MntlUh Bnllwn> tarrluKr. A trifle may j»rov6 a life-protairtor. Augustus Hare and bis mother were alone in an Emglish railway carriage, wliicJi had seuld for six or eight i>er- sons The train >vus moving out of the station, when three men iiame running along Ihe platform and attempted to enter the oarriiigo Only one succeed- ed, for Iwfore the others could follow him Ihe tram had left the platform. Tbou bumethiug b i.iipened which might have ended seriously had it not been for the diverting imwer of a, trifle. Mr. Ilaie, describing the adventure in "The Story of My .Life," stiys; In a moment we saw that tba man who was alone in the oarriage with ua was a maniao, and thai those left be- hind were his ke«<|itirs. fie uttered a shrill hoot and glared at us. Kortun- ately, as the dour liuiw\d to the ta.s- ael of the wimlow was Inrown up, and thi.s attrHcte<l him and he yelleil with laughter We sal motionless at the other side of the carriage, opposite each other. He »eiii«<l Hue Laaael and kftpt throwing it UP ami down, hooting and roaring with luughler. Ouc« or tw ioi) we fancied he was about to jiount'e ujion ua, but then the tiLssbl attrai'.fajd him agaiu. After ul>uul eight minutes the train stopped. Ills keepers bad aui'oetided in gettiivg Ujiun < he guartls Iws as the train left the islallont and hutaring his shouts, slopped the train and lue was removed by force. UlOH-PlUeKD Bl'MnLEUUKS. ALany yearn ago the fariner.s of Aus- tralia iuvporttid bumblelwes from Kng- land and sel tlueiu fniv in their clover fields, llefure tlie arriva>l at the bees olover did not flourish in Australia, but after tlneir oomiing tlk' tarmora liiul no more diffi<'ulty on that score. Mr. Dar- win Imd shown that Iniiubleljees were th» only InaeotJi fond or oloveir nectar which ,po(i-«s9o<l a prqUiscis sufficient- ly long to re<u\h lip bottom of tlve long, lube-like flow'ers, and, at the same lime, a l>ody heavy etiough to bend doiwn the olover-lnead so that the ,po^ len would fall on live inaec>t's back, and thus lie uarried oiff to fertilize other flowers of the sacUta ciiieciua. Accord- ing lo a writeir, the bumiblebees sent to Australia oost tlw farmers there alKiut half a dioUwr aiiiieioe, but they l>roved to be worth the price. WILL DINE EI^EVVHERB. iHoboâ€" Have you some worb, madam, that I oould do in exchange for a meiU f I.ady of the houseâ€" Plenty of it, %Iol>oâ€" I'll bid you good day, madam. THE VAXUE OF PUMPKINS. For a number of years it has lieon our custom to try to grow a crop of pumpkins with the corn. Grown in this way, they are a very uncertain crop. Sometimes the cirop is almost an en- tire failure and again a success. In 1895, from thirty-eight acres of corn, we gathered only three loads of pump- kins, and, of course, when the crop is ao light, they are mostly of poor quality. In 1896, ftrom forty-four ac- res, we gathered seventy-six wagon- loads, that would average about "2,200 pounds per load, mailing upwards of eighty tons. As all the land was sown to wheat and rye after the corn was in the shock, s,ay3 Mx. Jamison, all the pumpkins must be gathered before the seeding is done. With a driver, two of us would load and unload fourteen to fifteen loads peir day. We have long since learned that, if we wish a crop of pumpkins in ooorn. we must be lib- eral with seed at planting, and last year, I think that we used between two and tluree gallons of seed. We plant oorn with a two-horse planter ; each grain box lipids about one peck of corn, and we put in seven quarts of corn and one quart of pumpkin seeds, mixing them well with the corn. If they sprout and start well, they may appear thick at first, but some are de- stroyed in cultivating the corn, and the bugs get a good share so that we never have them too thick in the end. On the heavily uxairured fields last year, the crop was more evenly distributed than on a field that had not been plow- ed for several years and had not been manured. On the richer, low-lying parts of this field, we got soma of the largest ; on the thinner part of the field, the crop was very light. Readers may wonder how we seeded the land with all the.se pumpkin vines over it. A twenty-inch disk harrow lapping half way cut them to pieces ao complete- ly that they were very little trouble to us when using the drill. We always plant pumpkins with all the corn planted. Last year, we hoped to sell the surplus to the canning fac- tory, but on our own account, we fail- ed to make a sale, because the factory owners thought oura were not the right kind. It came about that two carloads were topped out with our pumpkins, and they proved to be the finest Ihey ever Ixjught. Hut as the demand was limiled, only four wagonloads went that way, and they to fill out cars for other parties. AVe sold and gave away about one-third of the crop. The remainder, as many as iiossible. were consumed on the farm. Nearly all Ihe stock on the faxm eat them. Five or six horses eai them in great <iuanti- ties. The three milch cows and heifers have all they wish, and they seem iiev- a(r lo tire <if them. We coniiiienced feeding them the la.st week in August, fir.st those that grow between the corn and the fence, wTiore they had sun and air to rijioii them early. Years ago, when we had a "Ij^om " crop, we tried sheltering them in a long, double-sid- ed rail pen. the sides being filled with straw and the top ixivered with straw. In tluit way, we kept them till nejir Christmas; since that we have piled tliem out of diKira, and aimed to fee<l them out by the time freezing weather came. It was omr intention to build a rail house protected with fodder tor some of the beat, but the wel weather crowded other work so much that we Wttre not able to get it done. All the time after they were ripe our hogs had all they could consume. We have five brood sows and a male hog in a clover pasture to themaelves; they ate a thirty-bushel wagoubox full of pumpkins per week, fed twice a day. thrown over a staked or ridered rail fence; thone that did not burst oiieu in th« fall were cut with a corn knife. We aimed lo feed al>out what the hogs would eat up clean before leaving the feeding grounds. The proper way to feed pumpkins lo fatten hogs is to give pumpkins first and then corn. The pumpkins do not si«)il the apiietites for corn, but cnrn wouUd for the pumpkins. 1 think that, by feeding pumpkiuM, we gel more corn consumed than we could without them, so we are the gainers by wliat the pumpkln-s put on and the incroased amount of corn digested on their accooint. Hogs do much better h.iving the run of the clover field than if confined to corn and pumpkins, and kept in a Biiiall lot. Sows that are suckling pigs get pumpkins in quan- tity, and a light feed of slop, but no corn; the pig,s get corn in their wan- derings and are very fnt. With full feeds of corn and pu'mpkins withouit slop or grass, both sows and pigs would get too fat, which would be a mistake., U'hile Ihe pumpkins are mostly water. It is in a shape that pleases the pig wonderfully well. The solids are, in the main, carlnihydrates and tend to fatten, hence they should not be fed to young pigs with too heavy quanti- ties of grain. When we go to feed them, wo always carry a corn knife to cut thenii ojion; a spade is an extM^llent tool for thi.s purpose. We never remove the seeds, because the Iwigs and cowa like them be«t, and we are certain that they do not harm. When cows are fed pumpkiius. Ihey dry up, because the gra.ss IS slM)rt or else because they lay om fall too faat. Hogs eat them better when fresh cut; if too many are fed they eat out the seeils and strings and leave the tiolid imrt ; and where this IS made st.ile by lying in the sun and aiT a while, they are slow to return to it. When we wish to take out the seeds to save we give the pumpkins a few jolts on the ground, turning them over while doing it; then when cut, the eeeda will be found separated from the strings, and are easily wash- ed. The canning factory previous to last year, i>aid from 92M to |8.26 per ton; last year, they bought them de- livered on the curs at my atntion for fl 80 per tonâ€" not a verv encouraging price, but better than lettina them go to waste. 'Ihe poultry alar* had I heir simre. Flat pumpkins were selected, ; UL open and placed with the flesh part ui) â€" and the chickena consumed all but the rinds. I do not know of any crop we could have grovi-n that would have .suited us BO well for all tno stock on the farm. We made no effort to teai-h the horses to eat them; possibly they thought stolen fruit the sweetest, as they ate them mostly by reaching across the fence. HOW TO HANDLE COLT8. The best food for a colt is such aa is best for its dam, that is, pastur- ,ige, oats, corn and hay, writes a cor- respondent. There are a good many advantages gained by the colt in work- ing the marea. They usually then get grain and hay which those that run with the dam in pasture seldom get. The little colt soon leoraa to eat out of the feed box with its dam. and a lit- tle extra feed should be thrown in for its benefit, A mare at work and suck- ling a coU should be fed liberally of both corn and oats, and this is the beet food for the colt. Being accustomed to eating grain will make weaning not only easy but the colt may be weaned much younger with safety. The oolt should be well fed and shelteired, es- pecially the first winter. The second and third winter it will do well with more outdoor life and less grain feed- ing. Colts should have an abundance of good liay, and shelter from storms. In handling a colt my first object is to make it tame and friendly. In this la another advantage of working the mare, because the colt ia oontinually at hand, at least thTee times a day, to be petted and rubbed. 1 like to have coltB taught to lead and stand tied at quite an early age. As 1 do not Idee to have them follow to the field I find it a great convenience in having them well broken to the halter at least by the time they are six weeks old. It also helps in breaking to work to have the coll taught to lead besiae another horse. After tne first winter the colts need very little handling, their time being then be«t spent in growing. Give theim good p-astuje in summer and hay, shel- ter and plenty of exercise in winter, with the run ol the stalk fields durintf the day. It is hardly worth while to break a colt to work before it is large and strong enough to perform useful work, 'I'he fall after it ia two years old or the spring it is three is the Vk>st time. Preparatory to its being put to work it ahould be put in the barn and fed regularly twice a day with grain. This feeding will harden it* flesh.put- ting it into condition to endure work. The two sources of trouble in breaking a colt to work are the fear and ignor- ance of the oolt and lack of strength. If it has therefore never known tear of its trainer aud is already taught to lead beside another horse, and also has sljength to do the things that are required of it, there will really be no such thing aa breaking to work. I have just been using a colt that was rais- ed this way. He has been tame sinc^ a foal, being early broken to lead, and was not in the least afraid of me or how I went atxjut him. He has l>een fed corn hnd oats regularly since Mhrch. MAINTAINING THE DAIRY. 1. Select the best cowa in your herd, or that you can buy* to keep, and dis- pose of the othera. 2. The best c»>w for the dairy is the one that produces the greatest amount of butter fat in a year, for food con- sumed, when being rightly fed. 3. To renew or increase your herd raise the heifer calves from your best cows. 4. Test your cowa by weighing the milk of each cow for a year and test- ing it oixasionally with the Babcock milk tester, and know how much but- ter fat each one does produce. 6. U»e the best dairy bred aire you can get ; one. if possible, that has a long line of ancestors that have been first-<'lass dairy animals. 6. Keep a record of the time when the cows were bred and have no gneas work about the time of calving. 7. It is neither profitable nor neces- sary for a cow to go dry more than four to six weeks. 8. The udder should receive prompt attention. An obstacle may be remov- ed from the teat the first hour, that might baffle science lateir. 9. After sejiarating the calf from its moth«r. feed the natural milk as soon aa drawn, for a week or ten days. A POPULAR KINO. wrdea'i Mouarck tba Tallest and Haail >on>»t In liuraiH-. The K(n^ of Sweden enjoys the en- vialde distinction of being Ibe tallest and handsomest monarch in Kurope. His Majesty is siiiiit)ly adored by thie Swedes, wiut frequently find themselves brougiht into closer and more familiar relations witlii hi<m than is usual be- tween BUibjects and their .sovereign. As att' instanoe of tihe King's deter- mination to be a good fatihier to his people. His Majesty is "at home" in his {laliw© at StookJiolm every other l"viie8day atternooni to such of his sub- jects aa care to come and see him. The only foriuulity consists in the visitor sciudiug Up bis card, wiuereupon he is inxmediatcly Ualh«re<l into the royal pre- aeiu^e and received witib a aimplicity aind friendliness wfhich entirely do away W'itb wervousnees. WEIGHT SO^LDIERS MAY CARRY. xt ia found, as a result of some in- teresting ex,i)erimeuts recently carried out by the German WiaV Office, that for an ordinary man a weight not ex- oe«ding 48 iwunds could be carried for 25 miles, if Hue bem^ieratura does not exceed 60 degrees, without any injuri- ous •ffects, even when continued for a numl«r of days. If, limvever, the tem- lieratuire is Itt diegi-oi*; higher, the same U>ad hua a teiuiiorary effect on the oiganisuia. .\ wieight of fiO pounds is the maximum weight which on or- dinary ,soldier could ivirry 25 miles a day ou several consecutive days. NEWS FROM THE MIMES. OUTPUT OF ORE IN THE 1-AMOUS KASLO DISTRICT. CeHeralMlnlus New* From Varlcw BHUak Columbia Uolii Field*. The business of the Kaslo and Slocaa railway still continues good, and thera is a considerable movement of outgo- ing freight. The passenger traffic ia also in satisfactory conditio*. Tha movement of ore, while showing a« in- crease over the previous weak, haa not yet reached the volume which may fairly be expected when some of tho largest shippers again enter the lists, which may be expected in the immedi- ate future. The Payne waggon road will be completed in a day or two. and the accumulated output of the mina^ wiU then be rapidly forwarded. Tha Noble Five properties will soon re- enter the lists with a larger produo tion than at any previous period iji their history. There also appears cre- dited to the Coin Mining and Milling Company, the shipment of a carload of ore, consigned Ito the Kootenay Ore Company. This is the corporate name of an association which has leased the Ajax claim, and is now engaged in working it, with results as stated. The receipts of ore at the Kaslo sta- tion of the Kaslo and Slocan railway for the week ending June 3rd are aa follows: Mines. Poanda. Ruth 1360,000 Slocan Star l!iti,000 Washington 128,000 Autoine 33,500 Coin Company, or Ajax 32,000 Sunset „.. 16,000 This makes a total of 719,300 pounda or very nearly 300 tons. The bulk ot this ore goes to Everett, Washingtom. while that of the Slocan Star and Washington is sent to the Omaha and Grant smelter, at Omaha Nebraska. A. sntall portion Is sent to Smelter, Montana. MINING NOrfS AND TRANSFERS. Thie Kaslo Montezuma Mining Com- pany has awarded u contract for aaOd- loot tuunel at the mine at Uazelton and Walker, and in order that it may be completed at the same time aa tha new coacentxator, they will probably put in a amall compreaaor plant to hap- ten the work. It is expected that th* concentrator will be ready to atart ua about the 1st of (Xtober. Plana ana apecificationa fear the work have beas prepared and sent out. ' The tug Kaslo, ou NV'ednesday eveo- i..g, towed up from Ainsworth a Langpa barge laden with about 90 tons of or« from the Black Diamond mine, con- signed to the Kootetiay Ore Company. It will be run through the sampler of the ixmipany to-day, and is expected to prove valnable. Fred. Steele has transferred to th« Black Diamond Company all his inter- eat in the agreement for sale and pur- chase of the mineral claims Hlack Dia- mond and Little Donald, situated neaX the town of Alnswurth. These claims are now being worked, and hoisting machinery has been put in. After two or three transfers of ia- teretjts to them, D. E. Crafts, and J. L. Pierce give O. G. Laberee an option of purchase of the mineral claims Lit- tle Mbud and Granite, situated on tbo east 8h<irie of Kootenay lake, about a mile from the mouth of Kootenay river. Laberee has assigned a four-fifths in- terest in tha option and agreement to W,B. Ives, of Sherbrooke. Que. James Pmith and W. R. Winatead have sold to Henry C Fowler, of To- ronto, their tuinaral claim, the Hazel. Ux-ated about a quarter of a mile west of ^Vhitewater station, on the Kaajo and Slwan railway, and adjoining the Kaslo and Poirvupine mineral claiiua. Not xuuch work has been dona upon this claim, but it ia favourably situat- ed. Alexander 8i>roatt, mining recorder at Ntew Denveor, has bought from Eli Carpenter, the veteran pronpei-tor of the Slocan, the mineral claims Koote- nay Qtieen and Slocan Chief No. 10 situated at the head ot the south fork of Kaslo creek. He is to pay (500 caalx f250 in three months, and a liK« amount in six months. M. Anderson, of RtisKlunid. has sold an undivided one-third interest in the Pacific mineral claim, situated on tba south side of Sixteen-Mile iveek, and abt>ut 1,500 feet east of the Amelia Florence. The Blue Bird properly h;is not been worked for a couple ot years, but it i« intended to ret<ume work during the present season. It was amongst the earliest shippers In the Slocom camp. THE FMGHT OF THE SUN. Acttronom«<rs know that the sun, aoh oonoitanied by the earth and the other {ilanet^ is movirig towajxl a point In th» northern hetwens with gre«U; sijieetl. Just what the velointy is, however, cam- not yet be told wnth *rtaiaity. Prof. Simon Newix>iul>, in a rwvnt lecture, said that it wTas jiroftwbliy between fiv« mile« and nine miljes i<or seicojnd Tha bright ataj, Alipha iLyrae lies not far from tine iwint toward whi»ih the aiun is moving. .Kvery moment w<a are get- ting nearer to thie plaiie where the.stajt now is. "Whiftn sliiwU wo get there I Probably in lees than a million yeara; tterhapis in half a million." THIE TIIMB. What time ia itf ' . Time to do wtoU; Time to live bietter; Give U(i> the grudge; Answer that letter; S(>eaking that kind word to aw«etea a 8or\row; Do that good dieed y^m would leave till t<vmoprow. What time ia it? Time ilo l«e earn^wt; iLaying Uii> trwiauro; Time to lie thoughtful C'tioosing true pTuMure: J,oving st«>rn ju/<tioe, tf truth boinj londâ€" Making your word juat as good aa joiu bond. Y

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