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PERPETUAL MOTION IS H[RE AT LA Seattle Youth May Have Tapped exhaustible Reservoirs of I ture's Energy-Electrical Expe Puzzled but Inclined to Belie Trickery Somewhere-Not I possible. Has Alfred M. Hubbard, 19 year Seattle boy, tapped the inexhausti reservoirs of nature's energy and h nessed to the use of man the illin able power that permeates the u verse ? Hubbard has announced the perf tion of an invention he terms an " mospherie power generator,' and ma claims that caused Seattle's laedi electrical engineers to doubt the e dences of their senses and to pause L fore they condemned as folly the i sertions of the youth. With the apparatus, inll appeara a small coil of wire about six inclh in diameter, surrounding a lern' nently magnetic core eight inches lo the entire cont rivance easily carri on a man's hand, Hlubbard gave a dei onstration several mile-, from his I oratory that, regardless of the prin pIes involved, ' evertl Seattle engi cers declared without, parallel in ceh trical history. Marvelous Machine, Anway. An ordinar yincamdescent electi light connected with the two tern nals of the "atmospheric power gen rater" glowed to a cherry red for ne ly an hour, and IHbahrni d volunteer to permit the lamp; to horn for many hour at.s was necessary to se isfy the most skeptical. The young inventor says there a no m1ovingL" parts connected with 11 generat I'. that. there are no hidd batteries, storage or primlary, a those wloc witnessed the denonstratic nmlde sure that there was no outsi, cennection with any source of ow< llubhard's explatnation of the ph nonenoni is that he has succe' led transforming the earth lines of ma noetic force into electrical energy av; able for use. While electric; ' engineers we highly skeptical and1 bell to the pt sihility of frontd, still as Georn Quinan, sup~erintendenclt of th< eh-ectl cal optrtions ot the Itiet Soi Traction, jIlt and l'ovr comlp:l saidi, "'whateve r ti-' tad hats done is a mael ou s anmon: tn;i inn.', All the exprt:; .greed that, if Siubbard tecl t ;her(' are no mo In glarts an I ncell I batter /q W V I R ::f ue .: rc ,.. . ~ rr r . :". :- v.- ,ai, t Si4' li !{ I[dib 8r'Vi+ the ihvention is revolutionary. The; had no explanation to offer for its op Teration. J. D. Ross, superintendent of the municipal lighting department and ai authority on experimental electricity leclared it possible that Hubbard ha< ra stumbled on the answer to the ques tion of the ages--can the power of thi ve atmosphere he utilized. n- Idea Still Possible. Carl Edward Magnusson, acting )l dean of the University of Washingtoi c college of Engineering, declined eve e to hazard a gues sas to the principle ~" involved in the device. - "It sounds like trickery to me anl I can hardly believe that the experi ment as described to me actually tool ,c- place," he said. "I will not ventur< it- an opinion until I have seen it." de IC. F . Uhden, special engineer of th< 11 city in charge of the Skagit rive i- power development, declared himseli e- intensely interested in the inventior s- and after canvassing the possibilities of chicanery admitted that he wouldn't ce dare form an opinion until he had seer es the apparatus in operation. a- "It's always possible," he said 19't hough there have been many to make ed the claim and no one to substantiatt n- it in the past." ii) But Hubbard because his device las ~ not been patented owing to conpli 8- tions arising with his financial back c- ers, it. is said., has refused to allow t. it hical men more than a glimpse at the apparatus. ic All that could be learned from him i- r rdn the construction of the in e- strutuent follows: S Ir The machine, he said, is composed of d sev.ral lavers of wire about a steel is core, which is nagnetized after the t const.ruct ion is complete. Once mag netiz'Arl, the (ore needs no further at re tant iio, he said, al the entire device isv :ll ie'iver enert'y un rem ittingly for m :i indelinite leieth of tilme. d ".) phice a maiximum of 50 years on mt the life of the getaerator," said flub I b-"nl "simtply because one must fix r em maximnm. I know no reason why e- it shoudl not. last until time rots the toin inuun way from'c the wires.'' I hilbt id denis Ihit his device is a iti ner)itoarlmotion mac"hinie. Ile mains t'in. i--t it tips thy' vast storehouses re " i. : fi" ene r y ot;1 that the appara s- i' unde upon sotund sc ientifie -i (Got idea IF roo Spatrk. id ' 1 h::\ - hlitc"hed mly wVire(s to the tail y, o universe, you might sa,'h it said. IIilhhardi has at h i 1h school edttca is t i t. His ifather is in electrical engi 1- . h sai. : i t' the f:anily fotmnerly ySt'moiiane. It w\as while he w\"a:= 77-~ * - I tce Not staat c\1(1I disiti ~they i T tchat ~- - ter r in charge of an air compressor at the Hercules mine near Coeur d'Alene Idaho, that he first became interested in the problem. "I watched a great belt flit by me , day after day," he related, "an I I noted as thousands before me had, that I could draw an electric spark from, the belt with my finger. I had always been interested in electricity and had studied a great deal from books since I was a small boy. One night I conceived the idea that devel oped later into the generator. I will not say that it utilizes-in any way the current derived by friction as from the belt. That is not accurate. I am not pripared to divulge the nature of the actual translation lof energy." Hubbard says he can obtain four kilowatts, equivalent to more than five horse power from a contrivance weigh ing less than 12 pounds, and that he can build a generator less than 18 feet in length to develop, 18,000 horse pow er, or sufficient electrical energy to drive the new battleship New Mexico. Hubbard offers to build for $50 a generator large enough to drive a motor car, but much smaller than the present engines. The Hubbard gener-. ator, according to its inventor, would give the airplane unlimited flying ramree.I The young man says he worked 18 hours a day for two years before he came to Seattle and during the year since perfecting the apparatus. His first models was built a year and a half ae-o, he said. ilubbard asesrts that his four kilo watt machine has continuously ex ("ited the equivalent of 120 ordinary 25 watt house lamps to full brilliancy for three months. The device (luring this time, he says he is ready to take oath, <ii tot re:ceive outward stimulus and, at the time the test was complet 0:l the lights were burning at the same brilliancy. Many Fiascos Recalled Tihe apparatus, should it prove to have the merit its inventor asserts fors it, enii-ineers, said, will revolutionize 'ie orld ( f power and motion. , All .teamn and gas engiens will be junked, exneris say. The most ponderous and oplie i:lted eleel ic:il gJieneratilg dle 'es. steami and wa ter turbine gen r: tors andi all the mechanism of trans is'on wires and tranl.formers will be holtl'. Illect.rical transportation can n11 )r a new' ("ra. Air tr:nspritationi vill b. I vail huinlreds of years. Sub'nari'e priact ie will be changed, 'nii n 't- import:mt of all (heap, al nei~xJ nasive power, place:I at the 0 of every'' men anl w\oman. 'he :mim-mel('men,(t of 1lubbard re -.''ed to th rinds of many the furore tearing the Philco R Wall that makes p a Two Year Guar; has taken five years to do it-f lost: painstaking scientific resear 'IIILCO RETA INER. 3ut it For the result: is the longest, str 'er put behind a storage battery ing, lighting, and ignition. The Philadelphia )iamuond Gri the Pliico Retainer was and is one in a thlonsand hav failed to< an tee of eight en mont hs. Buzt t nondo Gid~ Bat tery with the Phi het ter. In gruiellingt tests, it ha per'tformued any other h~att ery w I. Inl actualn war servicj(e in the lemnonst ratedl its sutpreme pract i< L- new paitenited featunrc, the l'huco Retainc ittedl hi~iid ruibbesr, which is plauced flat agains each poitie platIe. In any liattery t his act 'ratie and11 fall off. Thei fasiter tis oc:curs, th< out. Altho thle slots in the l'hilco Retainier Ilow the free paissauge of acidi and current, e lie Retainer is, in etect, a solid wall whi ial firmily ini lace, is rneans for you at least six mc service secured by a definite guat .adelphiia Battery Serv M.L. 11 ~E LPWA\ MAN A?1l~li C ? m$~ created in July 1918, by the request f Garabed Ghiragossian to congress for at special patent protecting his rights as the inventor of a "free en ergy" machine. The patent was granted. after nu merous members of congress had seen the machine in operation and testi fled to its apparent powers. For some reason, not fully explained the engine faield to render the service its in ventor asserted for it, and nothing has been heard of the device since. ---o ONE MEMBER LIVES IN STRICKEN FAMILY New York, Jan. 17.-Death won a louble victory in a. grim race with an express train and a government mail airplane tonight when two more inem bers of the Paul Delbene family, poisoned from eating olives, (lied in Fordham hosbital owing to the late arrival of the special serum necessary to save their lives. Hospital physi ians, however, hope to save the life )f the only surviving member of the family of seven, a ten year Old gi:l, with serum received from Washington Another package of serum, which was eing rushed eastward from Chicago )y mail airplane, failed to arrive, the machine having been disabled and orced to laud at Black Oak Ind. The luid was reported to have been trans Ferred to a mail train and is expected .o arrive early tomorrow. rhe members of the family who have already died from the olive poisoning ire Paul Delbene, his wife, their two ons, Antoino and Dominick and two irothers of Paul Delbene, Angelo and Dominick. Health Commissioner Copeland an iounced tonight that he had traced the loisonel olives to an East Side store l'he olives originally came from Cali Fornia, he said. There were 48 cases n the shipment, but it was learned hat part of them had been consum dl without harmful results. \cw York, .Jan. 17.-Serum neces mary to save the lives of two persons. )live victims, arrived here shortly af er 7 o'clock tonight from Washing 'n. It was rushed by ambulance to ordham hospital, where the patients, Angelo n'l Dominick I)clbenc the two rnr- -- mmm DSSible - rntee - ye years of the ch-to rear the = was worth it. ongest guaran for automobile d Battery with a good battery. >utlive its long he Philadelphia leo Retainer is4 s oultlastedl and acould buy or U. S. Navy, it :al worth. r, us a thin sheet oh t the active material ye material tends to quicker the battery re so numnerous that wch slot is so narrowv ich holds the active nthus extra, bat ran tee. ice Station McCullougqh, lanager, NING, S. C. ELPA Tobacc PERIE WAR MAKI Dickson's The Rex surviving members of a family of six, ire in a critical condition. Four of ;he family died from eating the pois )nous olives. The serum arrived at the hospital ;oo late to save the life of Angelo, vho died shortly after 8 o'clock. Al hough he was alive when it reached he institution, he was dead before an njection could be given. Physicians said they hoped to save he life of the other victim by admin stering the serum at once. P'ALES BOCIHE TOLD OF RAINBOW LADS In ransacking his desk oyesterday a ormer member of the American cx led itionary forces who saw hard serv cc in France (luring the fierce fight ng in 1918 uncovered some German )ropaganda that was thrown in the American lines by German aviators, Phis service man is a well known Co umbia boy and he has a number of nieresting souvenirs collected during ,he war. The paper dropped in the lines and )ought b.:k to America hears the ime "America in Europe." On the rount page a large (art ol appears sith American troops following the (ollar mark. It is entitled "The Mo adorn 'risade," meaning to imply that \ merica entered the war for monetary eaSons. S'ever:t.! ::1 i:-g stori s of interest tppear in the paper, one of these be ng a news i'1im saying that the Rainbow' division had been practical y anlnihilated. In telling of seeing housaids and thousands of wounded \ merican soldiers being carried to ':ngland the paper says: 'They are the 'emnants of the ceclbrated 'Rainbow' lividiion that. has been recruited from ill the states from the union. 'T'h is division under General Mangin and iitr unler General Rawlinson has ween almost annihilated. It has melt -d down to a handful of crippled sol liers. The 'Rainbow' division it will >e rememb1ered, is the one that has >con accused of cutting the throats of nore than a hu nd red German pris mieirs.'"' A picture of gn i A mericain sold ier inI -aried and a statement from him aying that lhe has beeni fair ly treatedI >y the Germans. The sheet is full >f misstatlement s about the allies. AICSINAl (IIlA NG;ES '100 I onldon, .Iian. 2,-I--vent the grea I Vool ieh arsenal has turned fronifi the nanu facture of war materil to the >eaceful puri suits of tradle. Ten thou and buttert churns have been mainu actured'( in the great builing which ly fail to keep on hand a bottle o nmentha is a certain preventive aii gr ppe, pononma and otheri re SA l WILL NOT STA] --It is'ap~pliced ext It has this cham other salves, it r ~ bottle of Vapoom .protection for ar - '- If your decal > Seed! INS N!' s-ALL Drug Store ill Store. 22222222222ttttit2t22ttittttttttttt!tti2t!!t i ARE YOU NERVOUS? Maybe Th, re is at Cause For It That You Can Correct. Many who suffer from backache and weak kidneys are unnaturally irrit able, fretful and nervous. Not only does constant backache "get on the nerves," but bad kidneys fail to eli minate all the uric acid from the sys tem, and uric acid irritates the nerves, keeping one "on edge," and causing rheumatic, neuralgic pains. When suffering so, try Doan's Kidney Pills, the medicine so well-recoitmended by Manning people. Read this Manning resident's statement: Mrs. B. rF . Louder, Dinken St., says: "I had a slight attack of kidney trouble about three years ago which started with smart pains through the small of my back. Headaches bother ed mte a good deal, and sometimes 1 was so nervous I couldn't hold any thing in my hand. I was bothered with dizzy spells, too, and black specks often came before me, in fact, I was feeling all out of fix. A friend told mne about I)oan's Kidney Pills and I got some. )o:an's not. only helped me but cured me entirely of the trouble as I haven't been bothered Prize te, at all dealers. Don't. simply ask for a kidney remedy-get l)oan's Kidney Pills--the same that Mrs. Louder had. Foster-Milburn Co., Mfgrs., Buffalo, N. Y. during the war sent out vast quanti ties of munitions for use against the Gertns. The nickel purchased to manufac ture bullets is being used in the ar senal to make five cent pieces for British IIonduras currency. There is a worli shortage of locomotives and railway ears. To meet this, it has been decided to manufacture these ar tieles in the arsenal an work already is ttnderway there on orders for 2,500 cars 100 locomtotives and for repir i work on 700O cars. Thliis serves a dloubule puirptose. Tbhirty thousand persons no0w arnet mployed in the arsenal whtere i10,00)0 were at work in war1 timue. Thousands of' these mtent are skil led muntition workers. By ke epinug these busy amakintg locomo ives and1( othetr Peaceful produoct s, the governmtent not only gives themt work buit retains their services. 1la event of antothcr war thley' could return it.. mtediately to tihe munitiont works in wihicht they arse skilled. One of the s idel inte produtcts (If the arisental sitnce thIe armuistice has beent tlhe strik(ing (If 0,000,000 war muedals. The Vapor Treatment FOR / Influenza, Croup and Pneumonia Mothecrs who know thec aiguahi oIf waSi mg hlpjlesslyV through age -iong1 ho(urs for thei phyac ian whlo may not airnvc intim w vill har d f this effective croup r emedy V'apo. d specifbe for colds, croup, inifluenzi, spniatory ailments. N THE CLOTNES ly abisorbedi thitugh I the ports of the vapors risc anmo are sinhaled dircet ly imbrantcs A dIolel-actioJn remedi.y, taint to pirocie ratifactory roulIts. acte ristic that di stinishecs it frotm wtill not astaint thIe clothles. liuy a enthia T[ODA Y. It is an invaluable inusignificaint price. Oc, and $1.20 Bottles at rug and Generai Stores. er canntot sutpply you order from UG CO., N. WAlmke.. r N. C