Show THE STUFF THAT DREAMS AtE MADS OF Shakespeare made Pu < k declare that he would put i girdle round about the earth In forty minuter The dream ol the HlxtcfrHh century became u rnlgluy reality In the eighteenth Jules 1 Verne was most Interesting in his I vagaries Men laughed at his travels 1 under the sea and through t the air and I space thai has no atmosphere to the moon and his swift Journey round the earth In eighty days Hut the HollandIs sailing under the surface of the sea It Is believed that the all 2 ship la on the eve of n pronounced success I suc-cess the automobile Is but B material isation of one of his dreams while his swift trip around tiie world will be reduced re-duced more than 50 per cent In the next I two or tinea years And Jules Verne still lives and watches every advance as but n fulfillment ful-fillment I of what has always been in his thoughts And the lesson IH that the shrewd and practical men of the world should not be too ijulck m declare what they cannot fjule see as chimeras The man on the height t > es the rising sun soonei than floes the I man I In I thn valley and there are mental heights and depths as well as physical When one lookH buck and contemplates the miracles which havc been performed In this century the steamship the magnetic mag-netic telegraph the ocean cable the electric motor heater and light the i perfecting i press the phonograph tho telephone the locomotive he should not be hasty In declaring that anything Is an Impossibility for who knows The distance between the Unite and the I infinite Is growing less every day and j the flashings of the signals from the heliograph of time stars are shining more and more distinct on inspired eyes straining I upward from the I earth |