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Show J ' :.r -v ' ;" ' - ' "rfVS'A--"" " ..... ... .. c - -. -7- "i- V PLEASANT GROVE NEWS toVe Potent Facts in JLitf " Bringing "ildLjyplirS About Matches By HELEN OLDFIELD r T IIEKE'are comparatively few people, men or womeu, who do not take a more or less lively interest in the love affairs of their neighliors. As Emerson says : "The strong bent of nature is seen in the proportion which the 'topic of love usurps in the- conversation of society. AVhat do we wish to know of any worthy "person so much as how he has sicd in the historv of l-v . . . "... . . . ... ' ' , tins sentiment t And what fastens .itfcntion in trre intercourse inter-course of life like any passage betraying affection between two parties?" ' ".w . '. Wherefore it is only natural that match making "sTiotilil possess an irresistible attraction tW i)nst. .women anil for many men. Old eople would like to sfx the young friends in whose welfare they feci a jvMirm interest well settled in life ariii they are convinced fully that, with their superior -experience and knowledge 'of the "'world, they .can judge which of tliein are best lit ted to make each other happy. Still more anxious are newly wedded couple- ih.it all their unmarried friends and relaliws. in whom they are spceiallv inieritoil, should follow their example and eiite.r.into the holy tate of mat rimonv. Xor, in the least, is this, as iiiiM-traii'iists. assort, on the same ir',rn-iplc that E.-op's fox. having lost his Mil. ad i-ed his friends to li- ti-e with theirs. Thcv reallv arc actuated by the purest motives. :- - Airgelina, tiiiiling lalwin all ami more than .n.r fati-v hail painted him. w ishes .that Ji'i r dean M friend shall-lx', jioi ,1- hju.i.y as. .-he hri-elf i- that is frot jo In1 tor. sitter the like, of Jibr:- is ttut to bi' tniind). p but a.s nearlv ..0 as can be attained. . Edwin, own oiiinion is TJBLIC and private Interests Inter-ests in the United States are now wording energetically energet-ically to - combine the fruits of those two twentieth twen-tieth century innovations wireless telegraphy and practical sky craft. It goes without saying that if airships and balloons and kites can be successfully success-fully made to serve as pertabld stations for1 wireless telegraphy teleg-raphy the vahie of such . aerial ve hicles fof the arts of both peace and war will be immeasurably Increased. Likewise will wireless telegraphy be enabled to add further advantages to its already numerous points of supe riority over all other forms of communication." com-munication." " The United States government, through one or another of.' its branches, has taken up wireless telegraphy teleg-raphy experiments via both kites ami war balloons, but the greatest interest inter-est naturally attaches to the work with balloons. So far as is known, the" United States signal corps is in advance of all foreign military bodies iu itf invasion of this significant tield. While the '.American army officers early realized 1 lie- immense -advantage: thai TOWAUDON PAWCETT PHOTO'S COPYRIGHT SI ra -M , " . would accrue if war balloons bo uti- !i -I jf u ome:i I iieii as wire 1 le.ss sjtions Uiere were sev tlu niot lortunate 01 men 111 Ins choice of a wiii. does Ins nnnoM to per- j ,.ouij . fuailc'las. kst diuin tu. fyke lo wjfe jho ueAt'lu.-l' t')'l as speedily as possible. Whet a third icimiii undertakes to iiitrodu. a couple where even i o!ie sided fancy is supposed to1ist, it lr- the part of discrcl ion Je tilnt" A tiarbi-.-n-li 11 supim- -it ion. In such case, even llimib "-tMii-h is silvern, .-ih'tiee i golden." .The more ii!.ii!crol'-cour-e and natural the introduction (,m he n,,idi- to v, the moiv hielv are (lie two loiinttud to aimear at their lnt. Iboievcr much it mav urattfv to think "that he has made ,1 loii jiie-i without effort, he di-likes lieing pursui'd and s iiu lnnd to avoid the woman who lt imagines is 1 r ;n' to nti h him. Snares must be hidden; "surely in ain't fie in r iss spread in the sight of any bird;" and la. t and line-sc are reipii. rite if one Mould further a 'oe affair. era! obstacles to be overcome re practical e x p e r Imcnts along this line could be entered en-tered upon. Foremost among these a man's anitv I as the weight of the standard wireless appa-tus appa-tus of sufUcient power fur . the exchange' of messages be-tween be-tween the ground and a I balloon at a 1 Ill-Fed Pupils in Public Schools By WELLS ANDREWS, M. D. l a I I benrst Ji 11 tra.ii'ti-- and diinn'- th- bnb a 1I1 dd's brain 1 .i ' mill h b -- than : t tn . n u ' l the atti inj.f to ;:ve. any 1 (.! has ln nlmcnt d fai tilt s. Tin- oralis of t' and i '" -r 1: t . .ci I Mild c are nli. of course, agreed as to the duly of (tinea ting the young so jis to lit Uwm for 1! iJii reading r'ipiimucuj and 1 oinMtit;oti of modern life. -Hut as to the cucnt to width this should Ik- carried in early chiblhood there is, unfortunately, a ureat ili- repaticv betwm-n ciliiators an iho-c who a phviciain have to deal in diM ,i-e w:th 1I10 -on.eiiii in cs of the violation viola-tion of nature's laws. The oslieialisni of the firmer . often supreme over medical Iblt when children re over- - Iih-hm' or ileal h the pbicinn - itrolo-t in voii o. mcupiiil tiy ti.or.il ;ind phv. n 11 1 . of mental cultivation uilh rioani tit ndvantatre is ad r tp.i-taki' 1- j ble tluti f meiit.il u': 'ire until tin re V ' h A WW, r r II " ' s 1 .... A l-f t-lee. Morknl II must rnN'" . fe 'loii'.d na i.'i j-ri.i il.. ,.d. I ,l;'!e f .".f 1 f 1 . - fir- w tr II - I M i?- I I V V - A M.J II - nt 1 v !Ui II t ' ical sfaui ts i an t of th." I 'i .i n'a ta f,f I 1 .:.- Ill 1 . a,: V, . -. r r ti 'i.' 1 a !-t he th. .1. v I' ira ban me wit'ii'i the r - jit- M 1 f tl.i l ' it. ii of t! p-'ri r iT1i.1i !"'i and art Tifr nsv 'vial witr.i5 srr ros VJi; W.lll WA.U bALlOON lofty h. gin I a. liaialirai Ii.ih t--n met in a iwirtatili ire!es rl vihii'j ha tn 1 nlly been d-ign d-ign d ., glial 1 otc- xp r .11.11 th first ex .1 n i I 1 of !.!. h ha. .t, !v Ii. ii oi ipleted at th 'Kfial rof j. f;e. it! .nmtlg!..!! ulilicr I he dirf I ion i-f Ki.itrlia! Astai II It .. Oroot. Not oli.y iU-- ft.l 1 n.i,irf ! t!l lrle ijiiiitu ii nitffi.rtu to i!i.. rxj'itM- of minimum ai lgl.t 1. ut il ,ifl..riU .1 sointii ti of f chief irol-l-m t t.t (i tti tin- i,-a fi...t - rcii.fl jr. the pr- oiim of .feg , itit .main! a p.o k (rum the tel iJM II I .T-t II I . 'I THE NEW f 1 1 1 1 r 1. rmp T e e e A rr wires, each 150 feet Jr length, sunpended itom a cross-arm" at-flached at-flached beneath "the keel or car of the balloon. bal-loon. It will be understood un-derstood that these wires . dangle below the cloud clipper and than Incoming mes- AMERICAM ARKY OFFICERS SAlllUG of raisin? kites to great altitudes and telegraphing 1i.Ivhhu .-tlwltl.- He ""claimed to have transmitted nie-ss.iges- . a distance of more than 40U miles, and such was the interest in his work at the time that .congress passed a special bill authorizing the incorporation incorpora-tion of a company to continue and extend ex-tend the experiments. However, the projcU came to, gficf in the panic of 1ST;!. Latterly, when .the development of wireless telegraphy again turned attention at-tention to the possibilities of the use of kites as ending and receiving stations sta-tions it has been demonstrated that thp kites have exceptional qualifications qualifica-tions for such functions. When a kite is How n at-a great altitude, a strong current of electricity is,, gen- t erated. especially when the kite is flown by wire instead of by cord. At Mount Weather, where piano wire is used, so strong a current is brought down from the clouds that it has been uecessary to insulate the reel on which the wire is wound. This presence of the magic current In force is manifest even on clear days when therms no suggestion of an electrical torni. Now; xpeiv merits are in progress with a view W using UiiiA captured current for wireless telegraphy. Tele- graph .instruments are cut in on the kite circuits and ere long a test Is to be made as tn the possibility possi-bility of communicating between two kites flown at points located 10 miles apart. . .. - v "-".'iJ I:. 'a I r.i.n as nth. c "':i v, fro" 1 W l.I.lli I:... a? I i-gritphir apiiariil s '.tni'ii.g ti e hiih tl.ro'igh ! ' t or il. -:gt from tti.- Lag of the t.l'.i!i TI atl'e ll.ft. '. , Of Ot 'T !.,; fl!..utig tn '..it 1. -mo if j 1. . it 1 .i r r 1 ,1 ! (.1 .,o I f ' ' -' if ' . f . '1 t ' . I.s I r . ! j.- t r i r I' t. ' I (. 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