I'age Six BADIN BULLETIN *norne • Citniera h ^ Catch with a He Couldn’t Escape This One SalisK,,. knov^.j^ Fayetteville Road, now Falls Road, on which the ’ '' dug - - a well, and built a school- U’h; V, LIUHl/ CV ^^din tr ®*'Ood in front of the present - -hospital. ^hurch from its earliest history Th, \^ried «hu: th: Ho *•8 dead in the lot adjoining the ^ut, like the church, they to the Geo w ” " a ) ^‘^'loway heirs made the *^^Urch lot aijoining the o Ro-^ ‘^‘='^oss the Salis- ft°*''Panv^ f Southern Aluminum 1?,,’ 'ot of equal size on the oining the cemetery lot. co'’nti^*’^'‘‘"Sement, all the lots were ^ with each other, which of ^bo th?‘ «" ^ frontage on the Falls Road cojy,*'"'^ hundred and thirty feet. !5*'ance(] town of Badin so , ® Value of real property that ® chur >25 0 Of property, and still pi,„ , to meet all the needs Ki '•'‘Urch iu ^^5.000 could sell possi- th; at as WilCIl LXIC UUllUliiS 01 the erection of the church **^itte«v that, when the building ' 15 AS I 1 . decided, after o^e now process of construction a great deal of concern. And after a number of efforts to sell, and quite as many mistakes, the committee gave Bro. R R Ingram power of attorney to sell the property. He at once employed a civil engineer, and had the property su - divided in lots, and placed same on the market. A large portion of this ..property has been sold, and several elegant brick buildings have been erected* Brother Ingram has handled the property in a way that is highly com mendable. This July 30, 1919. N, W. a' Littleton Testing Yadkin Falls Turbines (Continued from page 3) be created or destroyed, as for example; if all the ashes, gases, and vapors pro duced by fire are carefully weighed, their total weight will be found to equal the total weight of the fuel and air con sumed by the combustion. This theorem concerning energy is, very consistently, called the “law of conservation of enerfTV*^^ The law of the conservation of energy shows that energy may exist in many forms. One form of energy is heat. Another form is the motion of matter such as the rotation of a wheel or the motion of a car or wagon. Heat is supposed to be really the motion of the molecules of matter in the form of vibra tion, or rapid rotation. This brings us to the idea of , “potential energy.” Potential energy is energy stored in some form wrhich is not directly perceived by the senses. For example, the energy of the fuel and air, mentioned above, is not apparent until the heat of combustion has been produced in the furnace. Hence, the energy of combustion exists as chemical potential energy until combustion has taken place, whereupon it appears as heat in the furnace. In the case of a waterfall, the energy does not exist in the water, but only as a capacity of the water to do work by falling a certain distance. Hence before the water reaches the waterfall it is said to pos sess potential energy. Upon descending the cataract, or rapids, the potential energy is converted into mechanical ^ energy in the shape of the turbulent', motions of the water produced by the fall. It is the business of the water wheel (that is, the prime mover) to prevent the turbulent motions of the water, and thereby convert the energy of the falling water into a useful form of motion, namely, that of the machinery in the mill. In the case of the Yadkin Falls power-house, the machinery driven by the water wheels consists of huge elec tric generators, which receive the mechanical energy from the water '5-\ consent of the church, to the church property. ® best disposing of it to Vantage gave the committee j - ' . ■ \ ’t'v“ y,X'- - ■ — THE lUKBINE -lESTS PRINCIPA Croat; AlUn; Cochrane; Ely; Jessup; Bromelmeier; Morgan. First Row—Giersch; Scott. • - cook; Morton; Kelly; Tucker, V.; Killibrew. Second Row—Du . Tucker, M. H.; Carrick; Burgess; Howell; Burris; Earnhart. Third Row—Riser; Panmll; wamsey: Staton; Dawkins; BUckwelder; Scott, G. C. Top Row-McKinney: Shoemake .

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