CHARLOTTE NEWS, SEPTEMBER 10, 1 904- II HOW TO FIND THEM 0 Tl IV.."--v !::- a planet whose birth is even now n. ca jflS iHumt constellation ot the, be vhieh was so striking Jast L-eginnmg. u nis study of the beginnings of worlds, durine th fn? - ' Which CnilTltlnCti orrn XI .n'- r.ln"p there nre bpffin- sco ui nme pass ;n tae us piae mere are Legm- away, is one of the srrnnrtpct tions of astronomy. . But such knowl edge can be derived with far greater certainty from a comparatively new branch of astronomy known as Dmihlft- star Astronomy. THE DOUBLE STARS. )car in the east the import- io'icIi taint constellations of t'n Kara, and Pisces, the Fishes, , ;:;;or Eric Doolittle in the U-n standard Union. The bright - i .7 : ... : : - .ilor.o f 1 1 Arft tiaii' piling 1 J- iv. i.ii.i.: Many of the stare nf tio c-w t! o stars ol uie uuusitjuauuu j . - -" "-j, . tla n, xrrti, mewea with a telescone. arp rpp- t- t'S SiJlIlflli ;ug taucu iiui Liici u 'r- , . - - - t rW down in the southeast may ! , ' uu; bl"Bie tuiis, Dut two eisrs very ;.;'Vn Fomalhaut, the Royal I ? lose together. They are really two 'nil intensely white star, which is jlnT-m!nse suns which are revolving Pouth Pole of the heavens " L auuiuet unuer tne action or Civ - t.ie i : t trf.u ft! ..rrr vifiMe F in ''! v. r -, other bright star of the sky " 1U" sr?-vuy . Many thousand ul-" uive aireaay Deen dis covered. A study.' of the way in which these bodies move has led to many has to us. THE MILK WAY. ins the most beautiful feature of ,-pmhrr skv is that sreat multi- 1.uwiauas discoveries, it .,ir,HPc stars thp Leen sllora. ror example, that -;..! ami ample road whose dust is V i;lv. .t..vo: At " 1 s;a!axy ii it--s!;v Hi the great law of gravity is not peculiar to the solar system but that it operates throughout the Vhole universe; that every particle of matter, even in the -rms a great arch over the!s emote star' attrcts eveiT ther . r.outi, to thP T.mT, Particle in exact accordance with this Otti'-i i! nit; ui lug jcar la luis so bright as now, but to see it x'st the observer must be awyay ;lare of electric lights and the t be verj" clear. If he will ex- .,,-;,,, it vi:h a small telescope or a '.;.:! si opera-glasses he will discover, t C,a'!;!i o did three centuries ago, that it i- :(- ,,- nieielv a nebulous stream, but .. .1 t . C I 1 V.'2Iili.l-. -'I laiici yaiLO ui liic ;i'.r;j:;i we i .in look through the Milky V"ay ":nl s,3e the black sky beyond. The resign-! near Scorpius and Cassio jeia will especially repay examina tion. What tb.p true form of this great universe- o: stars is, what its size is and how its stars are moving, whether they ;.f jiradaially drawing together or scat tering: or even revolving about various ifiuks. is not yet known. It is cnly) hnown that an ct tne orignter stars or tbe sky. cur own sun included, belong X fai.s oimrnious cluster. The discovery it the- changes which are going on in tl.p universe of stars as a whole w-ill be one of the greatest achievements of the j.?arononiv cf the futurel THE SEPTEMBER CONSTELLA TIONS. Let the observer face the South. Near the prennd is Sagittarius, above this is -q iiila. the Eagle, with Delphinus, the T'oU-hin. a little to the northeast, while directly overhead is Cygnus, the swarf, row "acing the North, the brilliant u 'ations Cassiopeia and Perseus i e se.. while to the east of the Milky Wrv. sl vi hing al lthe way from Per nyc.i to Deinhinus, are the constella tions Androv eda and Pegasus. Andromeda, the unfortunate daugh ter cf Cephev and Cassiopeia was ( haiiif d to the ocks in exposure to the sea monster in punishment of her i: o;'ner's boast c' beauty. Perseus, her ics ,-uer. is represented by a bright constellation near, and as this is sur-rf-raded by the star dust cf the Milky Vay. he w?.s chruv.cterized as."stir rinz np a dust in Heaven." This group is described by Kingsley: There are many thousand clouds of 'nebulous matter in space, all of them which are visible to us being many mil lions cf miles in diamater. Each of these nebulas is certainly slowly con densing or shrinking together under its own gravitation, and as it condenses it grows hotter and hotter and also be- v -t arc-sation of suns, which are 1 ? 4tuul1au axis' i an 1 there apparently congregated ijd?f fintto atssle. sun ' lf e . . ; , : !4t. i velocity of its rotation is great enough. V:r: aro scattered or even absolutely i Lm?L 1 n-n"dla- In . , .. . - the latter case each nart will spiw. lately form a star and the nebula will have become a double star system. At first the two stars are intensely hot and in a plastic condition so that their mutual attractions raise enor mous bodily tides on each of them. The effect of these is to rapidly push the two sums farther and farther apart and also to change the form of the paths which, they pursue about one another. At last the contracting suns ecomes solid and cold ; the tidal ac tion ceases and there remain but two dark bodies revolving slowly about one another a great distance apart. All stages of this development are visible to us in the sky from the double nebulas to the old systems which are just dying out. In this manner also the earth and moon were originally devel oped from a single nebulous mass. The stars of the map marked H and K are double; H cannot be seen with a small glass; it is composed of two stars revolving about one another in twenty-six years. K can be seen with a good field glass, and so also can the pairs marked L and R. The former of these is made vfp of two stars, one of which is golden and the other azure, presenting perhaps the most striking effect of color in the heavens. The lat ter is a qualruple star, visible as a double star to a keen eye even without ntelescope. The star marked I is a triple star presenting an extraordinary fine contrast of colors. Formalhaut (.marked F), has recently been discov ered to have a faint companion, but this is only visible in the largest tele- THE PLANETS. Saturn and Jupiter are both in better positions for observing than last month. Saturn is in the constellation Capricornus while Jupiter in the early evening is low down in the East. To ward midnight this planet has mounted high up in the heavens, and it is then the most brilliant star in the sky. The position of Uranus is as shown in Sagittarius, while Neptune is in the constellation Gemini, nearly midway between the stars of Nu and Epsilon. The other planets are not in favor able position for observation. THE TOTAL SOLAR ECLIPSE. On Sept. 9 there will occur a total eclipse of the sun, but it will only be visible to observers situated in a nar row strip of the earth's surface ex tending from the west 'coast of South America across the vast wastes of the Pacific. The eclipse will begin at seven minutes, forty-eiglit seconds after 6 p. ra., Greenwich time; its duration is only two minutes. The next solar eclipse visible in the United States will not occur until June 8, 1018; this can be seen along a nar row strip of ground extending from Oregon to Flirida. On Jan. 24, 1925, the light cf the sun will be blotted out to observers in Main and Canada. the sun are resisted by the other, through which they move like bullets through the air, there must come a time when the career of every one of them wTill be terminated by a catas trophe such as the imagination can hardly picture. Encke's comet is a body of relatively very small mass. Compared with the earth, it is like thistledown to a can non ball. ' The thistledown quickly reveals the effect of the air resistance, while the cannon ball flies on with a velocity which at first seems hardly to be dimin ished at all. But if, the resistance con tinues long enough the massive ball no less than the bit of down will be brought to rest. " So, for ages after Encke's comet had plunged into the sun, the earth and the other planets might continue pursuing their orbits, scarcely showing the ef fects of the resistance to their motion. It is by no means certain, however, that the resistance suffered by Encke's comet is experienced equally all around its orhi-t. It hns been thought thnl th retardation may be lhu.f" " " ; . -space near the &un, end , . .' to the ether, but to some mtLii swarm through which the comet ::.zz on each return. In this case the phenomenon would not be extended to the earth or other members of the system that are not subject to a similar meteoric encounter, and thus Encke's comet may be swal lowed up by the sun without, after all, implying a similar doom for the planet ary, system. In the last hundred years the period of the comet has been diminished about six hours. There are indications that the accele ration is falling off in amount, and this strengthens the supposition that the cause is a meteoric encounter rather than etheric resistance. The meteors may be gradually get ting cut of the comet's track, so that eventually it will obtain a free way, in which case the promised tragedy may have a happy ending; but even in that event the comet will have been brought closer to the sun, and this fact will re main as a memento of the danger run and the peril escaped. The comet will be in perihelion about the beginning of January, but it should be sighted from the earth, with power ful telescopes, not later than the 1st of September. In October and November it will pass south of the Constellation Andromeda and through Pegasus to the Milky Way in Aquila. Here it will attain its greatest bright ness, and may be visible to the naked eye. (Copyrikht, 1904, by W. R. Hearst, Great Britain Rights Reserved.) Lake Geneva, Wis., Nov. 20, 1903. Life has been one long night of misery for me during the past three yesrs, because of my miserable state of health. It seemed that I endured air the misery that a woman could endure in that time and live. Three years ago I caught cold while out skating, and suffered a severe fall at the same time. As it unfortunately happened during the menstrual period the subsequent consequences were as bad as could well be imagined. Inflammation and ulceration set in, not only in the womb, but also in the ovaries, and- affected the fallorjian tubes. My physician did his very best , to relieve me, but after three months declared there was no relief except through an operation, which I objected to most decidedly. I thpn tried several highly recommended remedies, without any help, until my mother advised me to try Wine of Cardui as it had been recommended to her. I took it as a drowning person grasps at a straw and it proved a veritable Godsend to me. My pains gradually grew less, the daily headaches I had suffered from then disappeared. My general health kept improving and in thirteen " "' ' weeks I was fully restored. No operation was needed. Wine of Cardui proved my restorer and most gladly do I give it the entire credit. SECOND VICn-PEESIDBNT, ' T2ACH2as ASSOCIATION . sl v-.. ill T'; " rmW-J' : -m. Ethel Baker PRIESTS AS WEATHER MEN. "I set thee H'sh for a star in the heavens Spreading thy long white arms, all night in the heights of the ether, H:r:l b ythe sire and the hero, thy spouse, while near thee thy mother S!ts in her ivory chair as she plaits nvnbroisiai tresses; -Ml night long thou wilt shine." THE NEBULA OF ANDOROMEDA The observer should not fail to look for the nebula of Andromeda. This with a pair of opera glasses is clearly seen a- a small oval milky wrhite patch of I-sht. It is even visible to the naked 'ye and was described as early as the tf-nth century as the Little Cloud. This nebv.la is believed to be a new and tiiovmous system, somewhat similar h the solar system, in process of for mation. There is a central condensed r.iulens surrounded by a series of rings v-'iy like Saturn's ring system, and it is believed that all of the interior part v. ill condense into one great sun while ll;f outer portions will condense into waller suns and finally cool down into orld just as the planets of the solar f-."steni have done. There is indeed a lor.nj condensed mass in the border of i:k- great nebula which is believed to There's Health in Lemon Juice Various experiments by em inent scientists have proven the great value of lemons in destroying the germs of ty phoid and other fevers. Germs of diseases are deposited In the system by th failure of tne bowels to act regularly. MOZLEY'S LEMON ELIXIR is an ideal laxative made from the juice of pure lemons, and has no equal' for cleans hig the system of all impuri ties. It acts promptly on the bowels, liver and kidneys, and does not gripe or cause unpleasantness. 50 cents per hpttle atx al drug stores. WOZefeY'S LEMON HOT DROPS CURE ALL COUGHS AND COLDS. " Mozley's Lemon Elixir Made of Lemons MOST INTERESTING COMET KNOWN. (By Garrett P. Serviss.) St. Louis Republic. Within a few weeks it is almost cer tain that Encke's comet will be detect ed making its way sunward and earth ward. It is in some way the most interest ing comet known. It is the only one that ever offered a distinct threat to the -stability of the solar system. It did this by exhibiting the appearance' of being resisted by the ether through which, like all the other members of the system, it is compelled tn make its wav in journeying about the sun as a center of motion. On each return Encke's comet, which has made thirty-six circuits since its discovery in 1786, is a little in advance of the place it" should have occupied if there were no interference with its movements. ' The meanine: of this acceleration, as astronomers know, is that the comet must hV, gradually drawing in closer to the sun, and consequently travenns with increasing velocity. The final re suit of such a process if continued long enough, could only be the destruction of the comet by its falling into tne sun KWiTn. fate for a comet is, in itself of slight importance to us, but it is of very great importance if it implies a similar ; ending of the system as a whole. , If all the bodies that revolve around Six Jesuit priests are the corps of workers in the weather bureau at Ma nila, a phenomenon that is pointed out to travelers in the far east and one which never fails to arouse their sur prise, says the Washington Post. This arrangement, however odd it seems at first, is seen . to be perfectly natural when one understands the situation and, to make the situation clear, six columns .of the Daily Bulletin, of Ma nila, were devoted to it in an anniver sary edition of that paper. It is the boast of the capital of the Philippines that she possesses within her walls the pioneer meteorological institution of the Orient." It happened in this way: In 1865 occurred a typhoon that caused much loss of life and properly. This territory had been assigned to the order of Jesuits and it was to them that the people looked for aid in times of stress, just as people in Catholic countries always look to their priests for help and instruction. The priests, realizing the need of some protection against a repetition of such a disaster, determinedto establish a meteorologi cal observatory, which they did by the procuring of a single set of instru ments to which additions were gradu ally made. This was in 1865, ten years before the service of Japan was begun and nineteen years before Honk -Kong took ud the work. The priest by whom the beginnings of this work were undertaken wras Father Faura, who was allowed to devote all his time to the work of the observatory after 1878. Before that time the priests had done this in addi tion to their other religious and scho lastic duties. Frater Faura won the confidence of the people by predicting ityphoons that actually came to pass, and in this way convinced the skeptical of the importance of the work of the observatory. The success of the earlier years made it seem desirable to increase the ef ficiency of this -work by giving the ob servatory an official character and making it the center of a system of sub-stations. This was done in 1884 after the priests had made an offer to the Spanish government to erect at their own expense a suitable building. The Manila observatory pointed out to travelers today is the result of this combination of church and state. It is in this building that the visitor finds himself face to face with men who to all intents and purposes are govern ment officials, yet who wrear the black gown of the Catholic priest. American military government has not altered the strange condition. The necessity of an official meteorological service -was evident. Americans found a first-class observatory, through a private institu tion, and a staff of experienced men devoted 'to their work. It was the re ward of recognized ability to leave them there and there they remained. Macon Telegraph. A rich looking belt buckle is made of two large button molds covered with ! velvet and embroidered with beetles in gold thread, or green and gold silk. At the 'back of these molds strong hocks and e3res are attached. Brooklyn Eagle. K 1M J&L. Opium, Whiskey and all Drug Habitt Cured Without Pain at Your Home We Have a Private Sanatorium For Compficated Cases. If yta are addicted to these habits you think you will quit it, but you won't, you can't, unaided, but you can be cured and restored to year former health and vigor without- pain or the 'os of an hour from your business at a moderate cot. 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