BOY'S GREAT DISCOVERY.
Nearly every elecil- ic;il expert in "cattle plans to examine a machine invented iiy Alfred IJubbaixl. n Itt-vear-oid boy. which the inventor claims, generates electrical jxiwor hum the air, and can be operated indefinitely without the application ot other sources ot energy, .-.ays. ;* Canadian paper. Several cic'ctrician.s have witnessed demonstrations, and ulthough they cannot explain the prin. ciple upon which n works, they m> <ertatti it is not a hnud or hoax. Key. Father William E. Smith, prolessor ot physics at Seattle College, who examined the machine, declared hi- thought it a practical working device, destined to take the place of all existing power generators. "1 unhesitatingly say that. Hubbard* invention within a tew years, will have adva'teed the win ile theory and practice ol electricity beyond the dreams of pro-.-eiitday M-ientists," Father Smith de-<-larj'd. "The. boy ban stumbled on t<; a principle of electricity never believed to exist."
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Bibliographic details
Feilding Star, Volume XVI, Issue 3930, 11 February 1920, Page 2
Word Count
152
BOY'S GREAT DISCOVERY.
Feilding Star, Volume XVI, Issue 3930, 11 February 1920, Page 2
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