HEAT AND COLD. 



through its attraction held every one of the planets in 

 place. In order that the sun should attract those plan- 

 ets it must of necessity swap horses in the middle of the 

 stream, and for that very reason the sun attracts no 

 planet in the heavens. But instead, drives them away. 

 Acting in the distance just as we observe it acting in our 

 immediate surroundings. 



The only .reason that that style of reasoning stood 

 all these years must be attributed to the gullibility of 

 man in allowing himself to be imposed on by the names 

 of men considered great having accepted the reason- 

 ings. If man will only wake up to the fact that men 

 are deemed great often when, in fact, very common- 

 place, owing to coming before the public during their 

 lives, the average great man being nothing more than 

 a man that had become noted during his life by getting 

 into public confidence through circumstances unavoid- 

 able as the precipitation of matter in a given tempera- 

 ture. 



These great men, having read the reasonings of the 

 original propounder of the theory of gravity, accepted 

 it without question, their minds being too narrow to 

 even question the matter. You may have asked either 

 one of them what was gravity. And he would perhaps 

 have answered thus: "A power generated by the sun 

 upon matter tending to union, or in fact a power within 

 matter tending to attract all matter." 



If you had asked him what made gravity, he would 

 have died before he could have divined the problem, 



26 



