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Perpetual Motion

Perpetual Motion image
Parent Issue
Day
14
Month
August
Year
1895
Copyright
Public Domain
OCR Text

Perpetual motiou. ít has been discovered. An Ypsilantian has at last attained the prize that has been worked for so long, and has sent so niany people crazy. lie has worked it out on the lever and hall principie, and has a machine that will attain suflïcient speed to tear itself to pieces if allowed to do so, but properly governed will run until the material of which it is constructed will wear out. We have not seen the machine. Our information is second-hand, but comes trom a reliable source. ïhe machine has been on exhibition at the Hawkins house, Ypsilanti for several days, and will be exhibited here at the Cook House some day this week. To keep company with this step forward Gus Fellows, of Aun Arbor, has invented a machine that will make him famous and liis name blessed by the generations of the human fainily yet to come. In liis own words "it is a machine that will entirely revolutionize dish-washing." All that will be necessary to do hereafter is to put the dish in at one end of a machine, and it will come out clean and neat and sweet, all washed and wiped and ready for another meal, at the other end. " For geniuses Washtenaw county againstthe world. Chas. F. Brush, formerly of Aim Arbor, invented the are electric light. Sterling T. Morton, also once of Ann Arbor, now Sec'y of agricultura invented Arbor day. Now Ypsilanti furnishes perpetual motion. And Ann Arbor furnishes a magie revolutionary dishwasher that will dispense with kitchen servants.

Article

Subjects
Old News
Ann Arbor Courier