From the Daily Argus of Mount
Vernon, New York.
Date unknown
From Col. Churchward
The Sun is Not a Superheated Body,
He Declares
Editor Argus:
The orthodox theory about the sun is
an exceedingly hot superheated body of over 15,000 degrees F or
C, I do not remember which. That she is sending forth flames of
an immense length which shoot through the sun's atmosphere at
about 400,000 miles per second; or about twice the velocity of
light. That the sun's heat warms all of the solar system, in
other words our heat comes from the sun.
The sun is not a superheated body; it is a cool body but highly
magnetic.
Our heat is an earthly force contained in the body of the earth
and in the atmosphere.
A natural law is: the nearer we get to a source of heat so we
find the temperature rising: but: the nearer we get to the sun
so we find the temperature falls - the reverse to natural laws:
therefore the sun is not the source of our heat, but, it comes
from the earth.
The sun revolves on her axis and her poles oscillate, movements
similar to those of the earth: therefore, the sun is governed by
a superior sun. To be governed by a superior sun, our sun must
be generating magnetic forces affinitive to the forces of the
superior sun. To generate magnetic forces it is absolutely
essential that that she have an outside hard crust: to be hard
it must be cold, otherwise it would turn into gases; gases
cannot generate magnetic forces. To control her movements;
namely, revolving on her axis and oscillating her poles our sun
must have a storehouse for her forces. Solid cold elements are
the storehouses of forces: thus again it is shown that the sun's
crust like that of the earth is solid and cold.
The temperatures assigned to the sun would turn her into a mass
of gases in a few days.
The sun's so-called flames travel at 400,000 miles per second -
where does resistance of the sun's atmosphere come in here?
Flames of the magnitude of the so-called sun's flames would have
consumed her millions upon millions of years ago, and we should
not be able today to worry about the eclipse.
The sun does not emit flames. What we see are light rays passing
through the sun's highly specialized atmosphere after having
been divided and filtered out from the parent rays; on passing
through the double layer of specialized clouds which envelop her
body. What are known as heat rays cannot be seen nor are they
recorded on the prism.
The shape of a ray is like a fine perfectly straight hair - the
shape of a flame is wavy. Watch a searchlight throwing its rays
into the sky, and watch the eclipse on Saturday. You will see no
wavy line in the sun's corona.