Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, February 04, 1927, Image 7

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    : HOW TO SOLVE A CROSS-WORD PUZZLE
, SEES POVERTY . T When the correct letters are placed 1p the white Spicer UN pusse will
J 11 words both vertically and horizontally, The first letter in each word is
Bemoealic ENDED BY ATOM Indicated by a number, which refers to She definition listed below The, Bunle,
us No. 1 under the column headed “horizontal” defines a word which wi
Bellefonte, Pa., Feb 4, 1927 om the white spaces up to the first black square to the right, and a number CON DENSED STATEMENT
clone, a, February 4, . Scientist Makes Glowing Pre- | under “vertical” defines a word which pig the White Saudted 1 the ert OF
. ae black ome helow. No letters go in the ck spaces. words used are dic-
SYNTH ETI C ‘ ‘H oT DO Gg” diction for Future. tionary words, except proper Hames, JS nevintions, sleng, initials, technical . . .
Sain terms and obsolete forms are indicated im the definitions. EF t N t al B k
Philadelphia.—If the atom nuclei, CROSS WORD 1S a 1011 an
CASING IS INVENTED which speeds through the air at the r PUZZLE No. 2.
rate of 1,200 miles per second, could FeV BELLEFONTE, PA.
be separated from the electrons, + 2 3 9 7 ¥ q
o which it gathers during the flight, and
Makes Sausage More Edible, tightly packed together in one solid 10 | 1 12 ASSETS:
: Chemists Say. mass, the weight alone of one cubic :
. inch of such matter would exceed 100,-
: 5 oans and Investments ; ’ I 682.00
New York.—More edible sausages | 000,000 tons, Dr. Karl Frederich 13 1 6 #7 1% L S. Bond $1,995,
are now possible through the re- | Schlissel, one of Germany's most em- U. S. Bonds Ec : 277,000:00
searches of Mellon Institute chemists, | inent scientists, touring the United Vg] 21 Real Estate, Banking House . 80,000.00
who announce through the American | States, and incidentally attending the Cash and Reserve . : 240,713.00
Chemical society the invention of a | sessions of the American scientists 123 24 a5 Ln
synthetic sausage covering made from | here, said in an exclusive interview. I 2,593,395.00
cellulose to replace the old-fashioned us June is not far distant, only 109 9 Quick Assets, $1,150,000.00
animal casing. a few hundred years, in the manner B
: . Reserve, Bonds, Etc.
“The casings can be made In any | in which science measures time,” said (Cash. Reserve, ? )
desired size, and the strands can be | Doctor Schlissel, “when, with libera- T1 LIABILITIES :
made of any length,” says the report. | tion of the atom, man will forget there :
“The sausages packed in cellulose cas- | ever was such a thing as poverty and 53 [53 5 Capital Stock ‘ : : $ 125,000.00
lugs oe Detieily comestible and may Justine As a matter of fst, Yo will Surplus and Undivided Profits 303,914.00
cooked in any manner.” ave no worries, won't even have to :
Four investigators were concerned | work.” 36 | 37 38 57 Circulating Notes 100,000.00
in the researches, which began in "It is common knowledge,” saia Deposits . 2,064.481.00
February, 1916, and were not com- | Doctor Schlissel, “that alchemy years 42 43 : Eee
pleted until 1926. C. L. Weirich be- | ago ceased to be a were superstition, 0 41 - 6 2,593 395.00
gan the studies In 1916, and Frank | because of the achievements thus far 4 a3 (December 31, 1926)
W. Stockton took them up In 1917. | recorded by science in the ascertain- 45 46 7
William Henderson continued them | ment of radio-active substances.
from 1920 for two years alone, and “For exampie let us take a lump 50 51
he was then joined by Harold E | of coal. Science has ascertained that semammm—
Dietrich. the lump is simply an incomprehen- 52 5
Casings From Far Off Lands. sibly large number of electrical par-
Casings now in general use are | ‘icles clustering together. RC ER RC A To CO RRR CO ARR RAT
sheep casings from China, Russia, the “Now if these particles in that lumg (©, 1926, Western Newspaper Union.) J)
of coal could be liberated and con- Horizontal. Vertical.
Levant, New Zealand, Australia, west-
ern Europe, and South America and
hog casings from native hogs or im
ported from China,
“Until the advent of the cellulose
casing, no suitable synthetic casing
had ever been devised which could
satisfactorily replace the animal cas-
ing, in spite of the fact that, even
with the greatest care, cleaners and
graders of natural casings were unable
to turn out a really clean and uni-
formly calibrated article or one which
would be of long lengths, free from
holes, weak spots, deterioration, or
other defects,” declares the report.
After experiments with gelatin, ca-
sein plastics, carbohydrates, and
starches, the material found most sat-
isfactory was a high grade type of pu-
rified cotton linters. It is converted
into a plastic condition by the viscose
process.
A machine was devised to make the
casings in the laboratory, where a
great deal of research was done, us-
ing many kinds of viscose and also
trying various kinds of modifiers with
the viscose. About 100 feet of cas-
ing from one filling could be made
with the laboratory machine,
To make a considerable supply o:
one type of casing a unit plant was
erected in a small building at the in-
stitute. Later, the casings were tried
out under normal factory conditions.
It was found that the synthetic cas-
ngs could be stuffed with the meat
while dry, eliminating the preliminary
soaking process required bv ordinary
casings, and that the stuffing opera-
tion could be done much more quickly
with the dry casings. Immediately
after stufling the case acquires mois-
ture from the meat filler and hecomes
soft and pliable.
Diameter May Be Any Size.
Drying the casings before stuffing,
by surrounding the moist cases with a
thin cloth tube and inflating by air
pressure, made it possible to control
the diameter of the casing at will,
and make it uniform throughout the
entire length.
“This is a very important feature
in the sausage industry and is some-
thing which has never been realized
in the manufacture of animal cas-
ings,” says the report.
“The thickness is controlled me:
chanically and for a casing one inch
in diameter, which is the same as the
best sheep casing, the film employed
. 4s about: 0.0008 inch in thickness.
“For the average wiener the cellu-
:08e casing weighs less than 0.20 gram
and comprises about 0.4 per cent of
the total weight, which is less than
the crude fiber content of many of our
common foods.”
Reindeer Thrive in U. S.,
Herders Have Discovered
Anchorage, Alaska. — Experiments
nade in Alaska during last summer
prove that reindeer do not necessarily
require moss and lichen for food. This
discovery eventually will lead to radi-
cal changes in the industry and make
is possible to raise deer in Washing-
ton, Montana, Minnesota, Wisconsin
and possibly Maine.
Tor years it was believed reindeer
ould not thrive except on the tundra
or swamp herbage, but in the long
drive of 5,000 reindeer from Nome to
Cantwell, near Mount McKinley, it
was noticed the animals fed exclusive-
ly on fireweed, coarse grass and other
vegetable matter.
Where this rough vegetation grows
profusely, as in the northern tier of
states, reindeer should flourish, ex-
perienced herders declare.
In the new location on the Alaska
callroad the big herd will have both
its native moss and the herbage. It
is expected attempts will be made to
teach the deer to like the taste of hay
and ensilage.
Criticizes Eating
Washington.—Eating has fallen into
4 very low state in America, Dr. Har-
vey W. Wiley, pure-food expert, de-
clares. “It is too standardized and
isn't engaged In with leisure and so-
clability,” he sald
—Subscribe for the Watchman.
trolled. They would provide vastly
more power than would be needed to
operate all the machinery ever con-
structed throughout the whole world.
“Again, for example, if the hydro-
gen contained in two teaspoonfuls of
water were converted into helium, it
is reasonable to believe that 200,000
kilowatt hours of energy would be
liberated.
“It is my honest conviction along
scientific lines that the time is com-
ing, say in about 200 years, when the
energy of the atom will be so con-
centrated as to do the work of the
entire human race.”
Plant Life Is Traced
to North Pole Origin
Philadelphia.—The evolution of
modern plants and of modern climates
began together at the North pole some
six or seven million years ago, when
the last of the dinosaurs were still
lumbering about the earth. It con-
tinued with increasing speed through
the tertiary age, which followed, until
the comparatively recent time of the
glaciers. It was during this time, ac-
cording to the record of the rocks,
that the plants of the earth began to
show evidences of_ being divided into
growth zones influenced by climate;
until then all the earlier plants were
of types such as now grow in the
tropics, and they
evenly over the whole earth, indicat-
ing the prevalence of a uniformly
warm climate.
At the meeting of the American Bo-
tanical society here Dr. Arthur Hol-
lick of the New York Botanical Gur-
den outlined the evidence for his
theory that the first temperate zone
plant life evolved in the polar regions.
The higher forms of flowering plants,
he said, are primarily adaptations to
a climate of alternating warm and
cold seasons, and their final invasion
of the still uniformly warm tropics
has been recent and is a matter of
competition with the plants they found
there rather than a response to a
climatic urge.
It is in the tropics today that the
only relics of the vegetation of an
earlier world, the cycada and similar
plants, remain to contest with the late-
coming modern plants for a foothold.
Plant fossils of tertiary age from the
tropics are very little different from
‘the living plants of the same regions,
whereas tertiary fossils from the re-
gions of the earth where winter comes
show evidences of radical and rapid
evolution,
Stopped the Show
New York.—Teddy. a black eat
which has spent nine years in the
Metropolitan opera Louse boiler room,
went on the stage during a perform:
ance of “Turandot” and stopped the
show,
Chinese Use Razors,
but Not to Shave
Shanghai,—If one in ten of
China’s 400,000,000 population
passed ten minutes a day shav
ing, the aggregate time con-
sumed would represent in round
numbers 760 years per shave.
But the Chinese wastes no
time in shaving his face. He is
a beardless individual and the
only use he has for a razor is
in the process of hair cutting.
Shears or clippers will not
do, and ome of the common
sights in any Chinese city street
is an itinerant barber with a
razor, resembling a diminutive
butcher's cleaver, engaged in re-
ducing a coolie’s head to the
semblance of a billiard ball, The
rest of the paraphernalia con-
sists of a pan or bucket of wa-
ter, a wooden stool and a towel.
Soap or lather has no place in
the operation, but the customer
comes forth looking as though
he had been sandpapered and
polished. : A
were (distributed |!
j
1—What a whip lash does
5—To desire something higher
10—Preposition
12—To devour
13—Verb
15—Recovering from intoxication
18—To exist
19—Cooking utensil
21—Respect
22—2,000 pounds
23—To equip with weapons
25—Consumed
26—A loud utterance
27—To move slowly
2Y—An article that should be used
after each meal
81—A metal used extensively
cooking utensils
32—Used by an orchestra leader
34—Moderately warm
86—An indolent tumor
87—One of our supports
89—Gulided
40—Low-bred person
41—Seizes with the teeth
43—A small point
46—Meaning yes
46—Superior
48—Look!
49—Baked pastry
52—1s in one place
in
50—To help
53—Nearly
1—Often happens on the ice
2—Whether (conj.)
3—Abbreviation for numbers
4—A famous third baseman of the
Giants
6—A prophet 7—Cushicn
8—Neuter pronoun 9—Equal
11—Tending to seek the center
14—To rise high
16—Large serpent 17—Female dee:
18—What the girls like
20—Cared for
22—The way he won the game of
cards
24-—The fruit of certain cucurbita-
ceous plants
26—Causing grief or misery
27—Covered part of a locomotive
28—To use a word in a double sense
29—A part of anything
30—Utensil for holding coal
33—Absent
35—Worshiped by heathens
37—Untrue 38—To procure
40—Enemies of mice
41—Raised
42—An aquatic mammal 44—Whistle
46—A liquor 47—Barder
49—He pays the bills
6§1—To bring about
Solution will appear in next issue
Political Calendar for 1927.
Election day this year will be the
latest that is possible under the law,
November 8, and the primary will be
September 20, according to the elec-
tion calendar prepared by George D.
Thorn, head of the State Election
Bureau. There will be judges, coun-
ty, township and municipal officials
chosen this year.
In announcing these dates Mr.
Thorn said that they were subject to
any changes which may be made dur-
ing the present session of the Legis-
lature. The calendar follows:
First day for securing signature on
petitions for nomination to be filed
with the Secretary of the Common-
wealth, Wednesday, June 22.
Last day for filing petitions with
i the Secretary of the Commonwealth
for the primary, Monday, August 1.
First day to secure signature on
petitions to be filed with the county
commissioners. Thursday, July 14.
Last day for filing petitions with
the county commissioners for party
officers, Tuesday, August 23.
Last day for filing nomination pa-
pers by independent bodies of citizens
for any office, Friday, September 9.
Last day when candidates may
withdraw before the primary, Monday,
August 8.
Last dav when candidates nominat-
ed at the primary election may with-
draw from nomination, Friday, Oc-
tober 14.
Last day to file nominations, to fill
vacancies caused by the withdrawal
of candidates nominated at the prim-
ary election, Tuesday, October 4.
Last day to be assessed for the No-
vember election, are Tuesday and
Wednesday, September 6 and 7. The
assessors sit at the polling places on
those days.
Last day to pay tax to qualify for
the November election, Saturday, Oc-
tober 8.
Last days for registration, assess-
ment and enrollment in boroughs and
townships for the fall primary, are
July 19 and 20.
Every voter in cities of the first,
second and third classes must be reg-
istered to vote at the primary election
or the November election.
(All previous registrations
expired.)
have
The personal registration days in
Philadelphia ave: Tuesday, August 30;
Tuesday, September 6; Saturday, Sep-
tember 10.
The registration days in Pittsburgh
and Scranton are: Thursday, Septem-
ber 8; Tuesday, September 13; Satur-
day, September 17.
The registration days in all other
cities are: Thursday, September 1;
Tuesday, September 6; Saturday, Sep-
tember 17.
Last day for candidates to file state
ment of expenses for the primary,
Wednesday, October 5.
Last day for treasurers of politi-
cal committees to file statement of ex-
penses for the primary, Thursday, Oc-
tober 20.
Last day for filing statement of ex-
penses for the November election by
candidates and treasurers of commit-
tees, Thursday, December 8.
Evening Dress (?)
A little tulle, a yard of silk;
A little skin, as white as milk.
A little strap. How dare she breathe!
A little cough, “Good evening, Eve.”
—Punch Bowl.
| Solution to Last Week’s Puzzle.
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STIYEFRS S[SERIED
Britain Busy on Wireless Telephone.
The British Post Office is working
cvertime to get wireless telephone
communication opened up between
New York and London early in the
Year.
Daily tests are now going on, and
the general view of the officials is that
the “hello girl” will make the best
operator for the new service.
A special plant at Rugby operates
the wireless telephony, and all mes-
sages will be automatically relayed
from there 3,000 miles across the At-
lantic. No special exchange in Lon-
don will be necessary, the ordinary
repeater section of the trunk system,
which amplifies the voice over the line,
will be used.
In other experiments up to now, dif-
ficulty has been experienced in main-
taining communication after 1:50 p. |
m. (New York time) owing to at-
mospherics. The cost of a three min-
utes call between London and New
York will be fixed at $75.
5 Million Autos to be Made in U. S. |
in 1927.
Prediction that factories of the
United States will produce approxi-
mately 5,000,000 automobiles during
1927, is contained in a statement is-
sued by William F. Metzger, a mem-
ber of the executive committee of the
‘ American Automobile Association who
just completed a survey of automotive
conditions of the West.
increase in automobile traffic in re-
| mote centers of the country are the
' factors making for a greater demand
' for automobiles in the opinion of Mr.
! Metzger.
| During 1925 production of motor
cars reached an estimated number of
4,320,000 and the 1923 production is
expected to reach 4,500,000, he said.
| An increase during 1927 to 5,000,000
{| would be a logical prospect for satis-
faction or demand, the statement de-
clared.
re —— pe reams ete.
Get Your Dog License.
i of each year.
| the office of the County Treasurer, or
i through notary public, justice of
! peace, alderman or magistrate. The
; license tag must be affixed to a sub-
| stantial collar and kept on the dog at
all times. The penalty for violation
is a. fine of not less than $5.00 nor
more than. $100.00, or to undergo an
{ imprisonment not exceeding thirty
days, or both. Local people who have
not yet secured licenses for their dogs
' should take care of it at once.
Construction of new highways and |
Dog licenses expire January 15th |
Licenses are issued at '
|
|
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Widow's Tears
re sad enough but they are doubly
sad if because of neglect or care-
lessness she is deprived of the
property which her husband intend-
ed for her benefit. If the First National
Bank is appointed Executor, she is assured
of the fulfillment of every kind purpose in
her behalf, and so one element of her grief
is removed.
THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK
STATE COLLEGE, PA. i
MEMBER FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM
© TTCCLTTTH ITNEEYT 5 STTETTY H SHETTY SH [TLLTTTTO [TUTTE © [ITTY [LTTTTTO ATTETT © [NETL 0
LYON and COMPANY
AFTER INVENTORY
(Clearance Sale
Every article in our store priced
with utter disregard of cost.
The rare bargains we are offering in this sale
are too wonderful to be missed.
Our rummage tab'e and racks speak for
themselves.
Drastic reductions in all ladies’ and children’s
Coats and Dresses. Every Coat must go during
this clearance sale.
50% discount on all Shoes, men’s, ladies’
and children’s high and low Shoes.
Special low prices on all Blankets and Com-
fortables.
One lot of Men’s Gloves, value 75c. to $1.00,
sale price 39c.
One rack of Ladies’ and Children’s
Coats
at $4.75 :
RUMMAGE TABLE
This Table is loaded with Rare Bargains you
can’t afford to miss. After inventory all short
lengths in piece goods, all the odds in curtains
and underwear, every department adds some-
thing to this table and the prices are so low
that you must come early to get the choice.
LYON and COMPANY
7%,
COA FEIVASAANERAARNATET + 3 NS ANTE WANN Ne)
[ee
OS NETTIC TEIN [TTR
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