ee HOW TO SOLVE A CROSS-WORD PUZZLR When the correct letters are placed in the white spaces this words both vertieally and horisomtally. Are You $4 “Toxic?” iy It IsWell, Then, to Learn the Importance of Good Elimination. OUTLAW STORIES ARE PLAIN BUNK Doctor Dresses Own Injuries, Saves Baby New York.—Diphtheria of the larynx threatened to choke the — Pemoreaic atm, Bellefonte, Pa., August 5, 1927. Thus No. 1 under ! 211 the white spaces up te the first black square to the right, and a number mnder “vertical” defines a werd which will fll_the white squares te the memt, black ome below. No letters geo im the black spaces. All words used ave dle-, tionary words, execpt proper mames. Abbreviations, slang, C.0.0.C Egyptian Had First Idea of Steam Power Every now and then some inven- tor files an application in the patent office which is squarely anticipated by one or another of the inventions of one Hero or Heron, who lived, so it appears, in Alexandria a hundred or so years before the Christian era, say# a writer in the Kansas City Star. Some of his inventions are fairly familiar to students of physics, but as they are not in use in the exact form in which he developed them ther are not generally known as such. Among others he developed an ap- paratus for causing the doors of a temple to open after a fire had been kindled on an altar outside. The heat of the fire caused expansion of con- fined air which forced water Into gome vessels suspended by cords and grranged, when heavy enough, to pull back the leaves of the door. This must have been a great mystery ir Ais time. Another, and one of the most grace- ful ideas of this or any other inventor, was his reaction steam engine. The principle of this was identical with the little rotary lawn-sprinklers now in use which whirl rapidly around throwing water over a circular area. Hero arranged a vessel of water, with two arms extending from its top, so that it could readily spin on an axils. Heat was applied beneath so as to boil the water. The steam rushed out from the extended arms, which were provided with outlets ex- actly as in the little lawn sprinklers, so that the reaction from the jets of steam kicked the arms around and «pun the whole affair. Whether or not he ever developed this apparatus in sufficient dimensions to get power from it we are not sure. It is more than likely that he may have utilized it for producing a very small amount of power. It remains the great-grandfather of all reaction steam engines, reaction turbines and other like devices of a now numerous family, all of which utilize this prin- ciple which Hero seems to have been the first to figure out. Married Woman’s Career Can the married woman keep up outside work and run her home prop- erly at the same time? A 9 to 5 o'clock job, combined with home-making and housekeeping, is certainly too much to ask of any woman. If there are chil- dren to be looked after, all sorts of complications arise: there must be a good, faithful and intelligent servant, and every housekeeper knows that the species is nearly extinct. Or, the chil- dren must be sent to a day nursery or to school at an early age. Such in- stitutions are poor substitutes for a happy home life. The regular job, then, is out so far as wives and moth- ers of the middle and lower classes are concerned. We must look else- where for the married woman's career, and we find it in a diversity of inter- ests that do not demand the whole of an individual's time, in social work, in writing, in teaching, in little theater movements, or in music.—The Musical Observer. Night Baseball Coming “Five years ago in the world series between the New York Giants and Yankees it cost the owners of the two clubs $100,000 to call a gaine be- cause of darkness,” says Billy Evans, big league umpire in a magazine ar- ticle. Enraged fans protested the um- pire’s ruling at the end of the tenth inning with the score a tic and Com- missioner Landie ordered the whole receipts of the day turned over to charity. “Just think how soft it would have been if the umpire had needed only to call the groundkeeper and say Let there be light. I have no doubt that in a short time lights for outdoor sports will have extended the playtime of the nation until long after sundown. Baseball at night will offer a new venture that should prove highly suc- cessful.” Microbe Organs Revealed A microscope so powerful that it is able to show the interior organs of a microbe was displayed at a reeent meeting of the Royal society in Lon- don. The instrument has a magnify- ing power of 3,500. Antedate Writings Ancient man discovered the four methods of preserving food, namely by drying, heating, freezing and use of antiseptics, such as salt and smoke, long before the day of written docu- ments. Enjoyment Followed Fast Bank holidays are usually held Mondays because the festivals are of church origin, the day before the fes- tival Sunday being a fast and the day after one of relaxation.—London Mail. Cobra Deadliest Snake The cobra is the deadliest of all snakes. If it has bitten four or five persons in a short period the sixth bite is not necessarily fatal. Other- wise the victim dies in a few minutes. So It Seems Homely girls have it all over their beautiful sisters, if the newspapers tell the truth. The former never have any trouble of any sort, kind or description. y life out of Jane, the baby daugh- ter of Policeman Hugo G. Geis- sele, Maplewood, N. J. An immediate operation, known as “intubation,” was all that could save her; Dr. D. J. Poia, ten miles away, started to Jane's bédside in an ambu- lance, with Miss Marion Raitzel, a nurse, and Gustave Schmidt, driver. Anether vehicle cut across Schmidt's course. The ambulance swerved and crashed into a steel trolley pole, a com- plete wreck. Its occupants were severely cut and battered. The young physician, never- theless, applied emergency dress- ing to his companions’ injuries and his own, then comman- deered an automobile, which rushed him and the nurse to the Geissele home. He and Doctor Demarest successfully operated on the baby. CEREEREEEEEPREEREEEEREEEEEECEERERELEEOREEOEOCO® POPPREEDODOORDYS STOOD INVENTS DEVIGE TO LAND PLANES ON SKYSCRAPERS eer Greater Safety in Flying Is Expected as the Result of Jenkins’ Invention. ms Washington.—A. propeller-reversing device which, it is announced, will permit an airplane to be brought to a stop within twice its own length after it touches the ground, has been evolved by C. Francis Jenkins of Washington. Announcing his new invention, for which a patent has been issued, Mr. Jenkins said that it would now be possible to establish air fields directly in cities and on the roofs of large buildings and eliminate the “slow and costly hauling of mail, express, and passengers from suburban fields ts their real destination. “Phe reversing lever Is so geared,” he explained, “that it cannot be moved while the plane is in the air, thereby eliminating the danger that the pilot might accidentally pull the lever. When the airplane strikes the ground, a Spring automatically re- leases the safety guard on the revers- ing control and the aviator is free to bring his plane to rest on ground, deck, or sea, almost as instantaneous- ly as a bird ceases flight.” Other benefits of the new device sere outlined thus: “The general use of airplanes for suburb to city passenger service is brought nearer. “Jt is now possible to bring a sea. plane to rest in the lee of a battleship, saving both plane and pilot under storm conditions, *planes can approach landing fields at a greater rate of speed than before has been possible. “mragedies like the wrecking of the giant Sikorsky plane, which failed to rise in its attempted flight to Paris, will be safeguarded against. With the new device, the aviator, when he real- izos that his take-off is a failure, cap stop the plane.” ath of Disaster Left by Runaway Glacier Bellingham, Wash.—A grinding ice- perg, 300 feet wide and 2,000 feet long, ended a seven-mile trip in which it destroyed everything in its path, when it was broken up in the Nook- sack river, 35 miles from here. The great mass of ice was broker. from Deming glacier on Mount Baker a few days ago. Trees, railroads and bridges wer sither swept aside or ground to bits. The ground over which the glacier passed is bare of even remnants of anything which stood there before, ac- cording to A. S. Athern, state forest ranger. The beds of Glacier creek and the middle fork of Nooksack river were torn wide for a depth of more than 30 feet and a width of 100 feet. Damage to tracks and bridges oi _he 'Facoma and St. Paul Logging company was estimated at $50,000. Pieces of the great iceberg as large 4s houses still were melting along the pathway where they were broken off. Caters to Motorists; Pastor Fills Church London.—“Sunday motorists who wish to call in at my church can park their cars in the drive and use my garden,” announced Rev. W. H. Ridg- way, vicar of Tarvin, recently : As a result of the invitation, which mcludes the right for motorists who accept to have their lunch in the vicar's garden after attending services at the church, every Sunday there is a long row of motor cars in the rectory drive; and the vicar preaches to a crowded church, Vicar Ridgway’s idea also encour .ges motorists from the city to visit the ancient churches in the neighbor- hood through which they pass and, with this object in view, the vicar is planning to form a sort of motoring guild of which regular members will be a nucleus of sporting churchgoers. Jazz Pays New York.—The king of jazz com- mands money befitting royalty. Paul Whiteman and his orchestra have signed a contract to play in a chain of theaters for forty weeks at $12,000 a week, Paul will get half, Former Marshal Tells of Past of Hunnewell, Old Cow Town. South Haven, Kan.—Persons in southern Kansas have the notion Hun- newell, a little town four miles south of here, just a half-mile from the Oklahoma line, was a bad place in the early days. But “Miny” Edwards says that’s mosly bunk. “Miny,” whose initials are T. M. and whose nickname is pronounced with a long “i” was there when Hunnewell arrived on a Santa Fe freight train one sunny June day back in 1880, and he has been there ever since. Moreover, he was marshal of the town in the days when it was re- puted to be a trifle rough. So when “Miny” Edwards says the lurid sto- ries folks tell about Hunnewell are mostly bunk, one must lend a believ ing ear. Romance Blasted High. The debunking of Hunnewell’'s his- tory occurred the other afternoon on the shady side of the street here. “Miny” sat on a bench on the curb, gazing out at the prairies that he has seen change from the open cattle range of 50 years ago to yellow wheat fields. A newspaper man, “Miny’s” audience, sat on the fender of a truck and listened sadly while the romance of the cow country was blasted kits igh. “You can hear some of these younger fellows tell about the way the cowpunchers used to kill each other off down at Hunnewell,” the early day marshal expostulated. “Buf ‘here’s nothing to it.” “Oh, sure, the boys used to shoot up the town every little while, but they didn’t mean anything by it.” You know, I sort of kept track of the folks shot to death in Hunnewell, and as near as I can count, there were only 13. Others got injured, but only 13 were actually killed.” After this declaration about the peace and quiet in Hunnewell back in the unromantic ’S0’s, the old marshal and cattle man lasped into silence. His audience ventured to tell a story he had heard about a shooting scrape in the big old hotel that still stands by the Santa Fe tracks in Hunnewell, a weatherbeaten old ghost of the boom days. But “Miny” said briefly the yarn couldn’t be true, and again lapsed into speechlessness. Obviously if there were only 13 persons slain in early-day Hunnewell, you couldn’t have a dozen or so getting killed in one evening's jollification. Presently the early-day marshal be came more loquacious. He told about a great open cattle range that stretched mile after dreary mile down through the Indian country, the land that is now Oklaltbma, on through the ranges of Texas to Old Mexico and the gulf. Edwards used to ride those ranges and he knows the rigors of the old cattle trail from Texas to the rail points in Kansas. Saloons Were Plentiful. In the spring of 1880 the Santa Fe railroad pushed its line down as far as Hunnewell. Freight trains puffed in, bringing the town. Overnight a city of tents sprang up and every other tent was a saloon or a gam- bling joint. Within a few days the freight cars began to unload timber, and frame buildings arose. Within two weeks a town of 500 population with several rather substantial frame buildings had risen where before there was nothing but the bare sweep of the buffalo grass. Up the long, dusty trail from the (ndian country and Texas came the bellowing herds of longhorns to be loaded onto the cars at Hunnewell. And with them came the singing, shootin’, happy-go-lucky punchers, Edwards ran the stock yards at | dunnewell a time, back in the days when there were 13 logding chutes, when the old hotel was full of punch- ers day and night. Then in 1883 he became the marshal. 3ut he didn’t have a particularly bad time, he says. “Miny” would have the world know that the law was en- forced then just as well as—perhaps better than now. “What did you do when a bunch oi punchers started shooting up the town?” “Arrested them, of course.” “Miny” Adwards is a small man, but he has a way about him even now, nearly a half century after those stirring days. «The thing that made Hunnewell boom,” said Edwards, “was the ship- ping of cattle. And when the wheat came and the cattle went, Hunnewell’s pest days were over.” “Miny” in- sisted upon discussing prosaic things. “Were there many outlaws at that time down in the country that is now Oklahoma?” The newspaper man was thinking of the many hair-raising yarns that he had understood centered about Hunnewell. “Probably no more than there are A0W." J. S. Sailor Weds Belfast Girl After Mail Courtship Belfast—An interesting romance reached a climax recently when Wil- liam McKnight of the United States destroyer Borie married Sophie Phil- lips, an attractive Belfast girl, The pair corresponded since they first met two years ago, when the U. S. S. Pitts burgh was at Belfast and one of Mec- Knicht's companions married a Bel fast girl "heroes of the Hellenic world. terms and ebuolete forms are indicated im the definitions. PUZZLE No. 1. 8 CROSS-WORD (€, 1926, Western Newspaper Union.) Horizontal. 1—Frozen water 4—Fancy eating rooster 8—Liquid measures (abbr.) 11—Part of the human body 13—A color 14—Organ of hearing 16—Not wide 19—Something to be done 21—A number 22—One of minute elevations of the skin 25—Female of fallow deer 26—A small mischievous spirit 28—Pertaining to a duke 29—100 years (abbr.) 31—Juice of trees 33—To work steadily 34—A means of travel 36—Exclamation of surprise 38—Perceived 40—A little way off 41—Note of musical scale 42—A flowering house plant 43—Neither on one side nor the other 44—A linear measure (abbr.) 45—A possessive pronoun 47—A spring of mineral water 48—A Southern state (abbr.) 49—Fish spawn p1—Contraction of over 52—And so forth (abbr.) 54—Pale 55—Relative by marriage 57—Part of a circle 59—A small plot of ground 60—Merchandise shipped 62—An infinite space of time 64—The whole thing 66—A yellow and black song bird 68—One out of many 69—Established value 71—Central state (abbr.) 72—A girl's name 73—A spring medicine 74—A meadow Vertical. 2—Songs sung at Christmas 3—To make a mistake 5—Preposition 7—A preposition 8—Equality of values 9—A merchant 10—A high cxplosive (abbr.) 14—An epoch 16—A lyric poem 17—Veneration 18—Small bunches 20—Prefix meaning not 23—A young dog 24—Song 27—Prevailing style 29—A poem set to music 30—A. child’s favorite candy 32—A sticky substance 34—A closed car 85—A kind of food 37—A small house 89—The Badger state (abbr.) 40—An affirmative 41—A laborious drudge 46—A large water fowl work 50—A unit 51—A tattered cloth 53—Person of born in a colony 54—Succeeded 55—Anger 56—Which person 58—Western state (abbr.) 59—Allow 60—To cook in grease 61—A prefix meaning three 63—Born 65—A tavern 67—Sick 69—Place. where (abbr.) 70—New England state (abbr.) Solution will appear in next issue ———— name Ancient Road Signs. Road signs date back to the early | history of the world. Many monu- | ments has been unearthed by arche- i ological expeditions in Crete, Asia Minor and the Greek Peloponnesus which show that signs were in use legendary In the Roman forum is still preserved the even in the time of the . “golden milestone,” a pillar on which were carved the names of roads to- gether with distances from Rome. ' Markers are being placed on many of our roads. ——The Watchman publishes news when it is news. 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