Bellefonte, Pa. September 21, 1928. ET ESSE. SCIENCE AT GATEWAY OF LIFE AND DEATH. Professor A. P. Hill, British phys- iologist, has brought science to “the very gateway of life and death” through his studies of the cause of organic life, delegates to the Brus, of | Association for Advancement S2ignce, at Glascow, Scotland, were told. Warning his audience that the “mystery of life remains unsolved,” despite the sensational discoveries made by Professor Hill, the speaker, Professor Frederick G. Donnan, of University College, London, opened his long awaited discussion in an at- mosphere of suspense. “Life is the greatest mystery and the greatest study of the world,” he said. Then, basing his talk on Pro- fessor Hill’s studies, he declared that “it is the non-equilibrium, the free or available energy of environment, Which is the sole source of life activ- ity. “The facts of biology and psysiolo- gy seem to show that living things, just like inanimate things, conform to the second law of thermodynamics. They cannot live and act in an envi- ronment which is in perfect physical and chemical equilibrium,” he said. Professor Donnan made the state- ment clear in simple terms by point- ing out that the steam engine moves and works because the coal and oxy- gen which feeds it are not in equili- brium. “In just the same way,” he said, “an animal lives and acts because its food and oxygen are not in equili- brium. Equilibrium is death!” Professor Donnan said Hill was “on the eve of a discovery of astounding importance, if indeed, he has not al- ready made it.” “The life machine is totally differ- ent from our ordinary mechanical ma- chines. Its structure and organiza- tion is not static and the ceils are in reality like a battery which constant- ly is running down and requires con- stant oxidation to keep it charged,” he continued. “Death is the natural irreversible breakdown of this struc- ture always present but warded off by the structure preserving oxidation. I believe this discovery is of enormous importance and for the first time in history of science, we begin perhaps —as yet dimly—to understand the difference between life and death, and, therefore, the very meaning of life itself.” “Th chief source of life activity on this earth arises from the fact that the cool surface of the earth is con- stantly bathed in a flood of high tem- perature light,” he said. “All living things live and act by utilizing some form of non-equilibrium or free en- ergy to a higher level. “A living being is not a magical source of free energy or spontaneous action.” Professor Donnan reviewed the formation of the earth in opening his discussion. “It probably has been a thousand million years,” he said, “since the earth acquired a solid crust of rock. During that period the living beings —plants and animals—developed by degrees from small. lowly ancestors. The last product of this development is the mind of man. “Man with all of his kith and kin, counts for but an infinitesimal frac- tion of the surface of the earth and yet it is the mind of man which pene- trated the cosmos and studied the dis- tant stars and Nebulae. “Truly, we may say that life is the great mystery.” "Women Reach High Position in Es- pionage. Forty-five thousand spies were em- ployed by the nations involved in the World War, of which 20,000 were in the field for the Allies, acording to Richard Wilmer Rowan in “Spy and Counter-Spy, The Development of Modern Espionage,” published by the Viking Press. An amazingly small percentage of this large number met death in the field or = execution by trial. Rowan says adding that a maximum of 1000 were killed or executed during the four years of war. “The cost of conducting an Intelli- gence Service is infinitesimal compar- ed to the million of dollars saved by successful espionages and counter-es- pionage work in war time.” Rowan declares. Brigadier-General G. K. Cockerill, former Director of Special Intelligence at the British War Office, and his staff saved Great Britain alone a billion dollars by stopping enemy remittances, capturing car- goes, preventing destruction of war plants and other activities. According to Rowan disarmament itself promotes espionage and service intrigues by no means have stopped with the cessation of hositilities. In a period of four months, ending March 1, 1928, seventeen persons were convicted of espionage in Great Britain, France, Sweden, Poland and Czecho-Slovakia. Among the many brilliant achieve- ments of espionage during the war, Rowan gives first credit to a woman; the famous German counter-spy, Ma- demoiselle le Docteur. He gives high rank to another woman spy, “Alice Dubois,” of the French service. One of the most arresting state- ments of espionage during the war, Hale “was completely a failure as a spy.” In his discussion of spies of the past, he places Hale far below those whose names are hardly known, but who were far more successful in their operations. —————— se eept— Gas Consumption in State Increases. Consumption of natural gas in Pennsylvania during 1927 totaled 118,000,421,000 cubic feet, or four times more than the manufactured gas consumption of 30,484,736,000, although there were 250,000 fewer consumers of the natural product. FARM NOTES. —To find the capacity of a grain bin in standard bushels, divide the number of cubic feet contained in the bin by 1.2445. —The important thing in storing "seed corn is to keep it in a dry but well ventilated place and to prevent freez- ing until it has dried out. —Where corn, without soy beans in the hill, was hugged down with minerals as the sole supplement, the results have not been good. —The silo insures the corn crop For it will save all that can be grown. It protects the farmer against loss from frost, drought, or hail. —Strange as it may seem, most of our machines do not wear out; they either rust or rot out. This is an ex- pense item which we can stop. —Sweet clover must be kept out of alfalfa seed-producing fields. Alfal- fa growers who make seed production a regular practice should not produce sweet clover seed. —The ordinary rotation of corn, oats, wheat and clover will go a long ways in controlling corn smut since this disease does not attack the other crops in this rotation. —Feed and protection aid in keepn- ing turkeys fit. Vitamin A, supplied in yellow corn, cabbage, alfalfa, clov- er, and most greens, increases resist- ance to colds. Cod liver oil also is beneficial. Late hatched, immature, and thin birds should have shelter at night from the cold. —When the lambs are weaned is the best time to drench members of the farm flock. A recent survey of the territory where drenching demon- strations have been conducted show that 60,000 sheep are being drenched this year in Pennsylvania. Accord- ing toW. B. Connell, sheep and wool extension specialist of State College, drenching is one of the most impor- tant operations in the successful man- agement of the farm flock. He says that sheep running on infested pas- tures should be drenched during the summer at intervals of not more than six weeks. —Cows that go into winter quar- ters in a thin condition cannot be ex- pected to do full duty at the milk pail. It will also cost more to bring them back into flesh than if they had received grain during the pasture sea- son, says county agent, R. C. Blaney. Dairy cows that have not been get- ting grain this summer will do better if they are fed extra at this time. This is especially true of cows that do not freshen until winter or next spring. When cows become reduced in flesh it is practically impossible to bring them back into production. Supplementing short pasture with ex- tra feed is profitable to the dairyman. —Now is the time of the year to be planning new hog lots and getting them fenced for use next year. There will be no time when the spring rush of work comes on, and the spring crop should have good, clean ground to run next year. On many farms the same lots have been used so long for hogs that they are badly infected with parasitic diseases which make it ab- solutely impossible to get the maxi- mum growth on hogs that continue to run over them. In some instances they are in such a bad state that the death loss is quite heavy, especially among the young pigs, and in some cases quite so among even the older hogs. —Marquillo wheat, the new highly rust-resistant variety developed by the Minnesota agricultural station, wil Inot be distributed before 1929. This announcement was made by the Minnesota station to correct an impression that has gone abroad in some quarters that the seed is already being distributed. There was available for seed next year only 125 bushels of this new va- riety, and the experiment station staff believed that the best results would be obtained if the seed was reserved and again grown on the experiment station farms in 1928, in order to make sure of the preservation of the seed stock and of the production of a sufficient quality of genuine Marquil- lo wheat to insure wide distribution in the spring of 1929. There is in the State no genuine stock of this variety, recognized by experiment station of- ficials, except that in possession of the experiment station. The variety is the result of a cross, made at University farm, between Marquis, the standard bread wheat of the Northwest, and Iumillo, a dur- um wheat. It is highly rust-resistant and of good milling quality. The aim is to get it into the hands of careful farmers in 1929 to be increased for seed purposes so that the seed may be certified and given wide distribu- tion. —The farmer who struggles along a ——— SR : HOW TO 8OLVE. A-CROSS-WORD PUZZLE When the -eorreat letters are pinesd spell words both vertically and horisontally, indicated by a number, which refers to the definition listed below the Thus No. 1 under the oolurun headed “horiscutal” defines a word which will all the white spaces up to the first black square to the right, and a number under “vertical” defines a word which will fill the white squnres to the mext black one below. No letters go in the black spaces. All words used are dictionary words, except proper names. Abbreviations, slang, Initials, technical terms and obso= lete forms are indicated im the definitioms. CROSS-WORD PUZZLE No. 1. 3 Horizontal, 1—Jight wind 6—Heavy breezes 10-—Tossed by wind 11—Tale 13—Established price 14—To frighten 15—Note of scale 16—Poem 17—Man-eating fish 18—In Spanish literature, a Seven- teenth century champion of Christianity 19—You and 1 20-—Sobs 21—At liberty #22—-Mammoth fish 23--To stab 24—Singer’'s rolling note 25—Hard center of fruit (pl.) 26—@Grinds the teeth together 27—Gold measure 29—Ceremony 30—To wed 81—This person 33—Golf club carrier 34—Head covering 35—Personal pronoun 36—Foundations 37—To disclose 38—TIlumination 39—Pastries 40—To avoid 4i—Rages 32—Consumed In the white spaces. this pussle will The first letter in each word is pussle. (©, 1926, Western Newspaper Union.) Vertical. 1—Cutting part of a knife or sword 2—Mere routine 3—Young sheep 4—Half an em 6—To get away 6—Labor 7—Anger 8—Eastern state (abbr.) 9—Dug up with a shovel 10—Secondary color 12—Salilors’ 14—OQuter covering, as of a nut 15—Mortgages 17—Fur-bearing marine animals 18—Table accessory to hold vinegar 20—Opposite of black 21—A raid 22—To inscribe 23—To be uneasy mentally 24—Hackneyed 26—Pasteboards 26—Unit of weight 27—Soldiers 28—Measures out 30—To crush 31—Market places 33—Barred enclosure 34—To hurt 87—To prohibit 38—Note of scale 39——Preposition 36—To invite Solution will appear in next issue. OLD LAW AGAINST ROADSIDE PETTING. Application of a “Parking Rule” established in 1871 by a court deci- sion rendered in ) county courts of Pennsylvania, is be- this opinion was given in the days of horses and carriage, rather than “horseless” arriages” it is believed the latter comes within its scope. “The public possesses, in a public highway, the right to transit and of transit only. The use, by every cit- izen of public ways, must be a use appropriate to the purposes for which they are intended, that is of transit; with such stoppages as business ne- cessity, accident, or ordinary exigen- cies of travel, either in vehicles or on foot, may require. “I will illustrate: If one of you, for the purposes of a social visit place your carriage before a door where it remained in the way while you en- joyed your social intercourse within, this not being such a stoppage as is required by the necessities of busi- ness, accident or the exigencies of travel, such occupation of the high- way by the carriage would be an ob- struction of it, thit is, would consti- tute a nuisance. If, however, you drove to a store and left your wagon in the highway before it, for the time necessary to unload the freight you hauled for the store, or to load the purchases you had there made, such occupation of the public highway growing out of the business necessi- ties of the occasion, and continued {only so long as was reasonably nec- essary would be lawful. “It is upon this general principle that the infamous habit of corner i lounging, when not prohibited by | special local legislation is illegal. | The loungers who occupy the public { highway are, while lounging, not us- ing it for the purpose of passage, and {are therefore obstructions of the pub- the Montgomery | ing considered by the Pennsylvania Department of Highways, Although’ with poor seed, poor ground and poor | lic right of way—that is, nuisances. | equipment is paying for good seed, These are the general principles of | fertilizer, and good equipment wheth- | the law. : ; er he owns them or not. He pays be- | After quoting the foregoing from | cause he cannot compete on even the charge of the trial judge to the ! ground with the progressive farmer |Jury, the Supreme Court commented “ PAR rad ee TT AEN NONE NWN NINN NPP NINN Making Your Will T is always better to consult a competent lawyer in the important business of dis- posing of your estate. And you will do well to name this Bank as your Executor, thus insuring prompt and competent settlement. Drawing wills and settling estates is not work for Amateurs. The First. National Bank BELLEFONTE, PA. EANNNVATIN ; 4 7 4 2 ? to Success OU areon the highway to success when you have an account with this bank to which you are regularly adding. If you have not made your first deposit — start today. 3 per cent. Interest Paid on Savings Accounts THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK TATE COLLEGE, PA. stump, six to eight inches in depth, and pour the solution into the holes and around the base of the stump. This will invariably destroy the entire root growth. Where it is desired to remove the entire stump when on a lawn or near a pavement so as to cause as little damage as possible, an effective method is to bore a hole in the center of the stump about 18 inches deep and 1 1-2 inches in diameter, in the fall. Pour in about 2 ounces of salt petre and fill the hole with water; then plug it up tight. In the spring take out the plug and pour in 8 to 10 ounces of petroleum, ignite, and the stump will smoulder, not blaze, to the extremity of the roots. Vegetable Use. Vegetable dinners once or twice a week offer a pleasant change from the usual meals with meat. The State foods specialist of the College of Agriculture at Rutgers University, New Brunswick, is sug- gesting for this purpose the selection | of vegetables that have a contrast of texture, that harmonize in color, and that blend well in flavor. Buttered peas and carrots cooked together or separately, beets with sour sauce, scalloped potatoes, and cheese and cabbage salad with cherry pie for the older members of the family and State Specialist Pleads for Wide | SASS i | Co a SAS oe Sh SH SRS ASAE SA SRE LIC] who uses all the means at his com- | as follows: mand for increasing his yield and lowering his labor costs by using me- chanical helpers. The price he pays is a smaller income and denial of ihe things an increased income would uy. Better farm life is the goal of all who are engaged in or truly interest- ed in agriculture. This goal has been reached by man, others are rap- idly achieving it, while far too many think that the future holds nothing in store for them, and use the means within their grasp. Every one will agree that the progress in the devel- opment and use of agriculture has been due in large measure to the de- velopment and use of machinery. The very fact that man has become a di- rector of power instead of a source of power has an uplifting effect on his nature. A real desire for better living is the first esesntial in securing it. Having this desire, the next thing is to ob- tain an income large enough to pro- vide it. It is here that proper equip- ment plays its part by reducing the cost of producing farm products and dividual worker produces. by increasing the amount that the in- - | “The general charge of the learn- | ed judge was so lucid in its presenta- ‘tion of the law and facts to the jury 1in the case that it needs no discussion {—and we affirm this case upon the | charge, with a single qualification of ‘a matter introduced by way of illus- tration, viz, that the carriage of a vis- (itor to the house of a friend left ‘standing on the street is a nuisance. | | It may become, but is not a nuisance ; per se, and this we presume is what i the learned judge meant, but his language might be misconstrued.” | Tells How to Kill Hardy Tree Stumps. | “How can I prevent Carolina pop- lar stumps from sprouting ?” is a question frequently asked the Penn- Sylvania department of forests and waters. | Experiments have proven that the { following formula is effective: Arsen- iic, 1 Ib., washing soda 1 lb., water 4 gallons. To prepare this solution, dissolve the soda in a convenient amount of water. Then add the ar- senic previously made : into a thin paste, with the remainder of the wa- ter. Bore several holes into the | cherry gelatine for the children are | proposed as desirable for one dinner. | For another day the specialist rec- | ommends buttered string beans, cau- . liflower with cheese sauce, spinach, | lettuce and tomato salad, and ‘baked According to the specialist, much the dislike for vegetables is be- ‘cause of poor preparation. She says, | “Steam as many vegetables as pos- ; sible to prevent the loss of raineral i elements. Cook vegetables in a small amount of water and only until ten- i der. The longer the cooking is con- | tinued the greater the loss in flavor and in vitamins. Most vegetables re- tain more of their characteristic fia- vor if they are served with butter rather than white sauce, but for va- riety now and then a white sauce or cheese sauce may be enjoyed. “Vegetables supply bulk and there- by satisfy the appetite without bur- dening the body with food rich in starch and fat which produce heat. Hot weather demands a generous use of vegetables and fruits in planning meals. i of ————————— et —— —Subscribe for the “Watchman.” — SASHA -— SAS Ay Sha Ee SA TTT A SAI ed] LS Solution of Last Week’s Puzzle. MEMBER FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM GIUIA/RIDEEL |O[OITIS REESIU| I TIEEES| I [L|T OF BIR EADBINOOIN ClOTHT AK ESETEA mi — YES EILITISERS| | RIEIPA YIBD AIR E/SEE L RLTIVIE YAW LS PHEID/E/ARISIPEON/S OIFEEDIR!I [EID ROOT] OIUTEES TIR | [PER PIRI® RIE[I NEREM E[E[RIlEIN, LIElAFIRO[T TERME | aa ar oc ruil 8 ¥ Troubadour Weabes | YOUNG men who ap- preciate fine materials will fall in love at first sight with “Nottingham, Troubadour Weaves!” They're new! They're distinctive! They're colorful! Yet at the same time they are subdued in character, and refined in tone; the shadings are subtle; the design is modest. And so are the prices! Let us show you. FAUBLE’S