CROSS WORD PUZZLE Wk~ z r j r -~ — W~ 1* —IP?; r ZiL””Z — ILiZZ —- ?;r;? TT" a-7 'Mfy/, zq TsT' !4 pL, -,-M^L J io __ | 11 H r 11 ” I — 1 in M H hm , across 21 — Form of the verb ‘‘to be” 22 — Greek letter 23 Female fowl 24 Near 25 Thorny 28— Behold! 30— Snare 32 Single unit 33 Guided 34 Comical 36— Mean hatred 38— The pick 39 Strikes heavily 40— Testified I 9 Substantia tion .Entice .Not at all .Beat it! (U S. slang) .Cut .Definite article .Expression of disgust ■Ever (poetic) -Inlet Sound don key makes DOWN 6—Successive layers 9—ldle prattle 10 —Second note of the scale 12— Back — prefix 13— A small vein 16— A street •Adhesive compound. •A linguistic stock of South America .Thigh bone •Irritable period Barclay On Bridge TOO BIG A SACRIFICE fELL, WE prevented a game, ier at the cost of going down two tricks." That was the aided remark of a declarer did not stop to reckon that her idee was too costly. When you vulnerable, it does not pay to a doubled two-trick set in tto prevent a not vulnerable *95 fKJ 6 3 *lO 6 4 *AKQS . !QJIO —T7 — 172 N. # *9 8 2 2 I*l 4AK J 5 U Q 4 10 7 6 2 *A6 9 A Q 10 5 4 »Q 97 d* J 8 4 lealer: East. East-West vul- Ke) tier a pass by East, South ted the bidding on this deal 1-Heart, West bid 1-Spade, th 3-Clubs, East 2-Diamonds, ill 3-Hearts, West 3-Spadcs, ill 4-Hearts and West 4-Spades, diich contract she was doubled, here was no possible way for declarer to avoid going down ticks, doubled, for a minus sofSOO, which did not pay, for fay Fever Sufferer Finds Cause of Malady MAN clendening, m. d. TOOK the combined labor of a dozen men to unravel the toy of hay fever. All of them "V fever themselves. Every- body who tried his hand at find ing the cause made a ril I y mistake unless he had the af fliction person ally. One of the most indefatig able workers was Charles Harrison Black ley of Manches ter, England. He made the first experiments i n mm 4 #« i iMj ■ j ‘ c o u n t i n g the grains in the air the season. He tried a let, , , om pheated working plest m t t? nally found that the Mh a S/f bCSt ~ a gIaSS utn sh 6 S ! y can “ on it ex on it e h ar ’ the P olle » grains nted t u by g rav jty. Then he Cj n tbe nunr, tier of pollen the L CUb,C Centimeter - He 15 hetht ° n poles J ust the nose S above g roun d as i? c Pa '" stakiri g care and inter- his symptoms to ' IfOUghout e the !len fall eVery a thought v ?* season - He 1% shou!d stand near t 0 count in ate, f tho observations ac- n o diso? Un f (i that he exPeri -I°r three whatever for grain, d&ys aft er the first * k *m st a a n P ? eared ’ showi ng ? en Without amount that th haVlßg hay fever> Rations i n , h then ‘ vvere extreme *» day to I arnount of Pollen Jtions co rr day ’ and that these Hmpw 0 ™? exact| y p his impressed N this ohs! 1 because before S hi s gw» ( i r f | a ° n he had at * She had' h days t 0 whatever nad fa een taking. He 27 —Retreats 29—A theater 31—Toward 33—Chinese weight 35—Distance run by a vessel in one tack 37—A long seat in church Arab 19— Public vehicle 20— Timid 24—Mountains of South America 26—Rounded ends of hammers Answer to previous puzzle: Ir|e Is |T|R I jMIt p|oMolßTWr ° 2.~ AMiilo fTflbo'"n e ZMZOZ zjjeo3EJCl D |L |T H f m"o 1 & r? t tTaI r E R’EHfrjT E§Ja m » cTIj "iT r"Tc" Q 1= o[t_ |o| Cr\ T~ s"t the most the opponents could score on the hand would have been 450, as 5-Hearts could have been made. The deal came up in a duplicate tournament and the bottom score was earned by the overenthusiastic West, who felt it was better to bid on to ‘4-Spades rather than allow her opponents to make a game score. Had North-South been vulner able, the situation would have been different, as the game score in that event would have been more than the two-trick set, and there would have been some excuse for West’s 4-Spade bid. • • • Tomorrow’s Problem 494 *8764 4A9 4 3 4A K 7 4 8 7 3 2 41® *2 V VAJIO 4QIO 7 5 S 4J862 4Q9C4 g, 4 J 10 5 3 2 4AKQ J 6 5 VKQ9S3 ♦ K 48 (Dealer: South. North-South vul nerable.) The diamond 5 was led against South’s G-Hcart contract. How can he make it? continued his experiments for fif teen years. Gives Himself Disease Blackley dropped pollen extract in his ndse and eyes and produced hay fever in himself out of season. He played a trick on one of his patients by blowing some pollen into her nose, not telling her what it was, producing an attack in her in the rrtiddle of the winter. v He even did skin tests with pollen ex tract on himself just as the modern allergy specialist does. His work explains why in some localities, as by the seashore, there was no hay fever, why it was worse in the country than In the city—in fact, hiS observations, published in 1873, explained about all there Is to ex plain about hay fever. It is no wonder that when the same year, Dr. George M. Beard, Os New York, published a study of hay fever in which he concluded that it is a neurosis—ft functional nervous disease Blackley was somewhat disgusted. He wrote, “The author is not himself a suf ferer from hay fever and corhplete ly lacks the advantage which a personal acquaintance with the maladji wotild give hirh in the study of its causes." Another victim who, independ ently of Blackley, proved the pollen origin of hay fever was Dr. Morrill Wyman, Professor of Medicine at Harvard, Who transported some hay fever plants to th* White Mount&ins, exposed his family to them, and produced an attack of hay fever immediately. The first successful attempt to prevent hay fever by pollen vac cines was mads by Dr. R. C. Low* dermilk of Galena, Kas. EDITOR’S NOTE: deyen pamphlets by Dr. Clendening can now be ob tained by sending 10 cents tn com, for each, and a self-addressed en velope stamped with a three -cent stamp, to Dr. Logan Clendening, In care ot this paper. The pamphlets are: “Three Weeks* Reducihg Diet . "Indigestion and Constipation . Re ducing am* Gaining”, “Infant Feed ing”, I ’lnstructions for the Treatment iL'tek ofe® .srfe THIMBLE THEATRE Starring PQPEYE Dear Old Dad By E.C. Segar \ ra«ro*a.v-1 I 7 I°,J W6 >s '\| BRlkCi A FCW OF ) >£ISOME GOODREWS ' A *£ SfSVTSSSJ' ’ , FATHER.EA?) v»w y iwssfc . ~~ y J y^^ |l£-MIR ; _ _ By LES FORGRAVE r?s b 5S T vjSv|\ mstwmgr* WHV 'JS? RVS ’ F\oH,B6Th!' 1 TvAEOEEPWOODCAMP F OH,BUTT M-MUMMY 1 NMHW r~CO DEEPYIOOD' SHE? s BET*4 NAPOO. / I SWAKrr -TO NNV-MERSE EVER. IS /1M GOtMG TD FOQ. Glß\_s3. MOST / OORIS!TRACS DO YOU "TJ-UNVO WHV I OiOuT SOSPBCt! HTv-US TRAIM TME MOST SXCLOSWfeJ YIHST / JGST NNREQJE BETH IS V Vd>U? OELIGHTPUU f APDTV YOUAREN’T I I AM. TO MONEYV IhATRAT P ' | CAMP TOO 1 - CASe-WW.weMtCM- THE OLD HOME By STANLEY LpH' pa ***'(s>% •• OFF MARSHAL OTEY WALKS I? TO BE I £j£j mfj ON THE LOOK-OUT FOR A <3ANi^^(|^^(># ___ , , n ‘ - ■ ’ ■ ll 11 t " FITAKETT . tfy PAUIROBINSOK. r<3OSH.ETTA/PHILS IN S I fJ F g LL PAM/VOU 1 f THetraanNO ZK D6 -X*; U Wg t^Sw l lr?T t***! WHILEDBIVINS. j HEBE?HOW THE ABI3UMENF-) ft 10 iT ( I'MCHSOdNSOUrOFHISLIFE-TOUI2E ) y ou , W^etW^ E£> ° 'I OG4UY^ Z - ______ _ ; •< 1 ■■ f ~~~ ■ . , 1 ' - ' , 1 " '*»■'* M " THE GUMPS—NOW WH AT? ' : ri /f S lar H s°vvl , re U slelk-nowl I ITon A me all &ight~ old llj ill || | ( |l 9hE GREAT ( ALL WE HAVIsjrOPO IS ' M n,nST o Su^S A LOUO^ N B- Ml Si 1 1 ' i (BENJAMt/v) SHIP POCKS IN 1 |UO OY s S ||, TO PO If WoTl? Ill' l GUMP / HENDERSON, (N. C.T DAILY DISPATCH, SATURDAY, - AUGUST 7, ( I. .-, -V'-i iL YrtE- 1899 CUBAN STAMPS, DIFFERENT fifORFl < ISSUES, ARE SAME. iM " v AU- IK OKE WrfH OKLY ?RlK