A dog In Portland, Ore. was run over by an automobile, surgeon. with a veterinary except that rame constructed by SEPP EIIDORS 8 a : oe & 4 PA is the signul of dunger. Some thing is wrong.» Without thls warn img we might persist and get hurt or killed. If you felt ne pain by coming in contact with fire yon might hurn up hefore you realize what was hap pening to you. Pain Is not a feeling. It is a sen sation. The distineticn 1s that In ease of a feeling you have a vague notion of pleasantness or unpleasantness whereas in pain youn have a distinct sensory experience, Feelings are not localized and have no specifie srzans Palin, like every other sense such ns seeing. hearing, ete, 18 loealized in palin cells mostly on the skin and scat. tered throughout the body. They are mostly found on the surface because there Is where ley ara most needed ns watch dogs of our health and safety, Another reason why pain has been confused with feeling Is that most pains are unpleasant and unpleasant ness 1s a feeling. Feellngs of pleasant ness and unpleasantness are the ac companiments of all sensory experi ence of everythii ¢ we see, hear, feel or touch. Some colors look good 10 us, others look ogly: musical notes are PEOODO- NELLY had received a beautiful palr ef blue slippers upon her birthday. Her mother had made them for her and they had been a great sur prise as she had a pair which were still pretty good and she didn’t expect another pair just yet. It was true that she hoped before another year she would have pair of slippers, but she hadn't expect ed the It was so nice, to have a beautiful new pair before the others had quite worn out. Now, if she went anywhere to spend the night with of her friends, or if one of her schoo! friends came and spent the night with ber— another 100, ID 80 soon one school up—she had a beautiful pers in readiness, pair of slip The slippers were bedroom slippers and they were knitted ones. They were magnificent. They had fluffy, beautiful blue hows with a ing button in They had soft soles and lovely white fleecy linings, They were warm with out being heavy. And oh, they always were fully made. and they didn’t fit and you had to pre tend to like them jut with mother's things it was different. She made them so you were proud and not ashamed to wear them. If no one noticed your feet and you were wearing a pair of mother's yon at drew attentioe feet. Well, several months had gone by and Melly had only worn her slippers once, She had put them away on the shelf with a big white handkerchief around them so they would keep clean until she began to really wear them quite often That was the way her mother did She kept the slippers In a big white handkerchief while they were waiting knitted borders, and little shin. each bow, so beaut! slippers ance to sour ais for the time when they would be given And her mother had a way of hid ing the slippers and of making them when one her at it, that they had always come us a surprise No one had ever expected their slip pers just the time they had been given hem, and yet mude for the family, Once they had di they ers, Yes, Melly hb for no saw 8G mother slippers all of seovered how nlee were they never wanted any oth ad heen saving her slip pers very special days — DE Don 2 Oh, How Soft They Were. Oh, Warm They Were. until she cousin in Maybe she would save them took a Jittle trip to visit a another month, evening the and very cold nut it was house One Very somehow was warm, Melly went upstairs feet were cold and wouldn't very well cold feet, Then she t! warm slippers. She twok them down from the shelf and took off the white handkerchief her she such Oh, dear, she felt with 80 sleep wught of beautiful ber i» PRGA GR REGH whnt irseshoe ov than a lock he so door Key ” me “Superstition is pennle that a b has more value T° SERVE three attractive meals for seven days In the week the ta promg er n and house mother must plan ahead avold monotony and he able up all ford advantageously. Chicken Au Lait, Take a five-pound fowl, one quart of milk, one tablespoonful of tour, one eg. one stalk of celery, one-half a bay leaf, four tablespoonfuls of butter one-teaspoonful of salt, one-fourth tea spoonful of pepper, one-half copful of cream. Put the milk. bay leal celery onion Into a saucepan and simmer for twenty minutes. then remove the sea soning vegetables. Add salt, pepper. two tablespoonfule of butter and let stand where It will keep hot. Stuff the fowl for roasting. brown In a deep pan in a hot oven then pour over the seasoned milk, cover and cook antil the fowl I= tender. When done remove fo use (® by McClure Newspaper Syndicate.) A Glass iadais the flour to the until well and serve add conk cream fowl, the pan, egg and fowl. gravy in blended. add with the Scalloped Fish, To any leftover fish add a fe potatoes. pens and a cream sauce er with well buttered bake as usual, w diced ov crumbs and Lettuce for severnl days may be pre pared and wrapped in a plece of old lace curtain. Many cooks muke bag of curtaining to drain washed lettuce ; this may be tucked away into the ice chest and the crisp. clean, dry lettuce is always ready to serve, Some time for supper or luncheon make sandwiches for the family and serve them with a hot drink of cocoa This with a lettuce salad will make a satisfying meal. For the sandwich filling try this: Allow one hard conked ege for each person, chop coarsely add chopped olives, minced parsiey and mayonnaise dressing to molsten. Serve on buttered whole wheat bread. Often bits of leftover ments which are not enough to serve nlone when chopped and added to other ingredi ents make fine sandwich filling. Autumn Leaf Cookies, Cream one-half cupful of butter, add one cupful of sugar and one ogg well beaten, then add three tablespoonfuls of milk, two ecupfuls of flour «ifted well with two teaspounfuls of baking powder, Chill and roll as thin as pos sible. Lay on ma “essed maple or oak leaf and cut out around KH. Bake on #8 greased tin In a hot oven. (@ 1928 Western Newspaper Union § and then she put them on her feet. First she put one on her right foo und then the other on her left fool. Oh, how soft they were! Oh, how warm they were! They were Jost right, warm and soft and comfortable and comforting. Meliy's feel were quite comfortable in a very time. She was not | cold any longer “T'll begin to wear them now, sald, “for my cold feet ive the attention as | ers who m " : And of course | Oh, Melly dearly | pers! They were very but they hadn't any tant, uncomf cred were friend! y¥ sl short Melly ike to much as oth would rece ght see me they were warm! loved her pew slip superior sli of the wiable mar pers, cold, dis ners of sone superior ifures and thir ie R They riendly ag they could be! Melly's mother couldn't have | slippers that weren't friendly knew that, it ITS, just nu made Melly {Copyrizht.} Mary's Party By DOUGLAS MALLOCH FREER SERS AERA AGES ARY'S party's going to be M Wonderful, that's plain to Etery father brings Something hone, a lot of things: Certain fixtures for the hall, Candy, too, for one sand all Really father's spent a lof, Whether Mary knows or not WEE ! wee i i evening Mary's party will outde All the other parties, too. irother drove the car ‘way out in the country. all about, Getting leaves of every tint, Giving walls an autumn hint, {| Berries, too, that shine and gleam And the dining room's a dream, Mary's For a week, Mother's place, Washed the Folighed silver, Nothing mother's Yes theyll soon be saying now Mary's party was a “wow” (8 198% Douglas Malloch) party's almost here, very near, and cleaned nr swept the curtains, mended lace. baked and cooked overlooked, By M. K. Thomason, Ph. D. pleasant ; scraping, shrill, loud noises are decidedly nnpleasant ; soft, smooth, velvety ohjects are pleasant’ to the touch; elummy, cold, ragged, sharp, un even surfaces are unpleasant, Although most pains are unpleasant, some are neutral and a few ure pos! tively pleusant. If you cannot think of fn pleasant pain recall the sensation of poking a sore thumb to enjoy the pain Pain, then, Is not a feeling. It 1s a sensation. It 1s usually accompanied by a feeling of nnplensantness but may be neutral or pleasant at times We have pain to warn us of approaching danger and harm. Palin is onr great. est friend In the struggle for existence, In avoiding puln we are compelled 10 remove the'deadly enuses, (E) by MeClure Newspaper Syndicates $PE0000000404000 0000400004 : “JOTTING a IT DOWN” By JEAN NEWTON PEELE EEE E EEE I SEED HIS expression 1s commonly used of something which is to be writ. ten, where the Implication Is that it will take no time nor effort, that the writing no more than = gcratch or a “jo.” We all know that there is a type of person who, not very fond of work himself, has the hahit of minimizing anything that be asks other people do. Accordingly he might request some one to “just jot down” a dozen pages or more! That however, would not be in keeping with the meaning or the origin of the phrase, » PPP PPPdd | | amounts to to For the origin of “jotting it down,’ # 4 # 4 # y 9 o 4 f BRR A ry we must turn simply te the word #§ot.,” derived from the Greek “Iota” af “L” It means a tithe; the dot over the “L” or a mark over a letter to distinguish pronunciation, and its sig nificance extends to anything of slight value or proportions, Literally “Jot down” would mean to make a mark. And it Is In the sense of making just a few marks that we today refer to writing something down ns “jotting it down.” (Copyright) GIRLIGAGS @/ “Erna vy Foe Be Spadina, bot “Paint can do wonders,” says Ma ture Matilda, “but the most a middle aged woman can hope for is to be the picture of youth™ (Conyriehr) Temptation, When son weet temptatéon, right. — Anon. turn to the <> PPO PdPPPd T= mun or woman who cannot | told a good position without plot | ting the fall fall, of others, Is riding for a Should you know a wily Intriguer of your way to avold him; | than a hideous hack dauhing of a drawing and color | brings hut But such pictures sometimes serve 8 good por pose go far out e forms no more ground for the horrible noth picture whose ng BOTrrow There is truthfully characters that or another experience, The effect that Machiavellun trick sters produce on the lives of striving men and women Is gltogether out of proportion with the cause. So pay no attention to their scandal; carry none of their tales; take no part in thel stealthy, selfish schemes, designed to bring some Innocent persons into con tempt and to deprive him or her from making a mezger livelihood Rraugin amers nothing rightly written on de does pot in contain a bit of personal or | of i some line Having no character of his own, the serpent blackens the character of others, smiling as he does IL He has done ft many times, getting harder and more cruel ns he proceeds There Is to him a sort of adven turous excitement In his dastardly work which he relishes, until, In his sober moment he half suspects that Destiny may at some unexpected mo ment pounce upon him and compel him to pay beavily for his foul deeds And this Is exactly what Destiny In variably does No plotter or defamer ever escapes retributite justice Whenever you find a plotter who spends half his time looking for vie tims, youn mny rest asstured that he enrries with him a cargo of hate for his fellow workers and mankind gener he “knocks of the enormi Instead of “boosting” And he never realiz until There calling ab le earied others, Ia one sour work well and be aniformi the only wn favor of make a place brings at the time when vou most need it generous reward and lasting Honor (2 by MeClure Nevwaps per Syndicate There 1s the men and to fo good, appreciative succeed in life which il Timely Hints By Viela Brothers Shore ToT oITITOOY Bl A a a FOR THE GOOSE- hard, maybe they're right. If they think you're too easy, they surely are sniffed the little woman, *| little mincin® where girls these days!” “H'm,” see mighty is concerned, FOR THE GANDER Ask nn man these days how much is one and one and he'll tell fingers Don't le to your girl about money matters. But don’t take into your confidence, neither. sour her of times we're obsiinate be. we're weak and daring because scared {Coprrizht hy Lots cause we're The woheme has worked owt . ¥ " - Color of Roofing Not of First Importance Many miles away, as one approaches & town, we note how conspietious are the roofs and church spires. #gaingt an almost solid blue green by round. Most of us recall the days when roofs were hardly without ex- of natural bluegray slate, suggestive of the rmypeedness onr fore fathers observed when designing and building their homes. These dured years with no attention whatso- ever. When once applied they were entirely forgotten, These were built good, sound construction very buildings with their original their quaint stand In some nmunitic trating color later found in natura! and roofing materials. A roofs en houses in a period and ure glanaing {hose today eOl sinte vaiiain often fade became less sCrup ies tempted to give «¢ disregard However ex pense wBerion SICER the home n Tr irue while strength keen Put roof on a sheds wi nut witha add “ry] add col Plan New Home With View to Environment au height building wuld We maintal throug for ned a of a terri. mre city as wi v's reaity directors, i board, through will ask t} sors of los Angeles coun ight limit the Assnciation to National Estate Boards sta The produ toe uniformity of has ed a distin me extent where unlimited, nildings are ted ht of present to the «ity perm rise 1 an: i ont. iwever, the health T.os An. ® might ints out. celes cits i be broken dow Carden Attractiveness. The difference between just a house the more tive, fs charming home-—is von a distin Nothing can re than rive garden. A border of roses—a pr quils—a spattering violets-what tion they charm they add joyment of your home best months of the year. Many charnding effects achieved by planting the cession of perennials-—with subsequent care at all. of jon. bod of trans. thelr Properly te the en- through the oup of iris—a an inspiring effect with color, can and greatly may be right sue almaost no a AN AAI Look Well to House “Lid.” One of the peculiar reports one hears abcut the Chinese is the they gin to build a house at the roof. How that can be done has always been a mystery. Bul there is no <oubt that the roo” Is of fi importance. Without proper protectiofgverhead a hotize Ix not abltable. — AANA Birds Aid Gardens. Provide a bird bath and the binds coming for a drink or a bith will stop to help you with your garden work, Just the joy of watching the birds would amply repay you but they are courteous guests and will eagerly eat weed seed, worms and Insects that would otherwise menace your garden. Leads in Town Forests. In Muassachusetis, 79 towns have voted for town forests, making the state the leader In this work, says American Tree association, In » Jain Jiecuh th Vind held tor the gros tection of the town's water supply has heen placed under the tewn forest net.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers