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5 By ANNE CAMPBEU.r T HAD been In the kitchen half the 1 day. Cleanings the cupboards, making the room fair. When bands are busy, hours fly away, And it was noon before 1 was aware Weary before the open door I stood. Looking at my own patch' of homely green, __ When I-was Joined in my brief soli tude -By-.a. brown—butterfly, - with golden. Dental Hygiene ■ 86 mJPLETOMAKEl EASY TO WEAR 1 W HAT can happen in this great world in a period of five years? Among the great achievements we can list that of Andrew liahr of Seattle. Five years ago he took an assignment to drive 3,000 reindeer across the Creat Arctic circle. Bahr, although not a young man, took this great task at the instance of the king of Kngland, through a commercial trading company, who believed it a good idea to provide meat for the Mackenzie district of Canada, where there was a scarcity of food. In 1029 a herd of 3,000 reindeer was turned over to this herder and for five years he has plodded 1,200 miles across the Arctic circle and has-at last reached hla goal. Camping for months waiting for a river to freeze over, weathering Arctic bliz zards. camping for the breeding season and a thousand other obstacles have befronted this great hero, but he has delivered, not only his original herd, but an increase for the (he years of over 10 per cent and incidentally there were two children born on the stormy passage, and are husky Individuals. The Andrew Bahr feat will go down in history as one of ^he greatest feats of man. I was transported on its gauzy wings Far from the sordid tasks of every day. Intangible but high Imaginings Captured my thoughts an<^ bore me far away. .— —— There was my early home, the open door. The .locust tree, the garden rich In blooms; The sunlight on the whltely scrubbed pine floor, And heauu lending peace to Uttl^ rooms. From toll there Is escape. The drab cocoon ^ • Of ordinary day cannot hold fast The thoughts that soar like butterflies in. June, And find their way to God’s blue lanes at last. Copyright.—WNU Servlco. The Road to Health V ~ By DR. R. ALLEN GRIFFITH THE DENTIST A SUCCESSFUL dentist most be something of a surgeon, an artist, a sculptor and a mechanic. He should have the same understanding of the laws pf physics. xhemlsUy, aod biology Resembles Pre-War Style BEDTIME STORY FOR CHILDREN By THORNTON W. BURGESS AN UNEXPECTED DANGER D ANNY MEADOW MOUSE, swim ming across the Smiling Pool to escape from Reddy For, was worried enough ns he thought of how helpless he would be should Billy Mink or Snap per the big Snapping Turtle discover him before he reached the other bank. But Danny would have been still more worried had he known of a certain Big Pickerel, which you know 1^ a kind of fish, who was making his home In the Smiling Pool. Now the Big Pickerel lived very largely on the minnows and other lit tle fish of the Smiling Pool, but he was Just as Danny, Scrambled Out On the Bank, Those Great Jaws Closed With a Wicked Snap. always ready for anything else that might be good to eat. He bad been some distance away from where Danny dived Into the water, but lie had heard the splash Danny made. It was dif ferent from the splashes made by the young frogs, and the P.ig Pickerel knew the difference. He would have been very glad to get one of the young frogs. In fact, he could have told what had become of a good many young frogs whic^h had disappeared very mysteri ously. But he had paid no attention to the splashes of the young frogs when they hail dived into the water at the warning of Redwlg the Blackbird. You see, he knew all about frogs, and he knew that they had dived right down to the bottom and hidden In the mud. ^~But this other splash Interested him, and he began to move along in the di rection of It , Now If he had hurried in the first place, this story might have had a very different ending. But the Big Pickerel had had u good breakfast, and he was only mildly interested So be swam rather slowly. Danny Meadow Mouse was almost across the Smiling Pool before .the Big Pickerel saw him. When the Big Pickerel did see him he quite forgot that he had had a good breakfast. It was seldom that he had the chance to dine on a fat meadow mouse, and he could think of nothing In the world that would taste better. If he had moved slowly before, now he shot forward like an arrow. Grand father Frog saw him and tried to^warn Danny, but Danny was already swim ming as fast as he could, and all the warnings In the world couldn’t have made him swim any faster. The Big Pickerel’s great Jaws, each of which had ever and ever so many sharp teeth, were actually opening to seize Danny, just as Danny’s feet touched bottom, .lust as Danny scrambled out on the hairkr-those great jaws closed wlth a wicked snap, almost on the end of Dan ny’s funny, short tail. There was a great splash, for the Big Pickerel had rushed so that he had al most stranded himself in the shallow water. For a minute Grandfather Frog couldn't see what had happened. Then he saw the Big Pickerel dart hack Into deep water, and with a sigh of relief saw Danny Meadow Mouse pop into one of the holes In the bank of the Smiling Pool. ©, T. W. Burgess.—WNU Servlcs. Ears of Corn on Stalk The number of ears of corn may be anywhere from one to one-half dozen or more on the same plant, while the number of kernels to the ear may vary between 500 and 1,000 or more. The golden bantam types of sweet corn, for example, have smaller ears with fewer kernels than most other types and 500 would be an average for this type. . * MOTHER’S * COOK BOOK AU GRATIN DISHES A U GRATIN signifies, In French, a dish baked frith a coating of bread crumbs. Such dishes are par ticularly good to serve for luncheon, as they are easily prepared and quick ly served. However, they may make a chief dish,for dinner, or for a part of a company dinner. The .main part of the dish, whether fish, meat .or vege table, Is usually mixed with * white sauce. To these dishes one may add cheese, chopped hard-egg, peppers, red ^YOU Know That the bulldog was origi nally called the butcher’s hound, because it was em ployed to catch and detain cattle, seizing them by the nose or lip until they could be reached. C, McClure Nawipcper 8yndlcm.tr . , WNU Service. tered crumbs over a light layer of cheese. When the crumbs are brown the dish Is ready ro serve. Summer squash, potatoes, carrots, eggplant, In fact, almost any vege table Is most Attractive served In that manner. The nice thing about, such dishes Is they may be leftovers from the dinner of the day before. Epicurean Finnan Haddie. Soak a three-pound haddie In warm water or milk to cover, for an hour. Bake in a moderate oven for thirty minutes to separate {he flakes: there should be two* cops; cook one table spoon of chopped onion In one-fourth of a (hip of butter five minutes, stir ring constantly. Add one teaspoon of salt, one-half teaspoon of paprika, h few grains of cayenne in four table spoons of flour, stir until wjell blended, then Qdd, stirring carefully two cups of milk. Bring to the boiling point, add the fish. But Into' a greased bak ing dish and cover with crumbs. Brown and serve. ' * ©, Western Newspaper Union. Old Church Razed, Rebuilt After serving as an Anglican—place of worship In Leeds, England, for 87 years, St. Phillip’s church was torn down and the materials used to re build it at* Middletotf. that the physician rtiouid have. He should hare the samfe delicate skill that Is required of the successful sur- geon. He must be a mechanic of the highest, order_anjjmust be able to per form these mechanical operations upon living tissue through ao^ opening In the face about two Inches wide. The dentist’s education consists of a four-year course of 32 weeks and 6 days In each week. The dental stu dent must study the same fundamental subjects as the physician, such as an atomy, physiology, pathology, mateiia- raedica, bacteriology, histology, chem istry, etc. Besides he must study many special dental subjects. After he graduates, If he expects to keep up with the rapid advances of his profession, he must kaep on study ing and taking special courses as long as he lives, for no Individual can pos sibly master the dental art In the schools alone. This Is equally true of medicine. The dentist must have patients as well as patience. Few people go; to him until they have to. consequent ly they expect to be hurt and are In anything but a cheerful frame of mind. The dentist must do all the smiling for both himself and patient. His efforts are seldom appreciated and he Is often regarded as a disagree- ahte necessity. — All this Is about to change. The day has passed when the dentist will be looked upon as a mere tooth carpenter. The public Is beginning to learn the re lation between teeth and health, and th.e dentist has already learned that his work has a far-reaching effect, not only upon the health, but upon the very life of his patient, ' . The day Is coming when the public will begin to realize that to be well, they must have sound healthy teeth In clean healthy mouths. They will then associate the dentist with life and hope and health and youth, in stead of pain. When dentistry has accomplished Its wonderful stage of present day evolution, the dentist will no longer be avoided as long as possible. He will be sought as one who brings health and comfort and freedom from sin. People will go to him, not be- ause they have toothache, but In or der that they may not have tooth- , _ache. Dentistry will be looked upon as a pain and disease preventive and will be welcomed as among the most useful and popnlar professions. • • • r lea /de Tying her luxurious scarf of Russian sables, this young lady is almost a re plica of pre-wpr style. Yet her tai lored, braid-trimmed suit, and shiny straw sailor, not to mention her furs, are strictly 1935. “Men soon find out after marriage," say* Reno Ritzl, “that the women clothed in mystery have charge *ld- counts, too.” r***- C. Bell Syndlcate^WNU Swvie*r-“ Jade Carved by Hand - The real Oriental Jade is carved by hand with primitive tools. One of the newest de luxe, fashions is the wearing of natural flowers. A necklace of orchids—natural—Is star tling and becoming, especially If you use a powder foundation over your neck so that the delicate color comple ments your skin. * Copyright by Public Ledger. Inc. WNU Serrlc* or green, mushrooms and parsley. When the food is all cooked, the buttered crumbs are used for a topping and the dish la simply heated for ten or Jlfteen minutes to brown the crumbs. Whep the food Is used that' Deeds longer cooking the crumbs are added, ten minutes before removing from the oven. '■ Cabbage au Gratin. Cook cabbage eight minutes In boil ing water, drain, chop in small pieces and sprinkle with salt and pepper, cover with a rich white sauce, stirring Hghtly wlth a fork to mix well Turn Into a baking dish and cover with bnt- Piano for the Bedridden Invalid T HE Invalld’a piano, a new invention which enabled the bedridden to play the piano, aa It was demonstrated at the British Industries fair In Olympic DEVELOPMENT OF DENTISTRY T HE records of the practice of dentis try date baetf in the case of the Egyptians to somewhere about three thousand years before the Christian era. Even in this early period we have evidence that some methods were in vogue for the prevention of dental disease. For Instance, the Ebers papyri, probably epmpiled gradually | from 3000 B. C. to 1500 B. C., contain the following prescription for strength ening the teeth: “Powder of flint stone one part, green lead one part, honey one part—to.be rubbed on the teeth." t Skulls from the tombs of the Egyp tians have gold bands and fillings in the teeth, and also show the ravages of pyorrhea. In Chinese history there are many referfences made In regard to the care of the teeth and attempts to prevent their decay. Relics of the ancient times show that the Egyptians, Babylonians, Greeks, Romans, all had a system of dentistry, however crude It may have been. In 1839, the first college of dentistry was established In the United States at Baltimore, and American dentistry has led th£ world since that time. The progress of dentistry has been so rapid that today It is being recognized as second to no other science dn its importance to good health and human welfare. This is Its modern development—far beyond that dreamed of in Egypt or Greece. The new theory is simple. The mouth, It says, is something over which there Is sanitary control. It should be watched Instead of being neglected. In the mouth are the teeth and the teeth have a direct relation to the general health. That prevention of decay of the teeth and disease of the gums Is pos sible to a great extent Is the modern watchword of dental science. It la much better to prevent dental troubles than to have them to cure. The same measure which are nec essary to prevent dental troubles will also prevent other troubles that affect the . human system. The motath la the gateway through which'everything much pass that en ters the body. On good, sound teeth and a clean healthy mouth depend mastication, digestion, nutrition, health, happiness and long dlfe. Oral hygiene Is the latest offering of dental science to the world. It Is the science of taking proper care of the teeth and mouth to promote good health. Simple month cleanliness will pre vent and cure disease and prolong life. •, WwUftt Nvwspapar Unioa.' When a busy housewife finds a frock as pretty and as simple to make up as the one Illustrated, she'll make several of them In dif ferent colors—that Is, she will If she’s very clever. There are only three pieces to the body of this dress, the back, the yoke—cut in one with the sleeves—and the front Cut them out, sew them up, add the slimming half belt which ties ■ Into a perky little bow at the back, and the smart patch pockets, whip frills onto the sleeves and the pock ets or omit them altogether—and In less than the time it takes to tell about It you’ll have one of the dain tiest bouse frocks you’ve seen In a long, long tiinp! Pattern 2083 Is available In sizes 14, 16, 18, 20, 32, 84, 30, 38, 40, 42 and 44. Size 16 takes 3% yards 36 Inch fabric. Illustrated step-by-step sewing Instructions Included. SEND FIFTEEN CENTS (15c) U» coins or stamps (coins preferred^ ‘ for this pattern. Write plainly name, address, and style number. BE SURE TO STATE SIZE. Address orders to Sewing Clrcla Pattern Department, 243 West Sev enteenth street. New York City. GOB HUMOR “Curse It I Curse it !” hjssed th% villain, snatching at the girl’s waist “No It ain’t either!" she replied. Tt’a a girdle"—From the U._ 8. & West Virginia Mountaineer. Of Course Arctic Explorer—And at last vn vers reduced to eating boots and iegglns. Girl—Oh, and then the fooA spec ulators raised the price of them 1 suppose? Some Variety Groom—You will always look the same to me, my darling. Bride—Foolish boy! And I have ordered ten new gowns already. Both Safe Farmer—If things get too bad ws can eat our forest preserves. (Sty Boy—You’ve got nothing on us; we can eat our traffic Jams.— Toronto Globe. OF FMVOR