mm H SATURDAY EVENING. SEPTEMBER 25. 1S2C. TKF OGDEN XNLV ROEyA'NFK ... . I M ILOVE and MARRIED LIFEj f taj, the noted author I Xdah MgGlone Gibson I is T It l s GROWN ''H Alice stood for a moment beu do the .! W deck chair on which my bnhy ly ing iifllf und for the first t'.me I : realised how (Treat had been her lie- fU r.lre and how unaatlafled her Ionian. 1 ror a child, f k.n-w that th- uno that wub coming to her w mid seem like It tnc conaum mat.on of her womanhood. - IB Some n;n although AIlci had lIOJ . Jmh lnt me thai f..i.l never known the UE Rirat i Tom I bat w. IjH taught is necessary to a successful Ifjfl marriage. I knv that of all my friends y ll the marriage of Alice and Tom Stnun- I jgm ton was thi mo si successful I had ftvl even known. Nelthi r had cared for uiLsssssf ' 'nor to 'he extent where n.no- H lute possession seemed ncrtsMiy, eon- 3 41 sequently each was- perfectly willing 1 that the other should own hlmsrlf and AjM herself. 1 As the years had rolled on. both Hi Alice and Tom had come to that place where they were almost Indlspensabli K3 to each other Never having Know:-. HHJ that all-consuming passion, they never felt the regret when life showed them .J what mlfrht be ta ashes, growing -JTrfi colder and colder They hud always H managed to k"i, th. soft, warm flrc- i ' jK light of mutual affection steady, and ', tA knowing It was there, they went their . ' several ways, only to come bark to L'liij face cayh other before Itj warming Mt glow They h id grown much alike. In the dyl years they had been together. Alice f j had lost much of Her exuberance, favm much oc her aggressiveness, und It 4? fjj the truth was Id be told, much of her f mm stubbornness And Tom had lost that fj vfl air of disinterested paanlveneea, that fa quiet repose, which always marie him ! B seem a little too sslf.ccntered. a little -W 'on sufficient unto himself j-'. "Truly." J mused to myself, as I r looked upon Alteo sitting ull uncon- L srlouo of how i was analyzing her and ,j her llii- with Tom i. j!' ii Triage X, in ver different from love. And hen M , r. .;.... . i : i ... I i ' i QWOmW known A la. ii i I rJuB a marriage of mutual f orbcaranci a marriage of individual respect, a mar- rJ?fffl rlagc of unselfishness and undcrstand- Ztf jH 'nK And now this marriage was go- 1 tg to be crowned with n child. Anil , ' If looklnT at It. each of these dear 4 J friends of mine will come to realize 1'. Jyj that If there are such things as 'ftm matches thai are male In heaven, the match of Al.ce a. a. I bij oUiilon Is one of them." Almost ..s though I l.ad ppoken nloud. Aiir.- turned to me suleklj and, putting ou: hT tiumi wltfl a little cry. she said. "On, Katn rln , I Wish I were got.lg to mvtl 'ian W( nr live Into p ji t toiiiorrov I want to Wi tch his fnee when I tell him It n.-. ins tj me now i.at the only n fiai pfrieaa i have ever known in my iiLiriage was t:e foci that it was childless. And I Kfiew hut more than anything ! In the Uorld that Tom wartted a ch.ld lo call him "i Lber.' It'sa wonderful thought, Isn't it K ilh erlne. to tulnk tli.it because two peo ple hae learned a. id lived, '.heir chil dren and the r chlldrcu'u children's phUdren ahaii go sir.rring, dancing, and mayhap. Stumbling down the paths of time, i ih, OS much as I have wished for this wonderful gift. 1 do nol think 1 realised whul It was until now. Maty, sleeping on her deck chair, stirred uneasily, and Alice anatched her up to tak" her In to her berth, cm-ii pafore Miss Parker, who was cuuidlng near, could reach her. ! "Let me carry her. Hiss Parker," said Alice. "1 want to undreSB her little helpless, listlcRi, sleeping body. I want to la her close within h r'tlny bed, and 1 want lo UIk': her softly fold ed eyelids, and 1 WtlDt to understand thai all this. ea. all the world of motherhood Is coming lo me Jiecaus? I unde.-.stand. I did Q( I F" with AIlci- to the baby's stateroom, but sat there dreaming In the i.-.oon-Mrtht until she icturned. And I thought that Fate was vrr good to inc nrter all. She had not meted out to mo (more than I could bear and sh - had left mo Mary, my child As I sat there, I allowed my Imagi nation to run riot, and I saw my baby 'a girl, a maid and a matron And I even went so far as figuratively to dangle grand-children on my knees. And then I s'mok myself out of the 'dreams that th.- moonlight seemed to 1 make almost real. I heard Alices light step coming down the deck, and when she got very closv to me she jsuld. "Look. Katherlne. do you not see I the lights r re grow'ng brighter, al ' reaily you can smell the land and I am very glad, Katherlr.e. When we sail Into port tomorrow, lot's go from there back home." (To He Continued BEDTIME STORIES BY HOWARD R. GARIS I NCLF, ffTGGILY M THE TREE Hoi s: . Copyright, 1920, by McCluc Newspaper .' '''- Sj ndlcatc. (By Howard H. Cans.) One day, when Uncle VYlgglly, the nice bunny rabbit gentleman, was out walking, looking lor an adventure he . . ; chanced to meet Bobbv Chber-Up, the '. robin bird boy. Hobby was scrap nx i : his feet In the sand, and sort of thio - - , lng little stones about with his beak, 3t- i mi he dldn t look vcrj happy. Boob WWT didn't. i "What's the matter Bobby''" asked t Uncle WiggUy "Are ou sad because r the cherries are all gone, or do you feel badlj because you will sjoii have Atti ' down South with the swallows and bluebirds'?" "Oh, It Isn't that crumbled Bobby, ;ia3 usual nice, cheerful cheer-up song,' 48 after which he was named. It's the --Wl house where I live tha-i I don't like." said the bird boy. It's up In a tree. j and none of the rabbit, dog or pussy - ".Vi cat boys ever come up there and play ii with me Thev can't climb trers very S. well (except, of cours'-, thi- K.it boys), j and the) can't flj " j "Well, bul noij can fly down. If fjBl they can't fly up, ' said 1neli- Wigglly ''P.R with a jolly twinkle of his pink nose. ' ; "Think of that ' "Yes. but If I don t fly down to plav 1 i with I hem I can t haw any fun. ' went aKffl on Bobbv Cheer-l"p whoso name. Just then, 'ought to have been Bobb Sad Face. "I wish I lived In a house on p'rH ,10 Rround. or underground, like 9 Buioly. thn guinea ilg bo . or even ' vSS m a hollow stump bungalow like you, 1 Jy Uncle Wigglly." "Oh. nonsense'" laughed the bunny gentleman. K'- animals each live In BP a house best suited 'o him. Neut or K&BN tro houses are best for you birds. pflKjj But I know what I can do. Bobby, so HJfl your friends who do not fly or climb iPD can come to see you more easily." BBs "What?" asked Bobby, eagerly, am' BEE he began to whistle a few notes of ffitM his Dcst and most 'ouy ronr. nnat jil can yo" ,1"' 1 n' ''' XV ''' " BjvK "I c:ir. make a little ladder of a jfU wild grapevine." ald the bunny gen- IBI tleman. "Vou can hang this down jBJBJ from jour nest and boys and girls can Tfmmvi get up to see you. Only your house irj rather -mill Bobby" ARCS "Oh, I'll get my mother and father and my rlster and brother to build n jPjrjl platform of leaves, branches and twigs KjP, all ground outside of the regular heat! ' BJfM chirped Bobby, "and we can have I j some fun the-r " wW "All right." said Uncle W Igetllv "You dr. that, and I'll get the grape- A f v Away hopped the rabbit gentleman iwl to gnaw, with his strong teeth, some Strands Of wild jrrnpeilne. and Bobby, W t now singing his cheer-up song, flew Into the tree to help build a platform Hit 19 " around the nest house. WnlV It did not take the bunny rabbit - gentleman long to find, the grapevine. TjjlBp nnd soon he hopped back lo the robin HnHfc tree dragging it after him Then H pflr Jucko and Jumpo Klnkytall. thi t v. o Elji O monkey boys, came scrambling along. M j BJ and L'ncle Wlggllv called to them: "HI there my monkey chaps' Please Mil B take one end of this vine ladder up Yil I 'n 'he ir'e and fasten It near Bobby L2j I Cheer Lp's house." Efll I So Jacko and Jumpo did this, and t&l soon there was a fine ladder, easy to climb, reaching from the ground Elj' up to the robins' nest. And Mr and Mr. Cheer Up. with the helji of their children. Including Bobby, had maae a large plntform like the one where wLJJ you dance at a plrnlc In the woods, fe all about the nest, with a railing fr, around so no one would f ill ofr. "Now, we'll have some fun!" chirped Bobby, and he whistled and called to all his friends ra como and see him. for now they could get up to his nest house In tho tree something thnv , I could not do before. Then they came- -Sammic and Buale i.lltletall I he rabbit ; Jackie and Peetle Bbw Wow. the dogs Iulu. Alice and .Tlmmle Wlbhle wnbble, the dm ks 'll Jollie and Jllllc Longtall, the mice. and Squeakle-Eekle and Nellie Chip j,I . Chip, the sparrows, had no trouble getting to Bobby's house, for the spar Hjfl rows were birds like a robin only not Jbo large. And Johnnie und Blllle Bushytall, the squirrels, qould climb a tree without a bidder. ' Now we'll have some Jolly fun!" hirped Bobby "We can play tag and , W Jump over each other's backs, and aBAn then we II ent Home cherry ptr BL So the animal children had lots of ty f ,Bgi ran on the platform around the nest house In the tree, and none of rnem I fell off Uncte lggl) was there, too All of a sudden, Just when Susie I Llttletall was tugging Squenkle-Eekte, 1 the cousin mouse Jackie Bow Wow : looked down to tno ground and cried i Oh, Iook at the bad Uazoople' ) Look at mm i wonder who he's ' after''" "I'm aTter anybody I can get souse, from'" cried the Cazoople, who waa . an animal like a clothes horse, with 'skinny legs, a fal body and two mouths, so he could cat more souse. "I'm going to ttet Uncle Wigglly's souse ! and then some from Bobby Cheer Up' ' cried the Linzoopto. "Here I come: And witn that he started to climb up the grapevine ladder. "Oh. ho! N'o you don't'" exclaimed I Uncle Wigglly, with a Jolly laugh and with tnat the bunny g?nt!emun pulled the end of the laadi-r up frORI the ground where the bad Gozoopie ! couldn t reach it ".Vow. let's see you get anv souse!" said L'ncle Wigglly. i i lou ca-n't climb a tre? like a squirrel j you con t fly like, a bird and the lad dei I have lifted up out of your reach . Let's see you get any souse now! j "Alas! Wow! Wow' I cannot! You have fooled me"' howled tne : flazoople, and away he went without La emltch of souse. But the animal 'children and Uncll lg;ily had a good ' time. I guess I'm glad I live in a nest I house In a tree," said Bobbie Cheer Up when the partv was over, and the i bunny gentleman twinkled his pink ' nose So If the kitchen sink doesn't , splash water on the coffee pot and i make the tea strainer giggle in tne face of the clock. I'll tell you next ! about Uncle Wfggllj and the ground house. :,o 7 r Rippling' Rhymes By WALT HAS038 N - S g DISEASES AND REMEDIES I ve tried all kinds of temedles which are supposed to cure disease, and there are some vvhloh give re licl from anguish, funtods. pain and I grief Some pills will drive away I the pain, and leave you feeling safe !and sane, but only for a while be Burc! There la relief, but there's no I cure. The dark green pains will all ! come back and make your wear) sinews crack and smoking, slide along your bones until you fill tho night with groans. Beware the pills, whatever their hue. the green, the purple or the blue which lull you j for a Utile while, and seem to urge a hopeful smile For when the achea come back again, as iln will come to plllfcd men, theyUl climb our tendons and your thews, and they'll Different Types of Hats Bring I Out Different Characteristics ' 4 . a orkV Fashion Authority NEW YORK Here Is a pretty Rlrl. with average features and an average amount of "personality. ' Note how these different types of hats brliiR out different characteris 'tlcs. making her actually appear a dlf i fercnt type of girl. The Millinery association has us all (Wrought up about this idea The say lt Is up to us to wear the sort of hats that bring out our best points, not Jonly In features but in our minds and ' souls. PERFE T II . I OR n PI , At the right, bi-low. is a perfect hat for this type of face It is seldom that la hat combines, us this does, the loim sweep acres.-! the face with so graceful 'a curve. Then, loo, a draped hat. us 'uaiiy calculated to appear heavy, '! jebom Is so effectively lightened as this D thi points outlining the brim anJ I the ostrich fronds that rise above them. , Just above. Is a hat entirely unsuit 'oble, according to the association, to this type of face. The down-turned trim is wrong, especially when topped by a draped crown. It casts loo heavy a shadow blurring tho features Instead of br.n? ng them out and produces a generally top-heav) appearance. 01 BAKI i DEI im D ROH S The large hat above In the center Is better for theye features than the one Just described, because the brim though down-turned, is larger and th" ADVENTURES OF THE TWINS j EY OLIVE ROBERTS BARTON I IA MTV GETS I K BRED Mrs Field Mouse -looked in horrified amoxoment at her husband, Murtchle. calmly eating his soup. How could he, when his own son was crying with an Injured ce' Particularly, when Flop had almost told them that Mr Scribble-Scratch, 'he fair;, schoolmas ter was. the cause of It. Of course, he didn't Just say so. exactly, but well he let them think so unyway How did he know that Nick, the at- I -Ii .i-'.! hk i I.. 1 -1 ' 1 1 a i -...ii n:. an Im i I m lir t lli a a In 1 in a t nn in of your own son " screamed Mrs Mmi - , tendance-officer at the Meadow Grove I school, had seen h's father and made! '. report that morning about him and Aluffv Mole playing truant "Mr. Mouse, I should like to know what you mean by allowing this aw ful treatment of your own son." screamed Mrs. Mouse. '"Do you In tend to lot that dreadful falryman go wlthoiut a word"" oh no 1 guers not " answered Munchle, quietly reaching for a crack ' er. "Flop, how come you can't got have sp'lkei upon their shoes. There's i but one cure for fleshly Ills, and that I cure's not dlsqulsed as pills. The Good Book tells of one old gent who 'neatb his maladies was bent, ho often to the doctors stept. "and with 'his fathers then he srept." And that's the only cure I know Tor all (life's miseries and wo.'; just cast I away the Juice of squills,, the porous I plasters and the pills, the trusses iand thu liver pads and gu and slumber with your dads. uu The Amazon is estimated to be : nearly 700 feet deep at a point 1000 j mllea from the sea I 'jP BsaHBi rt o joscpii, lint-; suited to Chin type: top left and right, below; second on the right, cn fieri j nnaaltahlOi and right above, sdightlj better adapted. line of the crow n clearhj defined Also the upturned back relieves somewhat the disadvantage of the turned down brim. The long Uno emphasized by the your spelling? I met Mlkr Mole and ho says Muff got a hundred on his spelling paper today " "Oh, he didn't at all'" denied Flop I stoutly "He didn't get a hundred an more than I did." "I must have made a mistake th( n 'went on Munchle. it was his numb -r paper 1 gucs-i "He didn't either:" denied Flop. "He Id'dn't know how to do the earth-worm 'problem any more than 1 did. All he could do was to eat. He at I'rrtns until I thought he d bust (Flop said Bust). The storm brought 'cm up and Muff didn't have to hunt at all. They seemed to be hunting for him Instead And he WOUldn t move an inch and I couldn't get out of the hole and " He stopped suddenly, realizing that he had let the cat out of the bag "Why, Flop Field Mouse"' cried his mother In surpUse and dropping him off her lap. "Munchie go get a birch rod nt once ' HOW WILL BE ICCOl Si i FOR C VI PORTLAND William Vale is look ing for a certain careless burglar and he also has an eye trained ror his wife's return from the country j "I don't mind Iho silverware." Vale told the cops, "but the last thliu.- mjf wife told me was to be sure to feed the kitten and not let It escape. The jburglar left the screen door open and puss Is gone. How'm I goln" to tell : my wife I was so careless?" oo Berlin scientists have found that yeast, besides being useful in bread 'and beer, can be made to produce (flavoring extracts, a muscle building 'tonic and a noninflammable sub stitute for celluloid. turned-over corners of the brim at th sides makes the hat In the circle at tht left effective. The feathers add to Its beauty by relieving the severity and apparent weight ' HEALTH ' BY UNCLE SAM, M. D. Health Questions Will Bo Arv ewercd if Sent to Information Bureau, U. S. Public Heaith Srv Ice, Washington, O. C. . ft I ! DING V'OUXO CH1LDKI S Iho change from the bottle or breast to table food must be made Intelligently If the baby Is to con tinue to grow properly. No child three years of age or un der should ever be fed at the family table, or permitted to have tastes of food othor than that which Is espec ially Intended for him. To try to feed a young baby at the family table while attempting to par take of a meal is not conducive to a mothers or father's digestion. It la also Unfair to a young child to expect bini ait quietly through the time his , ... rs take lor their meal and not want the food he seeB them eating. A til m pie, safe and satisfactory method of feeding a young child, and a practical substitute for the always dangerous high-chair, Is the separate small table and chair. Where the house room space Is limited this small table may be fastened on hinges to the wall so it may be dropped out of the Way when not In use. When the mother Is preparing the fomilj meal, the baby may be served J .Vm U . Annkl hi.,.-, 'it 111 . riVVll tab!,- In this wiij, he docs not see: Other foods and will not ask for them, i When babj has finished his own meal.; lie will b0 content to play or sleep, while the fi illy enjoy theirs unham pered by hia presence. The small table Is an excellent means Of training In table manners. When the child has learned proper Control of hlms-lf at the age of four or five years, the family will then en jo his presence at their table PYELITIS. Q Will you please tell me what pyelitis Is? Its causes and after ef fects'' Is It the same as Bright s dis ease? A Pyelitis Is an inflammation of the funnel shaped collecting tube of the kidney, characterized by the for mation I"' which appears in the lurlne The dlseas.. Is curable, and Is 'not nt all the same as Brlght's dls ease. A patient suffering of pyelitis should he under tho care of a good physician. ' IllV'llr' Have Clean. Healthy , fis if they Tire, Itch, for C?8 1 3 Smart or Burn, if Sore, x. r"r"C IrritateQ'. Inflamed or YOUR L.lL3 Granulated, use Murine often. Sootbcs, Refreshes. Safe for Infant or Adult. At all Druggists. Write for Free Eye Book. Murino Ely c Remedy Co- Chic I Sister Mary's Kitchen I (Copyright, '.t20, N E A.) Pickles may not have S whole lot rf nourishment, but if they nssist a ad$d appetite they surely indirectly lUppljj food and should have their plae In ihe diet. Catsups and "rel-ishc-3" do much to give pl'iuancy to icrlaln dlshcr. 1 1 iMATO CATSUP 11 bushel ripe tomatoes 3 tablespoons salt 1 tablespoon black pepper 1-2 teaspoon red pepper 1 cup brown sugar 2 cups s-lnegar J tablespoons clmamor. 1 tublespoon cloves 1 tablespoon celery seed Cut tomatoes In quarters, but do not peel. Boil until soft, but not mushy and put through a sieve. Re turn io kettle and boll down one-third. Tie cinnamon, cloves and celery seed In a bag Add all ingredients to to mato Juice and boll until thick. Bottle and sal. Pepper hash la very pretty to look at and good to eat. PCPPER HASH 12 green peppers 12 red peppers A or 5 little peppers (bltey) I large onions Is Jesus a Myth I BY IR JAMES . VANCE. i Is Jesus of Nazareth a fact of his tory? If not. there are some things without an explanation. Tho four Gospels nre a fabrication nnd were Invented to maintain and promote a lie Is this believable? These Gospels abound In the suhlimest moral teachings They inculcate every virtue. They demand absolute fidelity between man and his fellow. They call for a life of unyielding probity. They frown on the slightest deviation from rectitude They call not only for an honest life, but a clean heart. They explore the motives and Imcstl . gate the secret processes of the soul, 'and brand as bad a life that cher ishes so much as a desire for evil. !"an It be possible that the worlds IsubUmeSt moral plea is built on a lie.' It Is incredible If Jesus Is a myth, the early Chris lions were deceived There can be no doubt about the strenRth and sincerity of their belief. It was more than sur mise and conjecture. It was convic tion stronger than life lts?lf For the (sake of this conviction they suffered the loss of all things position, kin dred, property, life Itself They went to the dunpeon and the stake with a O LITTLE. BENNY'S Note Book By LEE PAPE 1 4 Me and Sid Hun' dont speek to each other on account of being mad at each other, me being mad at him on account of ului calling me a old woman and h'm being mad at me on recount of me being mad at him. and this aftirnoon us fellows was standing crround the lamppost and ir'id Hunt came up, everybody saying hello to him exsept me, and him saying hello ; to everybody exsept me, and Puds Isimklne sed, G, aint ou 2 made up , yet ? No we aint. said Sid Hunt, and wats more theres a certen persin in this I crowd and bleeve me If 1 wasent I mad at blm Id tell him wat I think of him and bleeve mo it wouldent take long, either, because bleeve mo it aint mulch. Holey Bmoaks, Bennv, G wlzz. did !you heer that, are you going to stand ! for that Benny, jliuminv crick its o boy ihe fellows nil sed. and I sed, Well there's a certain part- standing crround liter that 1 dont speek to. , but bleeve me if 1 did Id soon let him know I dont consider he's eny i thing but a big lctnmin. bleeo- me O boy, are you going to stand for that, Sid did you heer that, Sid, holev Krlssmas lhats fearse. wats I vou going to do about that. Sid? all tho fellows sed. and Sid sed. Its a goo; thinf; for sumboJV heer that I don't speck to hlni because other ;wise If I did bleee me Id puntch his ' face in. O Benny, did you heer that, thats a direck insult O boy, holey tats, holey smoaks. the fellows sed, and I jsed, Its a darn lucky thing that Im mad at sumbody In this crowd or cits 'for 2 pins nuthing couldent pervent me from nocking his block off. Proving It was a lucky thins; we dldent speek to each other or we proberly would of had a fearse flto When your mouth tastes like all the mean 1 things you ever did mixed together, then j ou need BEECHAM'3 t PILLS Your mouth Is a good indica'jrvn of the con dition of the 9lomach sad boweU. Lj-r-t Sal of Any Merlicioe in lha World, Sold arwrvbert, La box, lOc, 2S. J 3 tablespoons salt 1 1-2 cups sugar 1 4 nips vinegar Remove seeds and stem end of pop- jl pers and chop shells. Cover woth boiling water, let them stand 10 mln- jH utes and drain Add onions chopped H Cover with bo.llnK water and let the whole come to a boll Drain again. ,H Add sugar, Salt nnd vinegar and cook twenty minutes. Seal In sterilized Chill Sane,, may take the place of H catsup many times and Is much easier to make. CHILI SAUCE -W IS ripe tomatoes onions 3 green peppers cup sugar 2 1-2 cups vinegar 1 table-spoon salt teaspoons cinnamon Am 1 teaspoon allspice H 1 teaspoon cloves H Feel tomatoes and slice. Chop pep- B peis and onions Put In preserving H kettle with vinegar, sugar and spices. JH . Brine: gradually to the boiling point H 'and co-.k tio-vl until thick, about IB 1 two and niir -half hours. A god housewife makes time when she can't song on their lips They made tho Lfl sacrifice nol only without a murmur, xH but with an eagerness that cannot be iH explained without certltdde. They had 'H every opportunity to know whether mLH they were being deceived. The evl denoe they submit could not be re Jected In any court of Justice. If they wi-r..- di'i'eUod It Is not posslblo for iK men ever to be sure If Christ did not live as He Is re ported In the Qoapela, the christian aiiin church Is without an explanation. The E 'church is here. With nil Its virtues nnd Its faults, it is here, an undeniable aaP fact. Men mu hold differing opkn ions about the Christian church, but K no man can say it Is a myth Its rec ord Is un open book, and Its Influ- Hn once is widespread. s well try to explam the American nation without th Declaration of Independence and the Revolutionary war as to explain the Christian church without Its founder. Can it be possible that all this Is MmW built on a lie? As well talk about the MmF da without a sjn or the sea without Htj tho waters of the deep or forests with- mxHi lout trees or sensation without life as to attempt to tell the story of the asaw 'world todav and leave out Jesus- BE JUST FOLKS I By Edgar A, Qaeat ImMV 4 . Rj THE CONTENTED WISE flK Not by the wise are the great things wBi done, IHE For the wise are pleased with the mmf things that are, They've charted the course of the morning sun Wmw. And know the name of each separate ftfi And t b ever Ithe way of the wise to WmWf Tenaciously to an olden tiling. ifip'? Who ventures away from the traveled He 1 To follow his dream Into realms We? Shall walk alone with his heavy load. ,Kj I For the wise sit down with the things that are; l Into 1 1 ti v. must a young man go. fl&- !But the wise stay back on the roads HJfc- the know. k'-; I Yet eer the wise wa to youth. HA ' And eer the old must fear tte i For never men come to the final iHfr' truth I Or the end of things which their BVJ skin span ao. WSm And he who follows his dream, and Hp To better the world, --hall teach the Heed not ih" wise when they tell you WS- Youib be brave as you build the Rs . What though you're scoffed at, day L' You shall win if Ih" dream be true; rjl Linger not where the wise men BAV Progress waits on your willing hand. The Mennonltcs derive their name fif from Menno Simons. formerly a BK Catholic priest, who became a teacher Bk and leader of the Anabaptists about Hg JOB PRINTING I THE - NEUTEBOOM PRINTING f COMPANY (Successors to Dee-Neute- w& boom Printing Co.) KE 2370 Washington Avenue mfc. Above Minnoch Paint Co. mWH Phone 1166 Eg DOINGS OF THE DUFFS Danny Tips His Mother Off. BY ALLMAN K BVVfP I WOVsl DAWfJW. I WANT VOO'VO B II I iYuef) I 7Zr 1 fefTllP 1 ', '. T ITIFiP 7 , Wtt I Sr.M-fUE HOUSE U.LOAD0V I I JSJ LohAP TZ HB I VJEtU, VJMAT M kWlTTij6 a- I P0V J 1 85? sosyjotr , ml vuosil rHKMim I If I a mv soaj ' 1 WAR ,ft ?) fl