Show M X forgetting YOUR Y t 3 TROUBLES A j 11 Z T iby douglas malloch A S K LIEN a man was a boy W WHEN just so big and no bigger then it a joy not to puzzle and figger with a shanty the school and the president grover then the regular rule was to cairy carry things over oh that teacher of mine 1 I dont know what tt it gained her gave me four into nine but it left a remainder evry lesson each day left a three or a seven then I 1 found out the way after that it was heaven I 1 could add and divide and not leave any leavin yes whatever I 1 tried it would always come even when a figger that fussed bussed at the end id discover that was easy I 1 just carry it over oer then I 1 got out of school and the problems were bigger but I 1 found it a rule for whatever aliat ever you fag er though theres care all the way there la is worry and sorrow make it part of today not a part of tomorrow there Is plenty of pain there is doubt doub tin ln and arlei grifiin in dont let it remain make blake your problem come even start the morning os as bright and as free as a rover if theres trouble at night dont you vou carry it overt over I 1 Q 1930 douglas b for the tallest passenger when he chooses to stand the air which comes through the easily adjusted window at ones side Is cool but not too cold even in midsummer when traveling in european airplanes I 1 have longed for woolen hose and fur lined boots then too there Is no unpleasant vibration to brace ones nerves against occasionally the plane undulates in an air pocket particularly over the desert but there Is none of the jarring one receives es in an automobile or a railroad tra train I 1 n while on ao an airplane I 1 have jotted down notes at random and my handwriting was as legible as it I 1 sat at my desk at home it is the absence of vi vior gration atlon and the lack of dust dirt and odors that enable an air passenger to step from a plane at the end of a journey of 0 three thousand or six thousand miles without a trace of fatigue |