Show Sense en co coBy By JOHN BLAKEe BLAKE e Bell Dell syndicate Service Unfortunately It is Just as natural nat nat- ural for man to Indulge In In the il illusions illusions II of worry Vorry Worry It Is to Indulge In the Illusions of Win Witt m hope belie It If you ou are going to have any finy illusions the hope lope hope Illusions are arc the best paying ln In n respect to happiness I know that there are arc some instances Instances Instances In In- stances when worry Is not to be he hen n avoided ol d. d The parent sitting beside a sick child the workman out of ot a n Job and not knowing where he is to get tho the price of the next meal his fam- fam famIly Ily ly sorely needs has bas grounds for worry But It Is not as ns a n rule the people people people peo peo- who are up against It who do most of the worrying It is the little worriers tho the peo people pIe who seem to have made up their minds that whatever Is Is wrong and that hard luck will get them long that need a good talking talkIng talk talk- Ing to If these people would spend half the time they spend in worrying to the elimination of the cause of their worry Vorry they would be happier and far less of a source of annoyance to the people to whom they are always bringing their troubles There are all nIl sorts of or worriers inthe Inthe In Intile the tile world world weather weather worries who see a storm In every cloud that appears appears appears ap ap- ap- ap pears on the horizon health wor wOt worriers worriers who Imagine that because they have a n headache che or a pain In Inthe Inthe inthe the neck that they are arc going to come down with some fatal tatal disease business worriers who are downcast downcast downcast down down- cast not because they are arc not doIng doIng doing do- do Ing well welI but because somebody i ielse else for some some- reason that they donot do donot o not understand un Is doing better Develop enough philosophy to take things as ns they come men mending them as much as possible by your own courage and determination I suppose the little army which fought so desperately for freedom In the days clays that foIl followed owed the Declaration Dec Dec- Declaration of ot Independence would have hate been Justified in worrying Ing If It anybody y in the world could have bave been Jut hut if the they had stopped to worry the history of the world would have changed and there would probably never have been any United States State of America Buck up and do your our best on your own Job whatever It Is and dont don't worry If troubles come along There have been many races on this planet since its first peoples began began began be be- gan to think and work and fight But worrying never h helped any of them nor will It help you i e e Mr Ir the explorer when he was ask asked cd if Ir he lie was not afraid of polar Heroes of bears durIn during his Peace 60 sojourn j 0 urn In the theAre Ar Are Arctic C tic replied that polar bears are not as dangerous danger danger- ous as taxicabs Mr Ir however ho is modest Very few people would care to take the chances he dl did in order to learn more about a practically unvIsited unvisited un- un vIsited region of the thc earth so that his fellow men might have hn better knowledge of It S e t t When there Is difficult and dangerous dangerous dangerous dan dan- work to be done In the world worl there always s 's seems to be somebody to do It For a number of years I have seen mall mill planes sail over oyer my house day after day In cold or heat storm or sunshine Flying is by bv no means as danger danger- er- er ous as is it used used used- to be but men men of iron nerve alone are willing to do it as a regular job The same thing used to apply to railroading As a boy In a a. a western state where blizzards s were common In la lathe tho the winter time and when locomotives locomotives tives were not so finely designed and built machines that they are tOC today lY railroad accidents were ver very frequent A numb number r of or them serious serious se se- se- se rious rIou ones happened not far from my home But they did not In tho the least doter deter de do- ter young mea meil from becoming engineers engineers engineers en en- and firemen on railroads I have Just been r reading a one of John FIskes FIske's series of books booles on the discovery of or America The risks that the English French and Dutch settlers took were enor enor- First of or all an t they had to make perilous voyages In cockle shell ships across the storm stormy Atlantic Then Ihen they were In constant danger danger danger dan dan- ger from unfriendly In Indians Inns And Anti they knew so little of or how to cultivate cultivate cultivate vate the new v soil on which they had located their farms tIt that t they were always confronted with the grim figure fig fig- ure of or the tho wolf at the tho door But nut though they now and then grew disheartened the record shows that they remained l here and nud In III time prospered It used to be said taid that civilization would make men timid that after living liv liv- lag ing ng a sheltered life they would bo to afraid to face ace serous serious trouble Yet there have been beon abundant vol for eYer every war that the conn country try has engaged In and there has never nover been a dearth of ot men to undertake new and perilous projects projects as ns have hare the men you see flying l plaices 3 o today I |