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Show THE LEHI SUN. LEW. UTAII 'I cross s$ 1 I) r 1 bobby 'If tfILL J(m$k ror jff if ms sox HvmM 1E( '5 about having his picture taken with "Dad, do we have enough money big church I his curls. They aren't so cute any more!" I 1 wedding or do you favor an elopement?" -NANCY By Ernie Bushmiller youkCnooHs YcZ$!m WSL J I r'Fm TAKE ,AOII now what was NANCyI' I ISrrS ' TTT1 I'jJ SToANTED D' MATTER WITH i NANCY V A. SLUG&O TO MAKE DAT BLONDE J HEP. 2 . ' J JEAL0US J "T 1 ' v ' n " i in Sff hi l n i i ls i i i 1 ITTI T- m-S ..w. , uniJ. KL,h M :t nic nurcT...... VI Nf7 11 ugaHa f .TL'i"' Mb and hhe are our debaters! k now ydu may both i II ll. s ; ' ' -- - ' ' i I MUTT ANn irrc r -1 ' By Bud Fisher L..,.w .,.w vwjn inuw WTouunt i DONT YOU START J I Tr "S3TYi CAM ot- ir I I I GAVE YOU, JEFF? VEH!TriE BE6lNNlNG?Jj FROM THE 25 J r4A I THAT WAV j T1;(WATTILL flt COME TO P7 ALWAYS STH WIvSgW-yJ? WIvSgW-yJ? I GET TO WPb THAT VET I I & J N "E MIDDLE Mgs I jhMftfwl? vz-M m - - V' , r i-1 j.c...: ff v ftr'HJ Y7-l W bonder HOW its VW1 IM'H li 3&A,M U 9 a5SVWJ 1 KJV"w ir began tITTrD "3r ' " f-. r . , , By Arthur Pointer jKf m pp Mw, 1 hfei Liffj? REG'LAR FELLERS p " I 1 I ' . . - , VCI1C "yrnes PO YOU FELLERS . f 1 . IM WANNA TAKe A CHANJT V- J VYHEN VA 'oT5ALU V WME WouT 7' , A NICK EU EACH.' ST 17 v THOSE WA5 THREE ) V MONEYAl 1 F Trrr l-s I rfnu-J L TRA CHANCES HAP iJ- T?"' .4fr.. VIRGIL n By Len Kleu SILENT SAM IK 7l ifflFTI I 1 r- . By Jeff Hayes j jHE ; Sons of FICTION' AdBam CO?? Eugene I . Wright This Week's Best Fiction BECAUSE he had a problem on his mind that morning Louie didn't give much attention to the man who got in his cab except to notice that he had an old, tired race and looked as though he might have money, and when he heard his pas senger say, "Grand Central," he pulled out from the curb in a hurry and swunc down a side street to Fourth avenue. He hadn't had a decent fare that morning and his time would be up at noon. Grand Central, he knew, would . meter about seventy-five cents, and if his fare was in the hurry he seemed to be and he got him there on time he might get a quarter extra, making it a dollar. At Twelfth street, seeing some kind of a demonstration ahead of him, Louie tried to go down a side street to avoid being be-ing held up, but the street was filled with trucks and he had no choice but to fall in line behind the stalled uptown traffic. traf-fic. His mouth drew down at the corners and his hands tightened on the steering wheel as he read the signs and banners a group of demonstra' tors were carrying. "Darn fools." he said. "Ain't we got troubles enough right here with' out people worryin about what goes on in Spain and China and them other foreign countries?" A faint smile played over his pas' senger's grim, sagging face. He had made a large donation to foreign relief himself, he remembered, about three months ago. He could make good use of that money, now. "You don't believe," he asked, "in charity?" "Not that kind!" Louie exhibited his strong, troubled profile. "Not when there's people in this country needing it just as much as they do over there." HpHE MAN gazed admiringly at Louie's thick, lustrous hair, the healthy color of his neck and cheek. "You," he said, "look strong and healthy." "I'd be in a pickle," Louie told him, "if I wasn't" "In what way?' Louie shrugged. "You can't sup- j port a family on part time in the cab business." And then, his body seemed to grow rigid between his shoulders, "I'm a blood donor." For a few moments the man was silent; his eyes were reflective, "That's interesting," he said finally, "I'm sure it's appreciated." "You might think so." Louie gave a short laugh. "The last guy I gave my blood to threw me out of his apartment He was practically dead. If I'd refused to make the transfusion he would have died, They wouldn't have had time to get anybody else. And yet because coiu an s pay mm a montn and a half s back rent I owed him he had me thrown out in the street furni ture, wife and kids everything." "That seems. . . unfair." "Unfair I" Louie's hand tightened over the steering wheel. "How would you feel if the guy that cracked down on you was walking around the streets with your blood in him? And this guy's rich! He didn't need the money. He'd given five thousand bucks to the Red Cross a couple of months before. He's got more real estate in New York than he knows what to do with." Louie put his cab in gear. The parade had moved on. Traffic was beginning to thin out ahead. "I'm just praying that some day I'll meet that guy. There's some things I'd like to tell him." "You'd recognize him this man. if you saw him?" "Only by his picture in the news papers. They had him all covered up when I gave him the transfusion Only his arm was sticking out" Louie crossed Fourteenth street and swung into the outside lane to make CROSSWORD PUZZiE Horizontal 1 Female servant 5 To discontinue discon-tinue 9 Golf club 11 Dawn 13 Skill 14 "The magic city" 16 Prefix: not 17 Note of chromatic 6C&1G 18 He defeated Jack Johnson in 1915 20 French for "I" - 21 Military cap 23 Powerful deity 24 Sum 26 Unaccompanied Unaccom-panied 28 Two ems 30 Weathercock 31 Public writer 34 Framing in which panes of glass are set 38 Note of scale 37 Group of ' eight 40 To genuflect 42 Alas! 44 Bones 45 Nook 46 Remote 49 110 50 Ram 52 Cubic meter 53 Pronoun 54 Flimsy 56 Tidier 58 Colloquial: dispute 59 To come out even Vertical l' Girl's name 2 Siamese coin 3 Indefinite nominative 4 Prefix: half 5 Riding whip 6 City in Chaldea Solution In Ntxt Inn. 1 p f m FTTTl 9 To I (u - IT, ji i u n - 26 H p2829 L-Lir--: P JJ ZZTZWY I, :::i:::::i4;- p 54 5S ii Jg, 'j" No. 12 shl 1 Electrified particle 8 One who shows endurance 9 Cold-weather garment 10 Colloquial: to vex 11 Chalice 12 Archaic: to anoint 15 To mitigate 18 Hoisted 19 House for pigeons 22 Armed band 25 Small pies 27 Comparative suffix 29 Pronoun 32 Exists 33 Negative 34 Parodies 35 Cancels 38 To shun 39 One who levies imposts 41 Hungarian composer 43 Colloquial: fanciful story 47 Pen for pigs 48 To require 51 Slang: initiative 53 Music: as written 55 Molten lava 57 Land measure Answer to Paulo N timber 11 slAlcl IsIpIeIdI tIrIaTp iii-iiil Ruot PjE A THl C EE Pq s R 0 A C hTj ? jpL A C E Jb e d"e cTk ill V.E RN Pe R A JTr A L EIH V 0 I N G 3.L L aer rHo b m o d Is I Fnew eel Serle H-47 up for the lost time. "But I'll meet him some day," he said. For some time the man behind him gazed directly through the windshield. He seemed to be unaware un-aware of the fact that his face was in full view of the rear-vision mir ror. He looked very old, and very tired. "I see what you mean," he said finally, and Louie could just barely hear rum above the noise of traffic. "I suppose we do pay too much attention at-tention to what's going on in other countries and overlook sometimes what's going on right under our noses. But we mean all right. It's easier for us to give to an organization organiza-tion that's rigged up to help groups of people than it is to look around yourself for people who need help. it TF YOU were to meet the man A you gave your blood to and didn't know him you might think him a pretty decent kind of a fellow. A man isn't generally thoughtless or bad just because he's rich. Suppose he was caught in a jam himself and needed every dollar he could lay his hands on. Suppose a group of banks were going to foreclose on him and he'd lose everything he had in the world if they did? A fellow like you young and healthy, why, you could afford to lose a million dollars. You could make it back again if you wanted to; and if you didn't want to you could do something some-thing else. "But when a man gets alons in life and then loses everything he's been working for for forty or fifty years it's apt to be quite as big a shock to him as it was to you to bp turned out of your apartment. In fact, some very good men aren't able to survive such shocks. For all you know, that man mav be dead. You may never see or even hear of him again." With a strange feeling in hia throat, Louie turned his cab into Forty-second street and drew un ho- fore Grand Central station. The guy accmea 10 Know what he was talking about he thought And sunoose th man had died after he'd given hiiJ his blood. Died with his blood in h:J veins. He'd never thought of thai before. And he didn't like it, some, how. "I guess you're right" he said his head lowered as he tore the slid rrom his meter and handed it back. "After all, he didn't know me from Adam. I guess we all make mis-! takes." face. His hand trembled as he drew from his Pallet his last hundred? dollar bill and pressed it folded.! into Louie's hand. , "It's never too late," he said, "to try to rectify those mistakes." m "We got troubles enough right here. said Louie. Ten Rules for Happiness You've read, you've thought, you've heard a good deal about hap piness. " You've seen people seek it, most of them unsuccessfully. You wonder whether there is really any way to guarantee yourself as much happiness as you think everyone ha: a right to expect Maybe these ten rules from the Cleveland Academy of Medicine will help. A learned committee from this academy studied the matter. What it sought was a formula for happier living. The rules are: Have a hobby. A hobby is a uge, a storm cellar into which you can duck when stress and storms on the surface of your life buffet you about too much. Develop a philosophy of life. That simply means to have a guide by which to live. A life without one b a iiplor-sb-oiter existence without plan, without goal, without the com fort of ideals or truth. Share your thoughts. Companion shin Is essential to personality ana to mental health. If anyone lives too long with his own thoughts W can generate explosive qualities th" frn Cnfocc rnnfide. COnSUil ViO Li . vVAUt..?.?, Face your fears and have it The world is filled with people r nlnir 9V9V frnm fears, but DeV them. Face 1 Overcome them boldly. Balance fantasy in your We fact. Dream, for all normal bei-: must, but balance your dreams w .. .... a. tuA hahll 01 acts. Don't lau inxo dreaming your life away. Beware of alluring escapes rro your troubles but face them rea tically and work out a reasonao answer. j , that Exercise moderately in ordeV you may have physical as mental health. Love wisely, for life without w is life without light Don't worry. , Trust in time and be Patif. for There you have the ten ruie happiness. They seem slmo simple to be effective. 3 But they are the rules basea eternal truths of human naru-,e psychology, and if Ji f 8 and follow them they wdl 0?! I interesting things to your l 101 1 ft: pod rr ;oiis of arictir She on iewas toman. 'M def ste of ration, ' :ss tha a non It wasi i cast id she 1 mal the r,d the ' er no t be esc Peter 1 :lf,his bss trips 'amplete; ' life, jy mov: jpers. EonaHy t banionabl feisses frc sally s a that' Miy lireadfu aste of i H and iat doe; .e?" he a reiten She foi rild, coi tesh ro magazine peaters. 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