Show SATURDAY EVENING FEBRUARY 16' 1929 i ( U&ZP GOIfci J DAY BY DAY ' FELLAS i JCMGC £6-n6- SIDE I w QMTUS SjJSST oPTcjswj T' " V ' ue --r- Li 'V I j -- : ' - 1 )4 Veen- MeTAEVv£ POLLOJ£0 OS FOZ X OF fciDS 1 DOO'T HMOMJ WovJ MA-i niArm W5 n MVaiO 1 STOP AMO ) has its naughtiness yet save for the occasional scenic surprises it is little different from the average Ameri- can burlesque show Ziegfeld White and Carroll long ago beat Ahem at their own game They excel only in nakedness In "Tout Paris" at the Casino de Paris a bevy of beefy ladies two chewing: gum ambled to the footlights entirely undraped save for scanty loin cloths The comedians are the red nosed sort with baggy pantaloons who punctuate their fun by kissingjeach other Whoops! The chorus consisted of what the program liisted as "The' Sixteen Kmart Boys" roguishly rouged and d smirking youths in costumes with mincing steps pink and singing falsetto I would like to have a percentage of the hospital aurights and offer them before an dience of cow hands in Tulsa OkUx on pay day Perhaps! an American might enjoy a Paris revue more if it were not for the pests who nag him in seat The Parisian reaching-hi- s gives the impudent program girl the equivalent of a penny Less than Nthree francs from an American and he wiill be followed arid insulted v ':V down the aisle follow the same ushers The girl No matter what you procedure give them they will stand by after yousare seated with hand extendMine not ed1 demanding more satisfied with a two franc pourbois waitedfor at least a moment for moreand not receiving it sneered "Cochon!" That my dears is a ' -'-pig But there is something extremely pleasant in the easy intimacy between a French audience and perIn the fronts row sat a formers perfect type 'of venerable French Papa with his happy family He munched from a pokje of candjpassing it around at Intervals to members of the orchestra And all 1 partook you bet One of the comedians strolling stopped shook through ' the ' aisle with a half doi-e- n hands and chatted while the show acquaintances came to stop And some distinguished lady in' a box evident-- ! ly a professional received a bow or was blown a kiss at one time or other from each member of the company Nothing so elevates a: person here as death The most humble funeral cortege' parsing through the street becomes instantly the object of reverential jrespect Pedestrians become inert! and every man lifts his hat Motor cars swerve to the curbs and-stoThrough the broad open windows of a lingerie shop — (I was there with my wife smarty) — this morning 'I saw a funeral In unison all pass procession clerks-turned from customers and bowed while lips moi'ed in briet The program will be song Bible lesson by Tosh co dano invocation piano solo by Elizabeth Kematsb song by Matsuc Kano address by Reverend Arthur J Hansen pastor of the First Bap tist church closing gong benedic tion —11 JWIK ' '"-- i lkFffW77 Jg U JU s' 5 rM 1§MT OUR AMBOLAMc- e- !f4 AMBUUANCe JUST CAy I - VWE'RC cSSeo-t- ll OM J BEAT7WAT? LlVCS JUST l OOG h ' !' W j&929 t Jilt ' ey wca sEwvicg inc x Y - 7 '' 7 The tiny shops nestling under the broad collbhades of the Rue de Rivoli are! rich with human interest of a learned ami J aged couble who conduct a glove de shop a few steps from Rue fill Four customers Castigliorie it to capacity The entire stock is a few bokes behind the counter Papa with hie snowy white beard sits at the! cash drawer while Mama waits on (trade ThroiJtgh a—slit iinI a curtained door 'one may and did-peep Into their home In the rear It has that meticulous shine only a French ytiousewjfeOn-achieves e- room and is a combination Both kitchen bedroom and parlor Russian 'German and speak FrenchT flawless --English FapW has never been to New YOrk but discusses7 it intelligently He told me about the treasures in the Metropolitan museum arid rare volumes in the public library They go to the opera twice a year and spend a day on a Seine boat tripr Outside of these excursions they rarely leave their There! is a solicitude and shop tenderness in their mutual devotion as they approach the shadows together that is touching Incidentally the way most of usa it pronounce the Seine makes Their Greek word to the French pronunciation is "Sennj" Hard and flat — like a night hawkjtaxi driver's think-especiall- y — head i "' ' i f( Fa cj-ufflr- j c i" KNJCK Stories j'K BOBBY COON HAS A HORRIBLE THE CHRISTIAN'S' PRAYER i h lilFE I Text: Matt 6:5-1- 3 I Sjolm Luke -- tlhf —- L Hughes minister-Religion makes its appeal to the highest in man The church therefore is not a social organization a fTusiness Organization but its purpose is to create Imotives and attitudes The Christian religion seaks ! to create the attitude of charity toward all to cause all men to realize that the other man's rights are sacred We are appealing to the membership of this church and the frienus of the church on the basis of religion That was the invitationiTOf the Master Will you heed His call ? Sunday! morning our sermon subject will be "The Water! of Life" You are more than welcome to j these services y Sunday evening the sermon will be illustrated byj means of the stereopti- can 1 his service beginat 7:30 Our Bible scliool meefs at 10 ©clock and the Christian lvdeavor -societies meet at 6:30 jf The Ladies Aid societyjieets in its regulajr monthly meetmg Wednesday alfternoon at 2:30 at the home of Mrs W D Wright 2611 Vari Buptn avenue with JMrs W IJ Mowbray and Mrs R lBush G 1929 BY HCA StBVlCl WC as hostesses The ladies ill give a dinner at the church oA" Thursday evenjng the 21st from76 to 8 (READ THE STORY THEN COLOR THE PICTURE) Wo woulp be glad to see all the j friends The warning which was given cenTots and Tinies waded in turies ago considering the assem- THE Scouty broke out in a grin FIRST! CIIURCn OF CHRIST bling together on the Lord's day walked up to the Sea Man and SCIENTIST — Corner Monroe ave- is just as timely now in 4hese per- He exclaimed "You played a trick On n h street nue and Twenty-fourtilous times! and even more so for us that we will ne'er forget And it is the manner of so many to look at us! We're soaking wet : 11 o'clock at fesrsake the! house of God liegulair service melt The all made theiice way you Sunday morning February 17 Evening service at 7:30 o'clock was really very slick "i will open with the old time hymns Subject "Soul" "Oh kindly don't get mad at of salvation and praise Look un- me" Sunday school 9:30 a rn replied the man "Why can't testimonial to me be and Wednesday 8 evening ye saved all ye you see that I was merely having va p ends of the earth for I am God fun? And meetings at noharmed one Reaainig roonis at 305 Central and there is none other — Isaiah bit You're boatone's filled up just like 2 Rooms meetfrom k open daily and building Prayer a funny a took all and sponge you Sun4 p m 11 a m to except ing oh Wednesday at 7:30 p m plunger Come here upon and 'Mid the storms of doubt and holidays days It's a comfy place to sit" unbelief Then Clowny shouted with a the a Book Stands that eternal SALVATION ARMY MEETINGS no! I'm not for sitfrown "Oh wbrlA holds dear for the coming week will be as We'll all catch cold if down follows: Through jthe restles ages it re- - ting we We loaf 'round ought to dry same meetmains the Saturday: 'Free and Easy our a fire and build clothes Let's 'Tis the jEopk of God and the ing 8 o'clock p m swarm it then we'll all 'rousnd and ' 11 name is Bible its Sunday:- Holiness meeting We need Oh the grand old Book and the get good and warm o'clock a! rn company meeting some sort of heat to take the chill (Sunday IjSchool) 2:30 o'clock p Are thedpar oldonFaith off goodness knows" I stand Y PI L meeting 6:30 o'clock m rok old'which "A great idea" said the man and the Oh Book the 8 Salivation o'clock m grand p meeting I will help you if I can Y'ou "And old dear Faith p m Tots and Tinies get the wood and Are the hope of every land The subject for Sunday night I'll prepare the blaze" The wood will be Spiritual Character" The CON GREGATIONAli was soon piled goqd and high and FIRST public is welcome at any or all of the CHURCH— Robert M Kennan pas- shortly smoke rose toward these services sky It settled over head and Weekly meetings will be" held tor Dr Tbhn Mackay of New York made a rather pretty haze Tuesday Thursday and Saturday furThe bunch all sat down near for watch the papers Kindly City will speak on Sunday at 11 ther anoiincements for the week o'clock from the pulpit Dr Mac- the heat and Carpy sighed "Ah kay is already well known to some this is sweet I'm getting dry al1 ' I R ST PRESRYTERIAN hungry Ogdenites by his fine messages in ready And I'm getting The Sea Man CHURCIU — John Edward Carver the two months previous: His too" quickly theme for jthe morning will be: jumped and cried "I know a plan pastor Mornink worship at 11 o'clock 'The Wings of the Morning'" The that can be tried I'll walk out in The Life that counts theme women's dlub will ' meet at the the water Then just watch what 10 s home of Mrs Woodcock 863 Twenty-f- I will do" Sunday rhool wilLmeet at o'clock He Waded In not very far and jstrfeet Wednesday evening ldult class meets hi the ifth shouted "There you are! study Y bung People's meeting at at eight olclock shortly 6:30 Musip for the morning" service is I've caught a fish It's" bigger than Evening preaching service at 7:30 Theme 'Had Washington as folll)w: you've ever bought in town Fix and Lindoln a Greater Chance Organ— up some sticks to hang it by" oh "Me Than WeT" Third in the series on Prelude "Largo" from the' 'New Theft Scouty shouted Dvorak my! I'm sure we'll all enjoy It World Symphony" "The Chakce of the Soul' Has the Soul a Fair Chance?" Table meet- Offertory "Intermezzo" Rogers when we've cooked it good and ? ing at 6 Praise and prayer atser-7 Postlude "Postlude in D" brown" Frommel The musik themes and after Solos— vice will feature the thought of (The bunch go exploring in the the periof of patriotic i leadership "The Lord! Is My Light" Allitson next story) O'Hara "The Living God" Morning music: (Copyright 1929 NEA Service Lorin "Wheelwright organist Violin prflude "Reverie" Inc) j Vientemps Dreams" "Viane Violin offirtory FIRST COMMUNITY CHURCH j 'Wlsternitst —Temporary meeting place Moose Miss Mary Fisher Hall 2416 Washington avenue Postlude "Milanese Marche" Rev D M Cameron minister 1 Haydn Bible school meets at 9:4 5 The i Mrs John Hillabrant is urged to be presmembership Tears Contralto iolos 'Singing in God's ent Invite or bring some one with cott you We have a class for every r Acre' "There la a Green Hill Far 1 Gounod ageMorning worship at 11 o'clock Away" Miss Grace Matthews' " The pastor will occupy the pulpit From Our Flic Evening!! music The subject for this service will "Aria gor G Violin prieSudc Cain's be "Jonah and the Whale ' men Wife Strinf and Noah's Ark" Qgden Elks lodge give "The Bzet ofeirtory for is second "Adajio" the' This of Violiij MySunday Elk Tooth or the Isle Ml liss Mary Fisher The oufr new pastor and he wants to stery" at the opera house Postlude 'Star Reverie" meet the membership at these proceeds go to charity Green wald services Every one should attend Mrs! John Hillabrant so we may get started properly LAWTON' Okla — Geronimo under new leadership Come to a Contralto solos 'Lost Chord" J famous Apache war chief KUUiivan church of distinctive service died at Fort Sill V "Aria from Elijah" Mendelssphn Miss Grace Mattnews GOSPEL CITY MISSION — 138 and William George Bybee TV10 nftor service will feature- in Twenty-fift- h street M L Bower-so- x have qualified as road superand Is service The mision thought derorationis being visors In Weber county- pastor the colonial period given good attendance 8Gospel is o'clock every night at The mercury went up to 45 deBible preached T B si A 7 On Monday evening Elder Her(Internati6nal There was a terrific elecgrees — Students' JVssoeiation J As we read man! L Payne returned mission- trical storm Three inches of moisthe daily press we are appalledt at ary will speak Singers are ex- ture have fallen in 10 days More the conditions of suffering hunjger pected to accompany this speaker than six inches of moisture has All are welcome Come and bring fallen since January 1 and privation existing among — jthe '''- now others —— poorer classes in Europe more made and CHURCH— LUTHERAN ELIM aggravated greatly John M Ford broke two ribs Instreet and when Corner of Twenty-thir- d general by the he fell as he was trying' to Wo storms tense cold and fierce Jefferson avenue Rev Roy B board a Union Pacific train scenes even Carlson pastor get a glimpse of such 7 Services for the first Sunday in in our owln large center of popMr and Mrs Joseph Stanford ulation but they are mere shadows Lent February 17: Servwere burled in a single-gravwhich in straits school 10 a m of the deisperate Sunday tabernacle at were the held ices the great submerged massesiofthe Morning services 11 a m Serold world exist These condltljons mon theme "Look to Jesus When A man who was convicted of will nevet- be improved by mis- Tempted"- t : his wife was sentenced in addnor by Dorcas society will meet Wednes- beating leading propaganda or to serve 30 days oh the court city wealth 20 to powerror day evening February the with rock ing pile worldly possesions of any ecclesias-Is Mrs Preston Linford 2843 Ecclee —— What is needetl avenue-tical system ears of sheep Sixteen double-dec- k ChrisOF CHRIST— and CHRIST less Churchianity and more THE northern from of four answerto hogs an L Peiman pastor Meet- Utah and southern tianity g Above all — Harry Idaho passed King"Thy prayer the ings will be held at the home of dom come Thy will be done on Mrs Alice Green well 2426 Monroe through Ogd'en en route to JJan earth as in Heaven" Listen in avenue Sunday school 10 o'clock Francisco on KSL Sunday afternoon from prayer service 11 o'clock R V Reynolds has beeji named 1 to 2 They will broadcast ay We have good news for all of the WTasatciv national Mr Watch Tojwer program in the building of God's supervisor Marsfli will be the speaker temple at Independence Mo Come forest The topic fvill be i "A Great Feast and hear about it John Ellis got the contract! for for the Peioplo" Sunday and Frithe Golden the building of the forest service at Age evehlihgs day EPISCOMETHODIST FIRST street avenue studies PAL building at Twenty-fourt- h bureau 26(41 Kiesel CHURCH — Twenty-sixt- h avenue Lincoln and in the Pyramid article in the and Jefferson avenue Lester Watfh Toiwer of November 13 — street minister P LinFagen A man went in the Oxford saWednesday evening at 2555 mild-we9:45 a m church school W C loon and shot a bullet through coln aventie the customary live Pete Poulson's hat A CarneSj superintendent prayer praise and service real a school with program All interested are cormeeting 11 a m worship service ser- Ice Sermon these "Fog by the pastor dially inviied to all or any of mon colby the pastor ''The Olivet Flying" no meetings Seats free and "jhe Golden Age bureau Outlook" lection Special piano and trombone duet Special music: t Garden of Prayer" Alice Mir"The has received a supply of various Prelude Mozart iam and Glen Fagen "Minuet" ' scriture studies in Greek Spanish " ' In G" VMinuet Offertory and Italian French Japanese Beethoven i VOLUNTEERS OF AMERICA— other foreign languages Rockwell 2457 Grant avenue Captain vand Postlude "Minuet" ' 'v Miss Mablfl Rowan CHURCH OF THE NAZARFJNE Mrs D E Mason officers in charge — Philip N Smith pastor Regu- Vocal solo Mrs Victory Kovaricki Services every night at 7:4 5 o'clock Negro spirituals sung by William p in except Monday night' f Sunlar services will bei held at 2:463 Grant avenue beginning at 10 Halsey a young negro singer school at 3 p m Tuesday-nigh6:3 0 n rn Enworth lea sua In day o'clock with Sunday school Parillustrated lecture on Chrlst$f and ents please send your children ©ut joint session with the B Y P Ut sacred songs Preaching eacn We have Classes for all no one in tne M iii cnurcn parlors zw4 night Come to your Father's house Bert Moore and worship with us where there ever gets- too old to attend Sunday Jefferson avenue ' ' j leader are no frills Coffge and rolls to (' school j 7:30 p m evening gospel scry- - thehungi-Morning worship at 11 o'clock Everybody welcome 1) 45-2- the-hill-si- 5:14 15 when thou prayest thou shalt not be as the hypocrites are: for they Idve to pray standing in the synagogue and in the corners of the etfdetst that they may be seen of mfen Verily I say unto you They fhave their reward 'But thout when thou prayest enter into f thy closet and when thou hast phut the door pray to thy Fatherlwhich Is In secret and thy Father which seeth in secret shall rewarfi thee openly 7 But when ye pray use not vain repetitions as the heathen do: for they think that they 'shall be heard for their much speaking V Be not ye therefore like unto them: for your Father knoweth what things ye have need of before ye ask him After this manner therefore pray ye: Our Father which art in heaven Hallowed be thy name ' Thy kingdom come- - Thy will be done in earth as it is in heaven Give us this day our daily bread And forgive us our debts as we forgive our debtors Ard lead us not into temptation Ax deliver us from evil: For thine is the kingdom and the power and thglory for ever Amen Arid he spake this parable unto certain which trusted in themselves that they were ' righteous and despised others: Two men went up into the temple-to pray the one a Pharisee and the other a publican The Pharisee stood and prayed thus with himself God I thank thee! that T am not as other men are extortioners unjust adulterers as this publican I fast twice in the week I give tithes of all I possess And the publican standing afar off would not lift up so much as his eyes unto ' heSren but smote upon his breast saying God be merciful to me a sinner I tell you this man went down to his house justified rather than' the other: for every one that himself shall be abased and he that humbleth himself shall ' be 77 1 exalted And thL? ta the confidence that we have in htm that if we aslfe-anthing according to his will he' heareih us: And if we know that he hear us whatsoever we ak we know thatj we have the petitions that we desired of him i or-eve- ex-alte- th There is rarely any out loud over leaving Ifaris When the last petty annoyance in gettinga away is over you generally make secret vow this will be your last want to cheer trip And I always But don't let that Influence you— I once cheered fbr Clifton Webb You swear you wljl never come back But you do For after all the Tho Tn tenia tlonal Uniform Sun beauty and charm of Paris far out- day Scliool Tesson for Feb weigh its irritating this and that Christian's Prayer Life Matt 19 29 The McNaught by (Copyright 0:5-1- 3 18:9-1- 1 I John 5:11 Luke Syndicate Inc) 15 Ti By WM E GILROY Editor of The Congregatlorialist - is an Inevitable aspect P' RATEREven of human experience those who have renounced all failh - By DAN THOMAS in God or in any spiritual reality N'EA Service Writer instinctively prayr TIan no matter how much he Cab — He made HOLLYWOOD before the reasons and no matter what he movie cameras way back in 1909 denies can never get quite free And yet Robert Ellis still looks like from the feeling that there is a young leading man I would not something in the universe larger guess how old he is but I yil say than' himself He may call it Huthat Bob could pass for 30 any day manity he may call: it Progress I got Quite a shock while lunch- he may call It Rationalism or Art he may call it if he ing with Bob and his wife Vera be Whatever an and moral being the when other the intelligent day Reynolds is something that constitutes actpr started telling of some09 of his there and Jn his life an element of aspiraexperiences lAck in 19 was 3 010 It shortly after the- tion And thtl Is closely related announced had their mar- to prayer as much in the primitive couple riage— which they had managed to man as in the most highly developed expression of spiritual experikeep a secret for nearly three years ence Bob s long experience in the JESUS' TEACHING realm of celluloid has taught him The teaching of Jesus concerning one thing if nothing else-- it is better to climb slowly eyen though prayer is admirably related to huyou don't attain the spme heights man needs and to human relation"than to be a '"flash in jthe pan" ships Prayer in the thought of "It is absolutely wrong tq Christ is the sincere expression and make a star of an actor or actress desire of man's soul in relation to The first thing who has been in pictures only a his environment "The therefore about prayer is that fevr months" he declares 'click' in his first pic- there shall be an entire absence of player may ture- but in nine cases out of ten hypocrisy he What good could prayer do to a he won't stay up there because hasn't sufficient background --Take man whose desires are not sincere? the industry as a whole and you It could only be a meaningless will find that those who have re- form a pretense That Is in fact mained successful longest are the what for many people the profesones who spent years in small sion of prayer actually becomes roles before getting a big break It is nothing but a form' in their more than a form Consequently wheni their breaks lives or if It is an expression merely of fear came they were ready'' Kills never has been classed as or of some vague need or even has been suc- of some selfish desire a big star But he — cessful' for 20 years a long time The man who never thinks of his He is now duty to God or his fellowmen may industry in the film playing - an important role in pray Instinctively when he is in "Broadway" press agented as one danger But that sort of prayer of the outstanding pictures of 1929 has little relationship to the sort -- v — it-i- de ! - ' -- mw : 41i l( wMA w4v3- i ' - j i n In Hollywood mid-wee- i And of praying that Jesu inculcated by precept and example There is also tiat conception of prayer which makes it the demanding of things from a great power who Is reluctant to give but who may be induced to be favorable to one's demands if there be much urging and especially It there be some sort pt spiritual bargaining This sort of prayer is illustrated in the actual story of a member of the Vigilantes In the earlyand unsettled days of Montana 'This man was pursuing a desperate criminal jind was! Ipslng ground In his neffectual pursuit as he toI3 of it afterwards he 1 rayed to God that if he might be permitted the criminal h would never ask God for another piing as long as he lived lie caught the criminal and he solemnly related how he had kept his promise and had! never asked! God for anything else Such a hotion is a sure travesty xipan Christian prayer! yet It is the idea of! prayer that manyj people and even many professing Christians actually have S1XCERITT Now let us note the positive and constructive teaching of Jesus about prayer First of all there is the profound emphasis upon the sincerity of the soul's quest of God In righteousness and truth Even public prayer! lacks reality " ( to-catc- I 1 if iti prayer to the public rather to thanqrayer Jesus deprecated God "the Father what are called vain repetitions At one place he told the parable of the unfortunate widow and the unjust judge not to show that God answers us because of repetition but to show that if an unjust judge could be perysuaded by the lmplbr-ing- s of a por widow the just and lovinjk God must surely be all the more ready to bestow his gracious gifts upon his children When also he spoke of the friend arising in the night to give hlsnelghbo loaves of bread because of the neighbor's importunity it was not to suggest any unreadiness of God to bestow gifts upon us but rather to enlforce the we could hardly receive truth that for which we did not ask The whole emphasis in of Jesus was upon the receptiveness n of man and the reluctance of God 'The parable of the Pharisee and the publican is a vitally human commentary on the true spirit of prayer and the passage from I John is a mystical statement which all may ponder Its clearness ana Its meaning may not be apparent but" the more vre pray in sincerity will have for understanding the Mysteries of which the poet has reminded us there are more in has prayer than this world ' dreamed of tat the-teachin- not-upo- fa Churches1 one-ha- lf " lows: Offertory EPISCOPAL CHURCH OF THE GOOD SHEPnERD — John W Hys-lo- p rector Corner of Grant ave- "Xashtuck' Schuman nue and Twenty-fourt- h street The first Sunday in Lent Holy Communion at 8 a m The church school at 9 30 a m Morning prayer and sermon at 11 a m Evening prayer and sermon In St Paul's church Plain City at $ The young peoples union 6:15 p m o'clock will join in the meeting of Toung People's fellowship in the Epworth League ait the Meth- Guild room at 7 p m Short evenodist church good mtisic and in- ing prayer and address at 7:45 p teresting discusions fori young peo- m Lenten service Wednesday eveple ning at 7:30 p m Evening song service 7:30 o'clock p m with spiecial music REORGANIZED CHURCH OF and a meditation for tbie beginning JESUS CHRIST h: I S 1501 of Lent "The Marks jf a Super-Maavenue Roy F The public isj invited to Washington Hewes pastor Services will be attend all these serviced held on Sunday as follows:- Sunday "F Sharp Major Nocturne" Chopin Marjorie Perrins pianist "That Sweet Mystery pf Life" Vic tor "Herbert Louise Perrins Vocalist I n' - ag-etl'- - - ed e - it - i us r JiAi-- i is i — The Church Nt'xt Wednebday evening beginof the Chimes) — Twenty-fift- h ning at 5:30 o'clock a special street and Jeferson avenue Arthur George Washington dinner will be J Hansen pastor served by the women of Circle Bible school 9:45 k m for all Ivo 2 The church school of mis:: sions will meet at 7 o'clock ages 11 a m hour earlier than usual worship and sermon "The Stream of Life" Special musical numbers will be as fol jj age-Icin- L :" Of) long-continu- -- who-believ- e Le-rto- - J ek " j — — —— 7 DOOR poor jBobby Coon ' Now that he wejjs sure thaV he was really and truly awake he ialmost wished that he hadn't tried to find out It would have been some lit- - - 18:9-1- 4 FRIGHT A Og-de- WEEKLY SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON 17-Th- s STORYr HAL COCHRAN— PICTWRC j i prayer i- FIRST CHRISTIAN CHURCH 24th and! Madison y - J Mat-suga- -jPSgg Bttrgcss II presidinr wasp-waiste- ll school 1 0 o'clock prayer services 11 o'clock preaching 7:30 o'clocK Public Is linvited to attend services and to hear of the gathering back Zion OGDEX JAPANESE UNION CHURCH — Jefferson avenue and 23rd street M Tsuji minister Junior services wfll be held at 2:30 o'clock on Sundajy with Sunt I V S£g R to- 1 I ? X To TAW£ VJAV I I "' : rvf ( RoUdl vjws 7Wat : j 'be ( A i 0 rr — Ul O O M'miVUE world-wid- ' -- STANDARD-EXAMINE- By BLOSSER FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS l1 New York revue PARIS —The e Parisian fame for THE OGDEN t y 1 tie comfort to have been able to keep the feelliig he had at firs that maybe It was a bad dream But now'that le was positive that he was wake and he also knew that ' that terrible scjunding which at first had been! part of that bad dream was no-v- just as real aajthe fact that he was awake The iact is he could noi longer doubt that something terrible was happening to his Jiouse the big! hollow chestnut tree he had lived Mn so long With' every blow and the blows followed each oher so fast that he couldn't cuht them the big tree trembled and Bobby trembled with it What coul It mean? Wrhat could be going) on- outside? He wanted to look out of his doorway f but he didn't (fare to He' was afraid of what he might see Yea J sir Bobby Coon was afraid to cljmb up to his doorwiiy and look out for f fear he" might pee something that would frighten him more than !he was frightened Jthen though how he could possibly have been any more frighteed !l do hot know Yet all the time it didn't seem to him that he could stay where he waa another mihutej No sir it! didn't He was too frightened to stay ' Now can yoki tihihk of anything " ° - ( i worse than that? The tree treijnbjed more! am! more and by aind by it began to-dmore than tremble With a dreadful a veryf dreailful ainking of his heart BolbVy felt his house' begin to sway tihat is jmove a lit- tie from side to side A new fear drove everything else out of hiu head— the fear thatj'his house ' might be Roing to fall He couldn't believe! that! 7 this could be so and yet he had the feeling that it was so and he could not get rid of It He had lived in that house al long long time and never in ail that-lonlong time-hahe oncjj had such a feel-i- n as now possjessed jhlm Many a time had rouh Briotherj Nortli Wind used all his strength against that big chestnut) tree! Sometimes he had made it tremble ever bo little but that wais all and Bobby curled up in hi? snug bed at roug!h Brofher! North Wind He Just epuldii't Imagine anything really happening to ''that v j tree f But somethlngj was happening now! There wasn't the smallest1 doubt about it The great old tree shivered and shook with every At last Bobby could stand blow It no longer He Just Itad to kn0w what was happening and what it all meant With) his jteeth chat- with terlng fright he icra'wled up to his doorway and looked down It frightened himlso that he let go his hold and tumibled down to his bed Of course thit didn't hurt him because it was soft and In a minute he waa scrambling up to his doorway again j r ' ' cartl It "What shall I do? What do?" whimpered Bobby Coon as he looked down with frightened eyes "I can't rub and I can't stay What can I dor What can I do?" t Bobby Coon wai horribly frightened There yvas no doubt about it he was horribly fflghtened! Have you guessed What It! was that- he saw? Well it was Farmer! Brown and Farmer Browtji's Boy chopping down the big chestnut tree wjjiieh had been Bobby's home f6r ko long And looking on Was Bowser the Hound j j -- j g d 1 and-laughe- j l - Next story? Bowser" the Hoiind" Discovers Sonieones at Home YOUR CIIILDREN By OLIVE ROBERTS BARTON (Copyrighted 182J by NBA 7 Bervlce Inc) 86 -- PAN Mrs Brown ever forget the look her daughter gave her the day the ahoe bill came without her silver slippers (charged on- - it and she had cried happily "That's rich! It will buy ns a couple of theatre tickets Ed'i And there is Mrs Smith who fairly curdled the Scream at the table every day with 7 mean remarks about people iwho were supSudden posed to be her friends ly out of a clear sky one day or rather out of Junlorls mouth came these words "Don'tj you like anyKm f body mother?" A certain man and his wife had a habit of discussing the night- - before party at the dinner table Mrs Adams would lease Mr Adams about a beautiful blonde and Mr Adams wouJd cfme back with the number of dances' Mrs Adams had had with one Tom or Dick or to Harry Then 'she Would asrefer blotto her husband's menjory and therefore not dependable on the night preceding as he had had so many cocktails and so many highballs ' to her certain ' knowledge THE LESSON THEY LEARNED They stopped this form of warmed-ove- r dissipation for good one day when Betty burst Into tears and ran upstairs out sobbing her heart dinner-tabl- e derby Another takes place at the Joneses nightly when Mr Jones accuses his wife of extravagance and she Jumps all over him for 'being l too lazy and too dumb to make a decent living It usufor her' and the children about talk winds withj up ally I " divorce d The children si£ there and silent There are meals when they scarcely touch a bite The family doctor is getting ready toparspeak a JUtle piece to these ents for their quarreling obviously is making the' children unhappy and ill re are a And so it goes thousand things that parents do that distress their children very much If things were reversed and children could train parents they would be kept pretty busy ten-year-o- ' ld ' ' big-eye- j on--the- - ' |