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Show Your Newspaper Boy— This Is What He Stands for Today ar) for Uae How about a Hathaway shirt in size 18%” neck, 38” sleeve! We've got 'em...in stripes, solids, pat- terns and pastels — permanentpress, too. Look for all the other fashion brand-names, all in the FREE Lewis Bryant TALL and BIG men’s catalog. We have everything to fit you perfectly. Sportcoats Roleeel ae ett)errra MASTER GUN LOCK and outer nee in tall sizes 40 to 54 with sleeves to 38”, stout sizes 44 to 60. Slacks with inseams to 39”, regular or flared legs. Shoes and boots 10 to 16, widths to EEE. Perfect fit guaranteed or your money refunded. Charge accounts available. Send for FREE catalog. Dept. 6-203 indore, Indiana 46201 1 color catalog.aclothingfor SAIL snd ole men, featu and a wide choice of saetecorse Mr as other leading brandsrt iearediontisis recommended S. Government. ent poisons... children and pets. used as directed, safe around (please print) Address. City____State. MILWAUREE, WISCONSIN Somes Zip__— Formula for relief of Bronchial Congestion, Bronchial Asthma. Helps Rid Lungs of Excess Phlegm yA FAMILY arrae aieaac restore free breathing, relieve distress... coughing and wheezing. This clinic-tested preparation is With Bronkaid Tablets enjoy to attack the spar major causes helps you ne up phlegm, clear coe ae Carey restores i breathing. ¥ less; called BRONKAID®. In one tablet, Bronkaid combines an expectorant and bronchodilators “of congestion and wheezing. Bronkaid Tablets quickly start acting to soften and ioosen ex- . This direct action A same time, Bronkaid helps relax tightened bronchial muscles and eases the distress that results from stagnant air trapped in the lungs. amazing Some ip_in one combination tablet. Bronkaid jou breathe more freely, easily. Fer rapid reliefoeore of and wheezi conges- tion and Sronenial asthma, for prescription required. Available at your local drugstore. Drew Laboratories; Div. ofSterling Drug,Inc., N.Y., N.Y. 1 When You Order By Mail From Family W Robert Roossien, carrier for the Grand Rapids Press: He didn't desert his route —or his country Whatwas your son doing at five o’clock this morning? If he was like most boys nowadays, he was tucked snugly in bed, not a care in the world. Whichis all well and good, for we Americans have comea long wayto assure this generation ofan easier life than the last one had. We feel—and with somejustification—that we have varned forour children theright to spendtheir time as they wish. To have weekends for themselves. To be independent in what they do with their ownfree time. Butthere is another way. A tougher and more rewarding way. Fornotall boys were in bed this morning. Long before the sun was up, you’d have found them driving along rural roads, windowsrolled down,stuffing papers in each box on their route; trudging alongcity streets on foot, toting bags that weighed almost as much as they do; wheeling their trusty bikes through twilit suburbs, wobbling along nohanded,trying to get that paper folded by the time they got to the next porch. Sure, you Dads remember... NextSaturday is National Newspaper Boy Day—a dayin honor of those hundreds of thousands of men and boys whose job it is to “get the paper out.” The boy who delivered your paper this morning may be Mexican or Oriental—or Polish, or Jewish or Italian—but in the doing of this job he is performing a service as traditionally American as a Norman Rockwell cover. And while we’re about thanking these boys in behalf of our 263 FAMILY WEEKLYpapers, we'd like to give special mention to a newspaper boy named Robert Roossien of the Grand Rapids Press. The Press is an evening paper. That means it must be delivered every day during hours when other kids are practicing for Little League, or participating in Scouts, or just watching television. Bobby did these things, too, but he had to plan them aroundthe fact that delivering the paper camefirst. There are two reasons for singling out Bobby Roossien. Thefirst is that he was carrying on a remarkable family dition: all five of his brothers have also been Press carriers. One has gone on to become a minister, two have entered the business world, one is a soldier, and one is planning for college. The other reason is that, unlike his brothers, Bobby will never be able to see his dreams of success come true. For whenhe finally left his paper route, it was to join our forces in Vietnam. There, on May 12, 1969,he was killed in action. “ Family Weekly, October 10, 1971 |