Show All Wrong Napoleon The dull drab years of middle age is the way a Y M. M C. C A A. A worker work work- er classifies the period in a mans man's life Ufe from thirty five to forty He says sas that men of this age are frequenters of ot saloons that they are mostly married married married mar mar- ried and that they are not as desirable desirable desir desir- able In the way of at citizenship as the male individuals of ot seventeen to ty four who spend much time with their sweethearts or the male Individuals Individuals individuals more than sir forty for that after passing forty five and presumably presumably ably surviving the dull drab years a fellow turns turns' his attention to things spiritual gen generally to church work and begins to live again The truth said a power of ot the rail this Y M 0 O. A. A gink seems to have lost aa as aaa asa a good many academic students of ot the saloon lose the real rea solution No better better bet bet- ter explanation ever has been made mado or ever will be made than that that- men go goto goto goto to th the saloon because they have no pl place ce else to go o that gives them the tIle same sort of ot unconventional welcome They go there not because their years are dull and drab but because the tho gregarious Instinct calls them New New NewYork York Sun |