TWO ROSEBURG NEWS REVIEW, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 1927. .ROSEBURG NEWS-REVIEW Uausa Dally Except Sunday by Tha Nowa-Hevlaw Co., Ine. Mcuhtr ( Tke J&Mocla(e4 I'reas. The Associated Press la exclusively entitled tu tha usa tor republl aatlon of all news dlsuatehes credited to It or not otherwise credited in tote paper and to all local uewa published herein. Ail rlffhta of republic ttop of apeclal dlepatcliea herein are aleo reserved. B W. BA' ES.. -Pr'aldent and Manager -.eecretary-Treaaumr Jauuered as second class matter May 17, 1&20, at the pool ultice at koseburg, Oregon, under tha Act of March 2. 1879. SUBSCRIPTION RATES ' Daily, per year, by mall . i! ASSURANCE . Dally, six months, by mall , Dally, three months, by mail mail, single inonUi, by mall , 1 T-eiiy. by carrier, per inopUj ..ti.ull . H ub 1 00 PPUWE Piaarrs lie assured. 1 would uut aay It, if 1 did not know it true; Take it to your heart uud weigh It I love no one eU-e but you. , Mildred. Betty, Kvo and lilla, Klhel, Hetty, Gertrude, Sue, nilu, Mabel, Myrtle, bulla Never doubled w h y should you? London Opinion. ROSEBURG, OREGON, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 1827. THIS CAPITALISTIC DICTATORSHIP .. '; Capitalists run things in America. This we have on the . .word of Brother Leon Trotzky, mouthpiece of the soviet gov ,'ernmont of Russia. Brother TrolzKy minces no words. He ;told a delegation of the American Federation of Labor, study .''Jlig things in Moscow, that "under the external of u political : . ;demcci'acy, the United States is ruled by a most concentrated ;capitalistic dictatorship." The Americans who heard him, of course, can decide for themselves. We all can decide for -ourselves. That is one of the prerogatives we've had ever .air.ee 55 earnest men met in Philadelphia and framed what ..,.we backward Americans call the Constitution. So Americans can decide lie was right, or that lie was wrong, according to their' lights, whateverothey be, red or white. Be that as it may. But .just a moment, Brother Trotzky has more to say. Let hini carry on without interruption. The press of Russia, Brother Trotzky told his hoarers, has a certain number of p rabid radicals to contend with. All sorts of crazy people with J. new ideas about government are just as likely as not to bob up, iii' Russia with some kind of a newspaper or other. These Z crazy newspapers with their new-fangled notions about how a country should be run! Let them have their say and soon Russia wolild be overrun with ail sorts of fantastic ideas. It -'would be terrible; Brother Trotzky, of course, does not sup- press the press. No capitalistic dictatorship in Russia sup Jiresses the-press.' No, the soviet doefc not need to suppress J the press. Adversaries of the spyiet dimply are not allowed to have paper br'printilig'iiiaehincry., There you are! Go around talking strange idoas in Russia md you'll get no paper to 1 print thbrri on. It's 'all very simple and' Very clear. America, $ with its capitalistic dictatorship, isn't so ground under hfeei 9 afteif idl. Maybe wo can ,make a go of it, yet. ; , "i I, i ii '.!,. , , HOMEj STILL A GOOD WjQRPj , . m i : A J'Maiitt Su'rVe)" in' whaph jrpord llian ilLQOO reproseiv 2 live American homos were considered indicated that ne6ilc Htflf are 'ihcl'iiie W file in' tlie:m!iiid Writ the 'vbrd's 'sweet Iracujons of modern social life, it seepis, the liomu ,still is( an iiiluencq.'it alwayrf Will be.-It will1 continue to be a power as longa8, Ijeive'; are childreri living there whose young livos urc growing, Pin-makers and alarmists to the contrary not withstanding,' American honfe ji'abjts haven't cjianged mlich In the lhstt ceiituryi The appWtenances havo; the radio keeps us in and thd liutomobile takes us out, but the home is above imd beygnd tlipie tarings. Sjip'erflclnr observers for years linve bocii lieralding ,Ujq break-up' of the old, institution, bu it just Won't break u;i. Perhaps the- same calamity callers .Vnltfnfl.' tlinil-ietfns 4n , Srtlnmnnc fin v. Anrl if Ihttv 'hurl hinil r inere wneiv Auam una J.ve.irere snowiv tne exit uiey wouict f have. been the "I told you soers"' that still ply their strange, '.Ill-timedUradei Wild 'youth '! Sureiy, now and always. Should j Myouth ever, tame, down, should youth, ever go 'about in 'the ,' worhl 'as' cherubim and seraphim, what a dismal'washout af J : fairs pf ithe 'earth .would become! Youth always yill be free "and in good time iind its way homo. And who will deny, that I '''home 'will be better' for youth's having learned of the ways ' of life as the world outside the home walks them? i In the event Veu happen to Have trouble , . Keepin' the Ring off'n The bawth tub We suggest that You paint the Interior of The dern thing With stove polish. CAMA3 VALLEY NEW8 NOTES j We have been having a fine i ruin the lust wey days. This will jlielp the later Kurriim stuff and I start the grass for fall pastures. I grhool will begin Monday. Some ' of the teachers are already , on I hand ready to ko to work. We ex- poet to have a full school this fall. ; Miss Eliza Church la preparing j to leave soon to take charge of ,ber school near Myrtle Point. ; Mrs. W. A. Keetz and cliildcn j returned last week from a ten day lit with relatives in Longview, : WuhIi. Khe was accompanied home by Mr. Jteetz' mother from Juuc- ONE-SIDED TWINS Two Mormon boys went to sohool for the first time out In Utah, and I tlon City, who visited a day or two the teacher asked them their I with the Heelz family. , names. . Mr. and Mra. Chas. Creasy end "John and William Smith," the family who spent two weeks on a boys replied. "Ah, then you are brothers. How old are you?" "Each ten years old, ma'am." "Indeedl Then you are twins?" "Please ma'am," replied one of the hoy, "only.. on..v our., father's side." HEARTY PROOF Judy: "Do yolj think abctsnce makes the heart grow fonder?" trip north returned home last I'rniay. -Mr. and Mrs. Hangs and family ironi uecumini s camp, nave moved over Into the valley In order to have mi easier way for their child ren to get to school. Mrs. Huntley uud children re turned laBt woek from a six weeks' visit Willi relatives In fjverson, wash. Mm. Huntley had very imix cur iruuuiu una ail Jluu WEEKLY SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON Solomon Dedicates the Temple The International Uniform Sun day Sohool Leaton for Sept. 11. Solomon Dedicatee the Temple 1 Kings 8:1-11, 62, 63. Jill: "Oh yes! Ever since Robert 1 a fiiie time. Currttsw) tide nt. nas gone, rm beginning to like! Bernard more and more.1 The following sign appeared at the Ladies' Aid rummage sale: "We have east off garments of every description and invite your inspection." 4 ' v It's puzzling when one reads In the papers, one day, that the gov ernmcnt 13 now strictly enforinn prohibition, and then, the next, how j f LET'S ALL THINK ALIKE! ' . You like the taste of mayonnaise dressing on lettuce? : Well, I do notrYou liken little fat with your slice of roa.-it .,..bcef? Well, 1 do not! You like Hat-heeled shoes? I don't! "."'SonKhing has got to be done about this. We can't go on living in 'the same city, in the same world, with such vary Miing tastes. What'll we do? Perhaps wo ought to pass a law. Now here. A group of citizens of Florida recently furnished the governor a list of what they called "indecent" books in 'k"lhe libraries' of two Florida institutions of learning. George .'".''Bernard Shaw nd II. G. Wells were among the offenders ... listed. There you have it, exactly. That's the way it'll finally work out. You and 1 will go before the judges and tell our story. You'll say you crave your lettuce with mayonnaise and I'll say I simply cannot eat it that way. You can tell the powers that be your story about liking coffee with cream and sugar. I'll tell them that dilution of coffee with cream 1 ; regard as nauseating. We'll get a decision on our troubles. Maybe they'll rule that the world will have to eat lettuce with mayonnaise and that all coffee should be taken black. We'll x.';each have scored a point. Thus the world and everything h). it eventually will be regulated. And the only books we'll have left to read will be the tomes of edicts by the censors. Won't everything be swell then? '"",', o A wan boy in a tenement coughing his life away, an over fed and pampered poodle in a limousine, an artist sleepinj; '" n the gutter, a well-muscled, strong-backed man complain - i n jar them are common images of waste. Walk down any -; street and watch for the signs of it waste. Walk through .".''the home, through the slums, through the halls of lawmakers, 7 through the courts of justice, along the docks or in a crowd .... od cabaret. Look for effort thrown away, lives tossed to the winds, precious time neglected. What is the remedy? How '"shall Soiely, as we capitalize it, cure for the world's great -' waste? How shall Government obliterate it? How shall Hu "' manily bend down and lift up what is wasted to a place of .."usefulness? How? There can be but one answer. Philosophers ;..kwnv it and wasters know it', too. The answer is Knowledge. J'We woo Knowledge with Education. What could be more V logical than thai ? American bootleggers arc import-j Mr. Inn lha , DtiilF i.,. -.I competing with dealers there. . "Do you care: for horses?" "No, I wait on tables." ' "Do ydu prefer the single or twin beds?" inquired the salesman - of the yoang farmer and his bride-to-be who were selecting furniture for their new home. ' ' i Never having 'heard of the duplex arrangement for sleeping the farm, er eautlously asked to see the twin beds, and; )ie ( waxed very enthu siastic when be - saw . a . dalntv model, , u i - j : i . ; ;Thatf Ifine," he said, without consulting the' blushing girl at his side. '.'Put in one of those." LAFE SEZ-"' '.' '"j '"Every cloud may hove a silvery linlnl . but the ' ones .this . month : seem to be Tilled with just water. 1', TEN MILE AND OLALLA NEWS Mr. una Miu. Oni Welker of Koaebui'B vIbUoiI with Mi. Mo Daniel Sunday. . , . t . H. S. HiiHhnell conLeiiijilutcH moving to his ninth near Myrtle Point In the ueur -future. . Mrs. Joy Ungemach and ' chlhl fonf Harold and Hetty, vlHited with relatives Sunday and Mon day. , r Mi, and Mrs. Harold Hopfe and jtionies broth or, Kay, were week end v in i turn at Ten' Mile. They reside at Vancouver, Wash. Rev. 'Allen preached an inter esting nerinon at Ten Mile Sunday. His year Ih near gone at this place hut we hope lie ipay bo returned for another year with us. ' . Alfred and Jean.Swll't aid" build ing new barns on their ranches in Ten Mile. . . , - T. M. Ollivant of Itoseburg .w a, Ten Mile, visitor Thursday. .A number of, the people of this iciulty expect to go ,to .the .prune orchards to help with, prune .har1 yest. : . . , t . . ( Mr. and Mrs. Rev. Allen of, DH lard were Teu;Mllq visitors Thurs day afternoon. ( -t - t. j2..X. By WM. E. GILROY, D. D. Editor of The Congregationalism It fs a great hour when a build ing project attains itw achieve ment. Tho man or woman who has watched a future homo emerg ing from excavation ad founda tion to the final coat of paint and the last touches. Ihut make the homo Inhabitable knows something of the process. There are anxieties and some times heartbreaks, not Infrequent ly the whole result is a tragic dis appointment, but where the home fulfills the plans and expectations its completion brings a peculiar sense of joy. Longfellow express ed something of this in his beauti ful poem, "The .Hanging of the Crane." The Joy of a home In personal life in even magnified in the ful fillment of some great community project where from day to day the dwellers In village, town, or city see the gradual upbuilding of some hall or public work which Is to represent henceforth a rallying place or a symbol of community spirit and activity. House of God. How much more are all these things enriched in their spiritual significance when the building Is lite house of God! There is a sense,! Text: 1 Kings 8, 1-11, 62, 63. Tltnn iInmnii n aqom hlpil tlin oktBrs nf Isrncl nrwl nil ilm IipsiHh nf of course, in which, as Paul Baid,;tne tribes, the chief of the fathom of tho children of Israel, unto king' "God does not dwell in houses Solomon in Jerusalem, that tliey might bring up tho ark of the cove made With lUUlds. I ,,. flf ,i, l.m-il nut nf f lift fill v of David. Whkrh is Kinn. i I And all (he men of Israel assembled themselves uiilo king Solomon! at the feast, In the month JSthumm, which is the seventh mouth. at the feast, In the month JSthumm, which is the seventh mouth. An.l ..II il.,. el.lo-e i.r Idpiio ru inn (iiwl ihtx nrlaele Umlr n t U 1- He worm could not Aml lh(iy br0UKht up the ark of tho Lord, and the tabernacle of the ! ' wj ? bethel lb Z y of God much less congregation, and ail the holy vessels that were in the tabernacle, even j 0, "e,1 1h?,,fla SK, 3 ohlt t . that he had built. ,im .H.I tho nrlts and Ihe Levites brintr tin. - : ' church in the tiuo laith of Chiiyt relitrion derives much A.i n...r oni..mnn ,i n ua ,.n,..,..Un r t....., , rt ! ana Willi tne purpose oi luuunng Kven Solomon in the grandeur of his temple building acknowl edged in the beauty of his prayer that as the contain the slot- em Id the house Nevertheless or Its meaning from symbols and assembled unto him, were with him before the ark, sacrificing, sheep Annuviuuuiia, uuin iirniK ju rne.iti ? and 0xen, that could not be told nta numbered lor multitudo. anu great irutns mane real anu vllal through their concrete expres hIcu or throtir.h their localization In certain definite and material forms. . ; - . . It Is for this reason that we value portraits and statutes of great men. Having .these things does; not make' greater, the truth tiauily would huva llltle power did it notmiuko lis aetuulity known through smite such institution as the church. ' The building of a great tcnplo, such as that erected by Solomon, is an event In the life of u peonle. Ilu a fino chapter on urchiteiduro ln Victor Hugo's "N'otre Dame,' the author Iihh told the story of I the slgnificunco of eras of build jlng in tho world's history. It was I largely in architecture that the hu- mau spirit found expression, and in the great structures that come down from antiquity wo liave an opportunity of discerning how great wore the thoughts and pur poses of. men and how wonderful, though different from our own, were the eras of civilization that havo come and gone. The verses of our lessons am associated with tho holy thing: i a nation's life, and with the hous ing of these In a structure worthy to receive them. Tho skeptic might fall to see in tho little box known as the Ark of the Coven ant the real place of God's presence which Israelites found in It. Tho man of fait h who is no skeptic may. see in fact the fulfillment of such a ooueeption in tho passing of the Ark and may emphasize the truth that the true presenco of God cannot oe confined to even the most beautiful temple eroded to his praise. .... .. Use Determines Holiness. It la, however, the use to which things are put. and. the relation ships In which they are found that constitute their holiness. No dedi cation of a building to God can make It In deed and In truth a church, but if that dedication bo Christ's mission in . the " world, there will be found a true, church And the priests brought In the ark oi the covenant of the Lord unto! Z ?uu" ". W his place, into the oracle of the house of the most holy place, even P1(JT,,l,"ua . "UBU. ?1Bm' under Ihn w Intra nf thn ehenihlms. ueisuip uu i oi mi fee. For the cherublms spread forth their wings over the place of the I ark, and the cherubims covered the ark, and the staves thereof, above. And they drew out the staves, that the ends of the staves were; seen out in the holy place before the oracle, and they were not seen without: anu there they are unto this day. Good 2nd hand pi a no only ?1 95. Good tone and action. Easy terms. Otts Music fcitoro, Koseburg, Org, iR. Nerb as , r , , : .DENTIST, , , - ' Painless Extraction 1 ' j ' Gas When Desired 1 i ) , Pyorrhea Treated ' I Phone 488 " : Masulo Bldg. Jack Lock will, the Lion Tamer ' , ' : ; BY GILBERT PATTEN 1 ' ; 1 " ' (Creator of Frank Merri well) 1 All primitive religions lay great ((v-ps upon form and symbol. With spiritual progress men learn to riis-t tinguish between the symbol and the fact, hut it should be remem bered thnt even our Divine Alaster who taught that God is a spirit and that they who worship must wor ship in spirit and in truth set a high value upon the synagogue, and as he had opportunity grnced with his presence, the temple with which some of his most significant acts and teachings were associat ed. , . - - I It is not the slzo or' beauty of a structure that makes it a church of God, thought we should hot' be too ready to dissociate beauty and magnificence with the houso of - God. There Is no glory in religious ugliness. ' ( " ' : ' We ought to covet1 for the church the beauty and, worth that we would desire iii our own homes, ; rememborins always that jfreat. art Is a3&'pci.ateu with 'simplicity,' ami tng': tliat tawdrinesd 'in WWbdfatfb'tf'and Lord. y , ' t decoration is as mucu an ortenso And Solomon offered a sacrifice of peace offerings, which he oM h& 'UBlitiess- in- form'. Pride in a fered unto the Lord, two and twenty thousand oxen, and ah Hundred : beautiful church building, simple, and twenty thousand sheep. So the king and all' tho. children of Israel Magnified an( worthy td stand in a Til ere wan nothinir in tho ark. save the two tuition nf RtntiP whir-h that' thoir Uvea expressed,.- but it Moses nut there at Horeb. when the Lord made ii rnvonant with the does make more real and present , children of Israel, when they came out of the land of Egypt. ,3 j their influences, And It came to pass, when the priests were come out of the holy place, that the cloud filled the house of the Lord. So that the priests could not stand to jninlster because of the ciouu: lor uie giory oi ipe.j-.oru nau ruieu tne nouso or ,tlie Lord. And the king, and all Israel with him, offered sacrifice befoi1 dedicated the house of the Lord. Task of Religion. The whole task of religion In life is to make intangible' things tan gible, to bring the spiritual into the sphere of the renl, and toward community, bus its value. '' 1 !; 1 ' 11 1 ' j ' A 'well-proportioned' 'church; With this great end tha 'religious spirit its spire pointing to heaven situat craves both a fellowship; and a ed upon a hill or upon,! a' well-kept place for its expression. We may , village green' in itself is ah ihspira well distinguish' between Christian-i tion toward higher things. ity chiirchiahlty:- but Chris- Copyright, 1927," NBA Service, Inc. STANDINGS OF LEAGUES Coast League : , w. PLANES DISPLAY DOCS jrNKAl', Alav'sa. Willi -'nliiii,. roililnB lulu ' all " ,-..ia:'M (or freight trns.lnirtallou dogs mo being HsuJ Use uJ l' " marauders, on Hie trails, rimiivquontlv, there Is an nvci .Hiii,il ami humlrfU .i air-, hussies. siiinrUineil. have leveltr.l over tn tho wllil suite nml are Itrroni- inK the mest diiiiseruns Klml ot Two or throo amaiccl anJ bewildered men saw the boy with . the whip run out Into tho center of the street and stand there, waiting (or the lion that was bounding along at the heels ot, , Saunders. It seemed like a rockloss, foolhardy thing to do. Saunders himself, wide-eyed and gasping for breath, cried out a choked appeal. Then he stumbled and sprawled on tho ground.. , As Buks toll, Lockwill leaped forward, swinging the whip, which had a long, stout raw hide lash. The Issh. curling through tho air, cracked like a pistol shot. The lash itself did not touch the lion, but it gave that sharp report almor.t under the nose of the running beast. The lion stopped as if it had been shot Oakland . San Francisco . Seattle Portland .. ... Sacramcntu .. .. Missions Hollywood Los Angeles ...105 115 .. 94 ' 78 ...90 75 ...83 81 .. S3 86 .. 79 93 .. 79 83 .. 65 106 PlttshlirK New York St. Louis ChicaRo .-. Cincinnati Boston .. Brooklyn Philadelphia .. National 77 7(1 74 ....:.."(! 61 55 ,.:....56 48 Xew York Philadelphia .. Detroit Washington Chicago Cleveland St. Louis Bobton American League. ..115 ..77 ....17 ...69 ....64 ....59 ....51 ....44 i PCT. .01S .546 .545 .506 .491 .459 .469 .3S1 I I .692 .5S9 .674 ; .567 : .473 1 .426 ' ,.I2M .361 .704 .676 .5311 .623 .485 .410 .400 .330 the tussle with a home run .with two on base anil two out. .Behind the steady twirling or Itixpy, the Keds easily uHapofsed of tlio Braves ,8 to 1. 1 The Browns dutifully took an other spanking from the Yanks, the 20th this season, this time by 9 to 3. , ''I'"- Ted Lyons sw'aljbpd 'the .'Sena tors with whitewash allowing only three singles while ' Ills . White Sox mates made .12 safeties for an. 8 to 0 victory. . 1 ; ' Wllitehlll stopped (he1 Athletics with four hits as tho Bengals niaue on wun a e 10 a iriumim and all hut crowded the Mack men from the current pennant cal endar. " ' The Rid Sox1 bowled over the Indians for the second time In tho series 6 to 1. Batting P, Wanor. Pirates, .3S3. Runs L. Waner, Pirates, 117., ; Hits P. Wanqr,. Plrates,.210.. . Doubles P. Waner, Pirates',' 38; Stephenson, Cubs, 3S. ' 1 Triples P. Vnuer, PhAtes,' 18. Homers Villinnis,, Phillies, 26. Stolen bates Flinch, Cardinals, 37 Pitching Benton, Giants . won 16; lost 4. . American ; Raiting Simmons, Athletics, 390. . .-,,.;.' , Huns Gehrig, Yankees, 139. i , ll'.ts Gehrig, Yankees. 193; Comhs, Yankees, 199., : . 'Doubles Gehrig, Yankees)" a'O.1 ' Triples Combs, Yankees, 19. . . Homers Huth, Yankees, 49. Stolen bases Sisler, Drowns, 27. Pitching Hoyt, Yankees, won 20; lost 6. The, Examinee ; today r says, tJiat Jack :'Bennctt,.iUias Jneqb Bevipan, sought' four: months under an in dictment in tho Julian- Petroleum scandal, surrendered at., ,.the r Francis hotel hero today to Harold L. Davis,, deputy .district, attorney In charge of, ,the Julian prosecu tions ill LPs Angeles, promising a lull explanation of.ull Jiillaii prose cutions in Los Angeles.. ..",.' LEADING PLAYERS OF BIG LEAGUES Including games of Sept, National MAN SURRENDERS AFTER A SEARCH f Astwlatf,! Tress Imaged Wire) SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 10. Plcnii at Idleyld Park. ' AARON FRANK HAS WINNING' HORSES , SACRAMEJNTO,' Sept,' ' 10. i'lio ' stablc;s of Aaron M., Frank 'of Port land won threoi first, .places liero last night at, the'73nl annuaj horse show. Frank took first on his team ot three jumpers, first for ;his single harness pony and first, in the single roadster class. . Fine Story and Clarke piano, fine tone and action, only $250. asy terms. Ott's Music Store. - I COAST LEAGUE RESULTS OTcatf 4 iAL .coos san picnjEs My kn.ck The Tillies- kite sailed right along ami nil Uie bunch burst into song. "We're sailing on tho deep blue," they sang In voices loud. "Right through the air wo travel last. Oh, say, how long will this trip last? As long as wo are up here wo will be a happy crowd." "Ha, ha," laughed Carpy, "that was great. Come on, now, let s not (By the Associated Press) The Portland Beavers asaln won from Sacramento yesterday by a scoro or 6 to 2 giving tlielll a two to one e:lge in tho series. Hie Senators collected eleven la,sillUo. j,,-, si,,g another little blnglcs. hut were unable to con-,volso 'raUse music's alwavs nice." neot when hits meant runs. Si) scoutv made up quite a verse, The Hollywood Stars grahbed ,vhich surely might have been both ends or a twin hill from I.08iniuch worse. The whole bunch 11k Angeles. 5 to 3. and 7 to 2. K,(1 lt vuiy ,voU uml a;lI1(! lt uver The Seals and Missions divided i t wce a dotibie bill with San Francisco taking the rirst contest 3 to 21 "Hurrah! Hurrah! By day, by and the Bells grubbing ' the sec- night, we travel Hi our littlo kite, onil 4 to 3 In eleven innings. i We're clinging to it tiglilly non. The league leading Oaks made It j wherever It may go. The sky's four straight over the Indians to-' above. Below's the sea. We're just :!r.:. by grabbing both games of a i as cheerful as can be, but where double header i to 3 and 8 to 3. I we all are 'bound for next, we The abrupt manner in which the "Monarch of the Jungla" had topped would have been amusing if tha situation hadn't seemed, ao perilous. Holding tha whip ready. Jack Lockwill stood still, hi pat, fixed ateatidy open tho CHios-ioning cyo, of the tawny beast. .At a ciitance Along the street, th, pursuing men had halted, taring. Tha lien whined, and crouched. iTo B Continued) MAJOR LEAGUE RESULTS simply do not know." j Then, when their song was final-j-ly through, they glanced down on the ocean blue, and Siouty shout-j ed "Lookit there! 1 see a great big ship. I wonderJf they see our kite, Tli- V,.tl......l w ( lines buzaed with tension todav. u' uo " Vr . L . n With lour clubs In the thickest lh J'00'1? "V??, boat woutd mm hat of years, the l'lr:ites hHdne , ,l?avv tnis "'V . hall n came shade over the Giants. I J,us,( tht'u ft, fcJu'1 fU'w I,P:,rb' The hrwihlorrd Cuba still dazerl ' ntl t;oppy said 'I m goins to try bv the Jolt that knocked them ofl ,uh , lhul f1ol,01w Lv 18. ,ftc ; thi. peak, tell before tho t;int Iu' 11 make ft dandy pet. Mlut,' v,..siHrdv, 7 to 2. then-hv slidii.g bwny answered, with a frov. n, hu..L- 1.1 miu'i, w h in i'-.r.i ... "you 11 likely tip us up-side down. cninrd third ' ... ( n(j ..u ve'U drop down in the: VU; AldridKe delivored the Pir-, s,,14 u P't soakinK wut' u .k........ i. And I'niH thev sailed aloni; all Pgalnst the Phils. 3 to 2. '' while making good speed on j READ THE STORY. THEN COLOR THK PIP I UK.E The CariiiiiHls had lo overtake . U'Cir Wil'. co t arpy said. "I'm w w, iiiut IMt nt-lUI the Rct.lns ihrltv h,.fre gaining gelling tired. A nap I'd like to must not go. We'll land some place (The Tirvn.il.. i,-j ..'tha Is an S to decision In Ion I, iiIubs. , uke." Then Scouty shomc.l.!not long from no- . w ' ,, , ,JJ . I " " "ni n . ' Letter tlell dramatically euiUugl ticudntot no: In bleep we himplv ; uv.ake." ;' "'ras in tne next story.i ' I f