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Hoars of fun and complete satisfaction fuar an teed, or return oooft lor hill rerund. To: FAMILY WEEKLY BOOKS Left Draw flams , EncloMd find I potlpold "LEI'S DRAW ANIMALS" ai Mm. QtMllly MKICOVEI $1.00 MClt - DELUXE IINDING t.MKk Junior TREASURE Chest Treetop Angel By Erika Here's how to make an elegant angel for the top of your Christmas tree. 1. Fold a shirt card board or a piece of heavy construction paper in half and sketch half an angel on it as shown here. Cut out the figure. 2. Glue the back of the figure (with the fold for ward) to a piece of card board tubing of the kind that comes with paper towels. 3. Paint a face on the angel, add a pipe-cleaner halo if you like, and deco rate her with silver stars, tinsel, or sparkles. You'll be proud to have an angel you made yourself looking down from your tree. The Christmas Tree By Rose Mae Across 2. "And laying a finger aside of nose" 3. Sooner or on Christmas Eve, Santa's sure to come 6. "All is , all is bright" 7. " Comet, Cupid" 8. Santa Down 1. December 25 3. Frost patterns often look like 4. "The children were nestled snug in their beds" 5. The Christmas blooms in the wintertime Answers: '3B0J "S !3DB( ' !SBUr)SMU,3 'X tUAlOQ snsja '8 :uo 'i :uibo "9 UaB :siq :ssoJ3y This is A strange Christ mas story. It has neither a tree nor a wreath in it. Only a miracle. Jessie and Aulden Robinson lived in our town all their lives. They grew up and were married and had three children, two girls and a boy. Aulden worked in a factory, and they lived in a neighborhood which was neither the best nor the worst. Just average. That's about the way it was with everything for the Robin sons, just average. But there was one difference. They gave their spare time and their spare money to help those less fortunate, the crippled and the af flicted. They didn't make a big thing out of it. The Robinsons felt a sort of inner obligation to themselves and to God. Some people are that way, you know. A few years ago, Aulden had a heart attack and then another and, finally, after he couldn't work any Family Weekly. December ZZ. 19M more at all, Jessie earned the living. Five years ago, Aulden died. Jessie managed, mainly because she has a simple faith that somehow things will turn out all right. Maybe if Jessie's faith hadn't been that kind, she couldn't have taken what came next. A few weeks ago, her son Jimmy fell under a train. His left arm and leg were severed, but he lived. There are times when living takes more courage than dying. Jimmy inherited courage from his mother. He chose life. A stranger who saw the story sent the newspaper a letter en closing a dollar bill. It flowered into a great blossom of compassion. A trust fund had to be established to handle the thousands of dollars which poured in from friends and strangers throughout our town and the state and, finally, the nation. Collections were taken in factories, in stores, in churches, in schools. Children sent pennies for Jimmy; theaters and athletic groups spon sored benefits. Jessie Robinson needn't worry now about the money for the hospital bills, the endless surgery, the arti ficial arm and leg. And, though she is a proud woman, she finds nothing in her heart but humble gratitude that others cared enough about a fatherless child to help him walk again. Twenty years ago, when the Rob insons gave what they had to others, too, they heard for the first time the motto of the shut-in club they served : There is a destiny that makes us brothers; None goes his way alone. All that we send into the lives of others Comes back into our own. That's the story of Christmas in our town this year. And the miracle? We call it love.