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Wear their blinders big and strong,
Dodge each happy sight;
Like to keep their faces long;
Think the day is night.

Now I've had my share of trouble;
Back been bent with ill;

Big load makes the joy seem double
When I mount the hill.

Got the toothache in their soul;
Corns upon their feelin's;
Get their share but want the whole,
Say it's crooked dealin's.
Natures steeped in indigo;

Got their joy-wires crossed;
Swear it's only weeds that grow;
Flowers always lost.

Now it's best to sing a song
'Stead o' sit and mourn;

Rose you'll find grows right along
Bigger than the thorn.

Beat the frogs the way they croak;
See with goggles blue-
Universe is cracked or broke,
'Bout to split in two.
Think the world is full of sin,

Soon go up the spout;

Badness always movin' in,

Goodness movin' out.

But I've found folks good and kind,

'Cause I thought they would be;

Most men try, at least I find,

To be what they should be.

Joseph Morris,

THE FIGHTING FAILURE

"I'm not a rabid, preachy, pollyanna optimist. Neither am 1 a gloomy grouch. I believe in a loving Divine Providence Who expects you to play the Game to the limit, Who wants you to hold tight to His hand, and Who compensates you for the ma terial losses by giving you the ability to retain your sense of values, and keep your spiritual sand out of the bearings of your physical machine, if you'll trust and-Keep Sweet, Keep Cheerful, or else-Keep Still'."-Everard Jack Appleton.

E has come the way of the fighting men, and fought And out of Life he has gathered-What? A living,— and little fame,

Ever and ever the Goal looms near,-seeming each time worth while;

But ever it proves a mirage fair-ever the grim gods smile.

And so, with lips hard set and white, he buries the hope that is gone,

His fight is lost-and he knows it is lost-and yet he is fighting on.

Out of the smoke of the battle-line watching men win

their way,

And, cheering with those who cheer success, he enters again the fray,

Licking the blood and the dust from his lips, wiping the sweat from his eyes,

He does the work he is set to do-and "therein honor lies."

Brave they were, these men he cheered, theirs is the winners' thrill;

His fight is lost-and he knows it is lost-and yet he is fighting still.

And those who won have rest and peace; and those who

died have more;

But, weary and spent, he can not stop seeking the ultimate score;

Courage was theirs for a little time,-but what of the man who sees

That he must lose, yet will not beg mercy upon his knees?

Side by side with grim Defeat, he struggles at dusk or dawn,

His fight is lost-and he knows it is lost-and yet he is fighting on.

Praise for the warriors who succeed, and tears for the vanquished dead;

The world will hold them close to her heart, wreathing each honored head,

But there in the ranks, soul-sick, time-tried, he battles against the odds,

Sans hope, but true to his colors torn, the plaything of the gods!

Uncover when he goes by, at last! Held to his task by will

The fight is lost-and he knows it is lost-and yet he is fighting still!

From "The Quiet Courage,"

Stewart & Kidd Co., Cincinnati, Ohio.

Everard Jack Appleton.

DUTY

In a single sentence Emerson crystallizes the faith that nothing is impossible to those whose guide is duty. His words, though spoken primarily of youth, apply to the whole of human life.

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nigh is grandeur to our dust,

So near is God to man,

When duty whispers low, Thou must,

The youth replies, I can.

Ralph Waldo Emerson.

THE CALL OF THE UNBEATEN

P. T. Barnum had shrewdness, inventiveness, hair-trigger readiness in acting or deciding, an eye for hidden possibilities, an instinct for determining beforehand what would prove popular. All these qualities helped him in his original and extraordinary career. But the quality he valued most highly was the one he called "stick-to-it-iveness." This completed the others. Without it the great showman could not have succeeded at all. Nor did he think that any man who lacks it will make much headway in life.

E know how rough the road will be,

WE

How heavy here the load will be,

We know about the barricades that wait along the track; But we have set our soul ahead

Upon a certain goal ahead

And nothing left from hell to sky shall ever turn us back.

We know how brief all fame must be,

We know how crude the game must be,

We know how soon the cheering turns to jeering down the block;

But there's a deeper feeling here

That Fate can't scatter reeling here,

In knowing we have battled with the final ounce in stock.

We sing of no wild glory now,

Emblazoning some story now

Of mighty charges down the field beyond some guarded pit;

But humbler tasks befalling us,

Set duties that are calling us,

Where nothing left from hell to sky shall ever make

us quit.

Permission of the Author.

From "The Sportlight."

Grantland Rice.

POLONIUS'S ADVICE TO LAERTES

A father's advice to his son how to conduct himself in the world: Don't tell all you think, or put into action thoughts out of harmony or proportion with the occasion. Be friendly, but not common; don't dull your palm by effusively shaking hands with every chance newcomer. Avoid quarrels if you can, but if they are forced on you, give a good account of yourself. Hear every man's censure (opinion), but express your own ideas to few. Dress well, but not ostentatiously. Neither borrow nor lend. And guarantee yourself against being false to others by setting up the high moral principle of being true to yourself.

IVE thy thoughts no tongue,

GIVE

Nor any unproportion'd thought his act.
Be thou familiar, but by no means vulgar;
The friends thou hast, and their adoption tried,
Grapple them to thy soul with hoops of steel;
But do not dull thy palm with entertainment
Of each new-hatch'd, unfledg'd comrade. Beware
Of entrance to a quarrel, but, being in,
Bear 't that th' opposed may beware of thee.
Give every man thine ear, but few thy voice;
Take each man's censure, but reserve thy judgment.
Costly thy habit as thy purse can buy,
But not express'd in fancy; rich, not gaudy;
For the apparel oft proclaims the man.

Neither a borrower, nor a lender be;
For loan oft loses both itself and friend,
And borrowing dulls the edge of husbandry.
This above all: to thine own self be true,
And it must follow, as the night the day,
Thou canst not then be false to any man.

William Shakespeare,

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