Sn Ha _- without so much as a scrap of old | earnestness: Beworai ian Bellefonte, Pa., December 6, 1929 SE SI" IN MY BABY’S EYES What is the dream in the baby’s eyes, As he lies and blinks in a mute. surprise? With little wee hands that aimlessly go Hither and thither and to and fro; With little, wee feet that shall lead him —God knows. But a prayer from my heart like a beni- son goes; Bundle of helplessness, yonder he lies— What is the dream in my baby’s eyes? What does he wonder and what does he know ? That we have ago? Bathed in the dawnlight, what does he see That slow years have hidden from you and me Out of the yesterday seeth he yet The things that in living he soon shall forget, All that is hidden beyond the blue skies? What is the dream in my baby’s eyes? forgotten so long, long Speak to me, little one, ere you forget What is the thought that is lingering there yet? ‘Where is the land where the yesterdays meet, Waiting and waiting the morrows to greet You wee, blink, What do you wonder and what do you think ? Bright as the skies, What is the dream in my baby's eyes? —Tom Cordry funny fellow, who only will moonlight asleep in the YOKO He came to the little mining town of Sunbeam with no more portable property than the clothes he wore and a small bundle. No man knew what was in that bundle or cared. They looked at the breadth of his shoulders, the massive legs and tre- mendous arms, the shock of hair on his head and his dirty old clothes shrugged their shoulders, and let it go at that. He went about the town and among the mines, saying to every man he met, with a look of pathetic earnestness—‘“Vork? You hire?” Everybody refused to give him work and he hid in some corner overnight, crept out again at day- light, and began his round once more with an eagerness that was pitiful. Late that afternoon Billy Rand saw him for the third time that day, heard him appeal for work and a man repulse him with hard words, calling him a ‘“wop tramp.” Yoko turned away sadly, with a pa- tience that impressed Billy. Yoko was only five feet, nine’ but so tre- mendously wide and thick that he looked gigantic. He could of