9 UHReRuID TI HOERRERD pi » Christ spirit of un- generosity. It is usual fathers who know the n, because they love unselfishly as Christ dren, but people who y children themselves permeated with this tmas spirit of giving. not your right hand + left hand doeth’ and understand His words eal Santa Claus. Some e gifts at Christmas, em has be res- ike OW ing em. ted one an- hat ing all fa- , of ist- he you eet or tree is not the real 10 lives at the north re. He is a represen- iowever, and as such, al as anything which world, Your Sunday nows that just as well e did not know exact- in it to you.” ased crying and had ely to her mother. “So Santa,” she said. And replied, “Yes, my dear, Santa, and when you h us you brought him or he had been away 8.” as was a lovely one endletons because at n Christmas eve, San- down their chimney ir stockings full. Be- 2 drank the glass of apple which had been d then he hurried on ' other people who be- rn Newspaper Union.) Dolly's Christmas Banning Thomas ye FTER all,” murmured Dolly 9 to her rickety pine dress- er, “Christmas in the city isn’t so awful!” She had just clambered up four flights of stairs, and marched rather solemnly the length of four dark halls. All the doors were closed in the halls; behind them she had heard people laughing and having a good time. In her arms she had carried a few bundles, mostly things for sup- per. She knew no one here to whom she could give a present if she wanted to. She knew no one who would, by the remotest chance, give her a present. Well, she had wanted to leave the country village where she had been born and brought up. It was too dull, much too dull for Dolly. Her parents had begged her to stay. The old man with whiskers who kept the country store had shaken his head over her, Her Uncle Jonah, a hard-headed, tight- fisted, rich old farmer had declared she shouldn't have a penny, not a cent. of his money if she “up and kited out to the city.” And she had retorted im- yertinently that she hoped Uncle Jonah would have a grave large enough to hold all his old money bags, so he ‘could take them right on to which= ever place he was going when he died. Tnele Jonah somehow had not relished this remark. He told her never to set foot in his house again, and Dolly flew out in a fury. Now she dropped her bundles on her very narrow bed, and dragged off her hat. Her bright hair tumbled about her ears, her blue eyes looked tired, her mouth sagged a bit at the corners. She threw her coat on a chair, and sighed. She had intended to begin at once to cook her swpper on a tiny electric plate, then clear up the things and go out to hunt up some fun. Some of the girls at the store said they were going to the “movies” and then on to a cheap dance. They had invited her to come along. Dan Dugan had in- vited her to go out to supper with him, but she did not tell them that. They would have thought her so dumb not to have accepted. Dolly had liked Dan because he looked a little like Roger. But he really wasn't in the least like him. She discovered this at their second meeting, Dan worked at a soda fountain and had a lot of smart cracks which sounded funny the first time you heard them. But she had grown tired of his humor very soon. He was generous enough but some- thing in his too familiar manner made her want to slap his face, So she had declined his invitation, saying she was going somewhere else. Danny was mad, of course, and said a number of un- pleasant things about dames who worked a guy until something better came along. Dolly didn't care. Here in her small room, with the rickety dresser and uncomfortable chair, she began think- ing of Christmas at home. She assured herself that she was perfectly satis- fied where she was, but it did no harm to remember some of the fun she had had in the square old house in the village. She forgot her supper; she forgot that she was going to the “movies.” She sat on the edge of her bed and clasped her hands around her knees. Her blue eyes were blind to the cracked window shade and the dusty looking globe of the electric light. She saw instead the big lamp on the mid- dle of the living room table at home. The lamp had a cheerful yellow shade. Books and magazines were scattered about. Her mother was wrapping up the last packages. Her father, in house slippers, was smoking a pipe and read- ing the local paper. Her younger sister was sewing on a pin cushion destined for Dolly's stocking, Her brother was pacing restlessly up and down the room urging Dolly to “get a hustle on” and come out skating. There were long garlands of ground- pine hung about the pictures. There were bunches of holly pinned to the She Dropped Her Bundles on Her Very Narrow Bed. curtains, There was mistletoe. There was a general smell of good things which had been put away in the pan- try. There was, in short, a warm se- curity of home. Then Roger had burst into the door, bringing a cold blast of wintry air. “Come on out, Dolly,” he shouted. “the skating’s grand. Moon's up and everything.” “Do go, dear,” her mother had said. “It’s a shame to stay in a night like this, I'll have doughnuts and hot cof- fee for you when you come home.” So she had gone with Roger. Millions and millions of stars in a deep blue sky. Frost in the air and sharp shadows cast by the bare trees en white houses Roger had laughed and joked all the way to the pond. They had skated around together, skimming over the smooth surface as easlly as swallows. Gradually they had stopped talking. It had all been glorious and somehow very sweet. Then snddenly, shyly, Roger had stumbled over a few words, asking Dolly to marry him. She had loved him for it, but she said “ne.” She said she first must try her own life in the city. She must be inde- pendent, She could not bear the thought of settling down in the dull village. “But we won't stay here always,” Roger had begged. “No,” Dolly replied. And they went home without saying another word. “Well,” sighed Dolly aloud, “I must get my supper.” While she was busy heating water and washing lettuce in her sink she heard a man’s footstep pass the door. hall she dropped the lettuce, and with- out knowing what she was doing, she flung open the door. a feeble -likeness to the cheery tune now descending the stairs, The whole expression of her face had changed. Her eyes sparkled, her face flushed, her very hair seemed to curl more prettily about her ears. The footsteps halted; the tune stopped. Bolly kept on with her end of it. A man was coming up the stairs, A tall man with broad shoulders and red hair. He wheeled about at the newel post and stared at Dolly. At this point she stopped whistling and man made great haste in approaching. He had nothing to say whatever. He gasped for breath, find his hat and come into her room. “To think,” said Roger, “that I have combed this darn city fore and aft to ago and never sent home your address. To think I chose this house, this very house, and have been coming in and out of it for three days, and never knew you were here, I'd about given up hope.” Dolly twinkled at him out of her blue eyes. Roger looked about at the rickety dresser, the narrow bed, the one uncomfortable chair. He said when he finally took her hand and said softly: “We can catch the nine o'clock train for home, if you hurry. ‘I came to get you, Dolly. I could not dreary hole. Your mother and father are waiting for us. They've hung up your stocking by the fireplace. And the pond is frozen solid, Grand skating!” in rer clothes, She hat and caught up her coat. Roger, let's go!” she said. They went down stairs, At the foot a man was waiting, At the sight of Dolly and her companicn, his jaw fell. “Merry Christmas, Danny Dugan!” sang out Dolly, and clung more tight- ly to her escort’s arm. Christmas night Roger and Dolly were slowing skimming around the pond. There was a moon. There was Just enough frost in the air to give the landscape a silvery white look. As they skated in rhythm and their breaths mingled in a sort of frosty cloud, Roger whispered, “Will you marry me, Dolly?’ “Yes,” she said. “Let's see how fast we can skate around the pond and then go home to she laughed happily—“coffee and doughnuts 1” “Come, ”» grinned a wide, happy youthful grin. | “I'd know that tune, Roger, if I heard | it in China!” she called out. The young | merely sent his hat sailing somewhere | into the shadows and took Dolly in | his arms. He hugged her until sha | nothing but his voice was very tender | bear to think of you alone in this | Dolly found her sult case and flung jammed on her | THE PATTON COURIER a ANTIQUATED LAWS REAL PERIL By JUDGE FREDERICK E. CRANE, New York Court of Appeals. NTIQUATED laws are the bane of the American people today. We are trying to adjust our modern scope of life to fit laws that were incorporated practically centuries ago. I do commend the progress, little though it may be, that law has made to date to become modernized. There are articles always being printed criticizing the law, Most of these articles were written by men who never even served on a jury, let alone profess a knowledge of the law. Because of their profession, they take advantage of the exemption law, exempting writers and newspaper men from serving on juries. Probably no one ever thinks of the law in the same light as his reli- gion—but it ean be viewed in the very self-same light—for the law is part of mankind. There is one law that is even higher than the Consti- tution of the United States—and that is the law of personal liberty. The young lawyer of today has an advantage over the lawyer of my day. At that time there was no workmen’s compensation law—but there was a master-and-servant law in effect. There probably was no lawyer who was not confused at some time or another by the intricateness of the master-and-servant law. As an example, if two workmen were hoisting a machine and A told B how to do the work, A would have no recovery under the old law for injuries, because he would then be classed as a master. The law is to be used every day, and not kept as a monument to the dead, or living on past performances. The thing we call the law is an instrument of government, for the protection, control and regulation of mankind—and if necessary, by force. SIN IN MODERN DISGUISES By REV. DR. HARRY EMERSON FOSDICK (Baptist). Present-day individualism is a psychological cosmetic, under which sin, nastiness and filth are being paraded just as they were in the Eight- eenth century. One of the most characteristic phenomena of our time is the way we rationalize sin. We take every-day, garden varieties of nasti- ness and personal infidelity, dress ology, and say “Oh, how modern.” St. Paul tells us that sin can disguise itself as an angel of light, but Paul never dreamed of our new psychological cosmetics, by means of which any sin from adultery up can walk abroad, now as self expression, now as release from an inhibition, now as the new freedom, or now as overcoming a complex. Amid all this looseness, disguised in the paint and apparel of the new phraseology, we all of us need to hear a salutary and challenging summons—*“pull yourselves together.” This is not by any means a reactionary appeal to old moral codes or taboos. It is primarily an appeal to a knowledge of history. The idea that this looseness is really modern is absurd to anyone who knows his- tory. One can find every item of it reduplicated in the Eighteenth cen- tury. them up in new psychological phrase- for coffee, cutting and buttering bread | Why she listened at his passing she | could not guess, but when a clear | whistle broke the chill silence of the Dolly pursed her lips and whistled | was | | | | | | | | | After a while she persuaded him to | find you. You know you moved a month | €@. 1929 Western Newspaper TTniany DEFECTS IN SOCIAL ORDER By DAVID SEABURY, Psychology Expert. Our social order has never been built in the past on a knowledge of human nature. Marriage and child training have always been based on the old prejudices and stereotypes, not on human nature and its needs. Experimental psychology is pointing the way to a new aristocracy— the aristocracy of the brains. It has shown that a moron is just as likely to be born in the millionaire’s family as in the poor man’s. Engineers, teachers and architects have all been educated for their professions, but society has never offered any training for motherhood, which is the hardest job of all. The new psychology offers a challenge to our ideas about matrimony. | Men and women marry without a knowledge of human character, without any real knowledge of compatability, with only a fixed idea of social dom- inance. There is nothing wrong with marriage as an institution; there is something ghastly wrong with what we have done with it. Education, too, must change its views, and must consider the emo- tional interference of the child, as it affects his behavior in his application to his studies. school and NORDIC SUPERIORITY A MYTH By DR. JOHN HAYNES HOLMES, New York. Because of has been such a I maintain that is no such thi sented to the ig of white, or N¢ There are 1 no race probler together withou thing as an inst sion to any me: resulted from n dition. The pr rearing of child tional, social an intermingling that there is no such thing as a pure race, while there are superior individuals and families, there as a superior race. No sillier idea has ever been pre- rance, credulity and selfish pride of men than the idea lie, supremacy. racial groupings but only socia 1 groupings, and there is social distinctions. I argue, too, that there is no such er of the human family. The so-called race prejudice tters of education, environment, social custom and tra- udice could be eliminated in a generation by proper 1. “1, therefore, hold the “race problem” to be an educa- religious problem. CHURCH HURT BY DISSENSION Py REV, DR. JOHN W. BRADBURY, New York. Modern cl foes of human has been soft-] cately involved worldly pagear lists against i have for years the foes of ht modern prophe passes its time —as if to put of mankind, ‘hmen have been attacking one another rather than the A great deal of the ancient challenge of the church led in recent years. The church has become so intri- th the power of wealth and dazzled with the glamor of and pomp that it no longer seems to ride out into the nched wrong and unholy greed. Its great spokesmen n turning their guns upon each other instead of upon mity, The malnutritioned mentality of loudspeaking an see nothing of the great problems of mankind but Tying such petty things as denominational differences men into one denomination would cure the focial evils in countries in which negroes and whites have lived | the wars, migrations and colonizations of history there ct of race prejudice, no person being born with an aver- | FREE 12 of My Famous Simplified Cake, Pastry and Hot Bread Recipes, Inside Every Sack of GoLD MEDAL “Kitchen tested” Flour, Get Full Set at Your Grocer’s Today, Gury Giscl one Festive CHRISTMAS COOKIES New Simplified “KITCHEN-TESTED"” Way OMEN everywhere are changing to a new, far simpler way in baking—GoOLD MEDAL “Kitchen-tested” Flour and Special “Kitchen-tested” Recipes. Just to find out how it works, ac- cept FREE, 12 famous, simplified 238 Women Baked These Famous Cookies With Perfect Success First Time. Not One Failed. 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