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Show J J ., VOL. • • • • • II • • • • NO. • • • • XXIII • • • • • • • • • • CO. • • • • 726 • • • t • CCC • • • ' • GREENVILLE • • • • • . • • • • ' . MO. • • • • • • • • • • JULY • • • • • 20 • • ' • 1935 ••• • RULES OF THE GAME OF LIFE , f. TOMORROW 1'As We mu s t not 1 i ve oy cl11.h,:e. t~J twi3 is oont, so tho tree Every game a,nd every endeavor of will grow," any kind have their rules. Unless I~ a saying old but true; th8~o were rulos fo~ the guidance As our jouth is spent, so our life and regulation of players and workwill go, ers, there would be much confusion It depends on me and you. and disorder. Almost every phase of modern Many of you perhap·s recognize life is like a traffic problem. this verse as taken from an old We simply cannot take the bit in song, und the first line as a proour teeth like an unbroken colt and verb, but the whole verse conveys go in any direction we wish without a world of truth. regard for the wishes of othGrs. Today, we nre the youth of If we try to act in that wa y, an.America - tomorrovl, vre \'fill be the athhy will soon be overy·,v-he ro and citizens of this fQir land, Qnd tho none of us will be getting tho kind of ci tizons rw muke depends things we want most. Wo r.mst give on what we nro today. If ue go ~he other fellow a chance, and he about just merely existing, living must give us#.o. oho.nee. Tho more for today alone and not caring anypeople there nre together the thing for tomorrow or the future, greater tho confusion if they are what poor citizens we will make. unable## or refuse to be orderly. If we are all like that, look at The rules of the gamo of life the condition in which this country help. Tti.e members of the human would soon be. If we go about, not race have learned a groat deal in caring what happens, letting nature the centuries that they have lived take its course, when we get older together. This knowledge is passed we make the kind of citizens whom from person to person und from ne see every time we go to tor,rn genorc.cicm to gcno::..· cti,'.):.1. I t 1,, ould sitt ihS o~t i~ front of t~ c sbJ~cs, be a great wqste of time if each of gossiping about the weather, etc. us had to test out all situations An old Dutchman once called that to learn thut certnin things nre class, "tho Sons at Rest". Do rrn harmful and certain helpful. It is ~ant to bo thnt kind of citizens? a great help to be told the effects Americn wns founded on high iof certnin acts so thnt rre cnn know deals, nnd it is up to us to uphold in advance whether or not it is them end to keep progressihg. We wise to do those things. One of must ench plan for the future. A the grent parposes of t he rules of fe v, of' our plnns nill perhups tumlife is to tell us whnt things ore ble to the ground like the house (cont. on page 2, col. 1) (cont. on page 3, col. 1) |