. Carpenter. he skies are blue. And the sun Is shining , easy to liuigh when your friends are true And theres happiness In sight;But when hope has fled and the skies are gray,And the friends of the past have turned , then Indeed Its a heros featTo conjure a smile In the face of defeat. Its easy to laugh when the storm Is oer And your ship Is safe In port;Yes, easy to laugh when youre on the shore Secure from the tempests sport;But when wild waves wash oer the storm-swept deck,And your gallant ship Is a battered wreck,All. thai Is the time when Its well worth whileTo look In th


. Carpenter. he skies are blue. And the sun Is shining , easy to liuigh when your friends are true And theres happiness In sight;But when hope has fled and the skies are gray,And the friends of the past have turned , then Indeed Its a heros featTo conjure a smile In the face of defeat. Its easy to laugh when the storm Is oer And your ship Is safe In port;Yes, easy to laugh when youre on the shore Secure from the tempests sport;But when wild waves wash oer the storm-swept deck,And your gallant ship Is a battered wreck,All. thai Is the time when Its well worth whileTo look In the face of defeat with a smile. lis easy to laugh when the battles fought And von know the victorys won;Yes. easy to laugh when the prize you sought Is yours when the race Is run;Hut heres to the man who can laugb when the blastOf adversity Mows, he will conquer at tbe hardest man in the world to beatIs Hi, Hum who inn laugb In the face of Carl Rurln In National Magazine. THE CflRPEIlTER. STATE, CHRISTIANITY (By ,lchnN the multiplicity ofmetaphors modernfancy places organ-ized capital and or-ganized labor as ene-mies. Certain it isthat at the presenttime the attitude ofeither to the other isneither complacentnor friendly; in fact,they are so unfriend-ly to each other that where one makesa move to .better itself or increase itspower, the other takes on the sharpestof alertness lest it lose by its inertia. Thepresent age is so highly civilized thatthe intelligent are surprised when onegives evidence that its spirit is yieldedto mortal enmity. The same fancy, however, sees theirrespective supporters watching with in-tensity the scoreboard, or, to use a clear-er and more correct selection, the bulle-tins from the field of contest. Watchingthe scoreboard may be in any gamewherein the opposing parties are infriendly contest, and naturally it is to beexpected that the apparently stronger,winning side has supporters whose in-terest in that side is as intense as th


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, bookidcarpenter33u, bookyear1913