Evening Republican, Volume 16, Number 113, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 10 May 1912 — Driven to It [ARTICLE+ILLUSTRATION]

Driven to It

Guy the youngest son of Fanner Tlmmina had spent two years in college, during which time he had accumulated more indebtedness than education. His father paid hie pills, and left his to shift for himself. The boy had good stock in him, however, and managed, by turning over a new leaf, practicing straight economy, and doing odd jobs of work as opportunities presented themselves to pay for his tuition, and he stayed on. “How’s you boy doing at college?” asked the elder Timmins' next neighbor one day. “He’s getting along all right now.” “I heat he* working his way through.” “Yes,” grimly, but with a gleam of pride, answered Farmer Timmins. “He found he couldn’t work me any more.” —Youth’s Companion. z .■ • - ' ■

Fair Visitor —Gracious! What a hard-looking man the prisoner la Bailiff—S’ah! That isn’t the prisoner —he’s the judge.

HER IDEA.