in ^M,UI,VJ nwiiic aim kujithL.IssmPe-! •hn-e-is-g-?eis10r-iso-?rlgn.they song the song. j rogAnd then the war was over and all 37 came “safely home and the ~ J door came to be known as “Mrs. Dannley’s lucky door.”More years went by and Mrs.! Dannley’s boys brought their children to be measured on the “lucky door.” iil)1-isAnd then came World War II,i and this time Mrs. Dannley looked for some way to distinguish between her soldier boys of 1917 and 1942. So she got some little flags and as one of her boys goes into the service of his country she pastes beside his name a little flag— A little flag for the second generation of her boys to go off to the wars. There is one name, that of Capt. D. D. Porter, who is somewhere in England, that has both a star and a flag.There are now 11 flags on the old door midst the nearly 200 nam-es, and Mr. and Mrs. Dannley read the names beside the flags and irj pi’ay that the door will be as lucky for the boys in World War II asit was for the boys in World War!• ■HHH b!CIX/C kiAnr lAiki