Evening Republican, Volume 15, Number 168, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 18 July 1911 — SAID BY THE WISE [ARTICLE]
SAID BY THE WISE
' ■■..' ■;; He is' wise who knows when to hold his peafte.—Ambrose. ( * It Is a good thing ,to learn caution by the misfortunes of others.—Syrius The* most profound joy has more of gravity than gayety in It. —Montague. Precipitation is the ruin of the young; hesitation, the ruin of the old. —Louis Aigon. ‘ ~ The man without a true friend is a poor man, though he be wealthy as Croesus:—Fraser. All men who are worth anything, Spend manhood tn* unlearning mistakes of youth.—Shelley. - •** ■x Do not cast your .heart before the world; the world is ill-trained to retrieve. —Victor Cherboliez. Truth is the conformity of expression to thought The expression of truth is simplicity.—Seneca. We must keep ourselves up to our best or we shall become incapable of doing our best.—Eleanor Root Learn modesty from the clock. It keeps its hands before its face and runs down works. —Moliere. •• A friend is a person whom you trust and who trusts you,-even if appearances are against you.—Savage.
