Rensselaer Semi-Weekly Republican, Volume 37, Number 29, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 14 April 1905 — Few-Line Interviews. [ARTICLE]
Few-Line Interviews.
My idea is that the man or the people who put in the most industry will have the most industrial success. —Mr. Choate, United States ambassador in England. The inability to endure solitude and silence is the pressing curse of modern life. —Arthur Pendenys in “The Books of To-day mid Books of To-morrow.” . • See that you leave your daughters a good legacy. Teach girls occupations that will pay, so that they are not forced into matrimony for a livelihood.— The Countess Uussell. One might almost think that a man was uninteresting if lie had not given way to every' passion, and that a woman was not very charming if site retained much modesty.—J. M. Barrie. In the years from 19 to 42 most men have fulfilled their destiny; those who have had within them the ability to rise have risen; the wenk, the tlie mediocrities huve shaken down into their appointed places.—Lloyd Osbourne. Tift kind of piece I nm always ready to acquire is the oue which a young fellow tukes his best girl to see in order to make her think that lie is just the same sort of dashing, big-hearted order of fellow as the hero, while his sweetheart devoutly hopes that he will carry away the Impression that site herself is exactly modeled on the lines of the beautiful ami self-sacrificing heroine. If you enn appeal successfully to these two unsophisticated natures you can depend on filling your theater for weeks and months *o come.—Charles Frohman.
