South Bend News-Times, Volume 39, Number 130, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 10 May 1922 — Page 6

6

THE SOUTH pEND NEWS-TIMES . WEDNESDAY MORNING. MAY 10. 1922

SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMS 3

Morrrinj: Evening Sunday J. U. bTEHIENSON. 'cDlUttr

Atsociatrd PressUnited Prcw International News .Service f J1f1 rr ! trltiHT!T tlfl ! IM M Mt !" I. lortl U robll.fceJ ttrclp. Joe not tpptj 'ii lOrDooa edition. rr.nvs of sLscRipno!f. tftrr.R Fan.Uy. " ' ' " " J . rr,1n ml Si:n-Jy. rr w.fk J " Kernte and Fnrsy. on mrM rontM. en 7 - - -All ctfc.r. r-r mill " " " MAY 10, 1922

7E KIU'AMS PARTY.

eu'd vr.u happen to b arour.d the Oliver hoM nmorfow'ar.'Vi- r.oon and r,b to pelade th Ce-f 1 i- of that ir.'-r.tutp.n to itiv you a rf,f'K ;it th" Us bnr.Tjrt hall, you veil about the .'.n"?t pirty cvr-r held in that hotel. The Kiwanlfl Club will have kups at its weekly me tin.?. It ha had other guests, some who name .ir well krnan In w York and Fan rrnvlrcn n they ar in th:r home eitle and other.'ihn find th'ir uiy each day into the daily new? dispatch-. Hut !h-? C".'".; will h much more important for rich member whf." mother !. Mid his best kweeth'-art and who lives in thi r;ty will brin? hr to that gatherir.it. Tho? who r'-'nr.M thin gathering ha 1 an inspiration, for It will probably do more pood rr the spirit of r-rvir on whkh th" club founded than any of the eloquent oration- to which ia members have 1 .s'ened ar.d c:vm rental approval. If you should happen to take a look, you would probably report that you mw a withering of whitehaired, laid headed or mature m"n. You would Fay th?t they Fat with women who? hair if white and who are rerhar a little feeble. You might vn o ?o far as to piv that it prevented a cro.s section of city lifo with Its lndustrif.n and its commerce, dlr.ir.ff with fni" very admirable ladks who will probil-ly be having about the best time they have had this year. If you should happen to be a member of that club, you will ?ef that there 1 jut one l.idy there who I not old at all. but whce hair i as brown or as Mark or a blonde as It w.w on the day that your yes first brsran to find a difference between that hair ar.d all orhr hair in the world. You will aLrO di?eoer that there she Is your.?, a beautiful woman, almost the mwi beiutiful in the world because she has the mo?t wonderful h-art. You would know that this woman in one that you could tru.n with the greatest secret of your life, and never worry for a moment about it?, hrlnc betrayed. You would like to tell her of your triumphs and you would he sure that she, would always sympathize w;ih any trouble? .that you mizht have. Y(. that one youn, al'f woman, will be tbrr- but it will take the ryes of a Kiwanls io find her. And no two members of that club will pick cut the same wormn whom they will pee In this l:Kht. Should you happen to be one, of th?e honored jura's, you purely would discover that a Fmall boy hrti crowded In amor.p these older. ba?y. bulnr.3 men. He '.. probably a barefooted lad and his face may b dirty, and his clothes r.ot quite as smart as are u.-ually found in the lobby of thU hotel. You would smil if these older men b prin to Joke about hi business and hi.s success, or shoot the Javelin of wit in his. direction. You would know that th-e things matter little as Ions' as you can still see that boy as he was in that day why it was enly yesterday when be brought home his playmates from school and proudly made it known that he was a part of the franc:. Yes, that'f solnt: to be a prrat dinner. A whole lot of elderly ladies circle.! around one youn? and beautiful ancel and a lot of old or agir.ff men with cr.e boy in the crowd.

THE OMG1XAL DICKERS. Gabriel Wells has Just paid 5:n'" for ten paces -f cn original Dicker. story. He bought at an auction of the effects of the late Theodore Vail, who prized It more highly than he dii the limousine which he iSi-d da:lv. Wells mUrht have gone to the nearest bookstore and pall ten cent. for a complete copy of tho story from which it came. The value of this purc'ns, came from the fact that no rlher person can have th! possession. Other men can buy limousines, country estates, fine horses, anything they desire, but Dickens will write r.o more page's and r.o -iher will be able to luv an orinlml Diekens manuscript. True, tho.-e tan pa:ci brought to Diekens but a tew pennies, for the mot of hi.s novels were written under j:rrp?ure when he wis .a reporter on a London newsparer. written under the grind of daily duty at a wage which i u him only the scant neir.lt!'. of life. Fortunately for others who belong1 to his profession and who j,ie the power of creating unusual hct'.on. the value of l:ir.c: writers i. more appreciitod in thete dys .ml tl-.o.-. a:r.e ten pages ;f purchased by one of the lidir. mic.izir.fs mieht bring ery r.ear the value placed upon them as curios. Put r.o person wou'd think of purchasing original mar.f.f cripts of a l:v;r; writer at any inflated values. Only those who rcll tl-.m in vast quantities will ; ay for them. That dt fire of rr. n have something whieh ether men do ret a.il c.ip.r."'. h ive a most natural r motion, resj or s'-bl1 pr obibly for most of the progress of the orld. It tl;- outgrowth of that f : .r.t of individuality w:.;v-h makes men d::":vrert from cih other ani v. l drives men to do useful and won lerfu! things. A"::ho.-.t tl'.e d.-'.re to r ::' hine in o:ne par. ;cul ir tl-.ir.c. it :s qu:te '.'.ke y that a natural laziness would k ' jj r.ivn m tlie muck ar.d the miro. TV; : ').' lesire to own a f ; n e home, finer rhap. thin thtt of the r.rxt dior r-:;M'.ir. That nr.1 prcwre-s T'-.' r- is the dttire to I e V;r.own as the gre.atfc! : a. ht-r. That r.-.akes for gr ater sincer.ty and s.1 t:::o-. Fhe-re tke '.e.-.r. to be known as the greatest .: -.: e-r.. i the -re if-t allst in ora branch of lav. . .':. th-- 1- i-l' r ..f the community and all '!;'" for--" rr.'r. to that p a: r t a k i r. g ertort whieh th.f- gro-;n work cf rll perdu.v Those . h; o h. i :.terd the ir l' e upon merely getting mor. y tri nr. c. .:ti t for this si me emotion :r the cqulf it Ion ar.d n s.--;or of rare things. r.tr!rd' ally thc.-e t- n Ii.;ke ns rssf.? are worth far - than their rir.te J duplieat-s-. It i not llke1 thnt r. the r.i w owner will read them. The tJii-k w :11 ere hin. Dut h hn .-at!-f.e.! the human cravln? for rur f r'r ! ! he cr.ly thine of Its kind and that, w.th him. co-;r.L for something. Others who .a . e .-i'i-'.' U" r w r. ('.. .-.: m this direction by orr.e rejor.al effor nr pr-or.ul attribute alone can afford to laugh at him. .

HOU HE GOT RICH. ,NIof!t of the mrr-v you lnve male. So far in life, ha pas.-e l out of ur hands and Into one of thrt c -.sh re ?i-ters manufaeiure.l by John 11. Patterson, dead r.ow at the a i o ..f 7 7. Pattersrn was a wUzird of psychology. He kr.ew the sJenee of making money, knew it thoroughly. From hi. llf", you can arn much that may help you eet rich. I'atterfon's rrate-t legacy to the future is f:ntif.p sal fmirship, of vhlh he wes ti st"P-father. His factory, the National Cash Il.z!.ter Comrany. had the jirst school in jr country flevotcd exclusively to salesmanship as a science or art. The idfa was imported from Germany. n th school. Tattrrson's drummers were taurht the answer to every penible objection or question that misht be rai.'M ty a prosreetive ca.h register I uyer. From th:.t', larn the value of thoroughness in everything. Iyrarn. alo. wht Patterson instinctively knew that success is largely a matter of sal smanship. No matter how wonderful your work, ideas or productf:, they will bring you success only in proportion to your ability to sell them profitably. Ignorance, of the principles of saK-'ma nship keeps many a man and worn in working for a fraction of what they could g"t if they developed a greater market for their stuff, through salesmanship. Maybe you wonder why you sometimes pep, n a small stor. a cash register worth much aa the Store's Whole ytoclv. The answer is: Patterson fpread the value of protecting money aeainst theft and keeping accurate, analytical records roth, functions combined in the cash register. Ifs a good dal like a business that ha $5no invested In a safe that never holds more thaji $20". The Patterson method of appealing to a prospective buyer was to show the buyer how to protect his cash against lo-s and how to run his business so It would at all time. show him just where he stood, also reveal l!n-- of unprofitable effort. Patters -n made money by showing other people how to make money. The customers came first. Patterson second. Usually it's the other way. cart before the hors-e. That's why so few email businesses attain thr ?ize of the National Cash Register Company. John H. Patterson was one of the bu.-ir.ess giants row rapidly fading into eternity. He was in tb,p class with James J. Hill. Andrew Carnegie, Henry Flagler, John D. Rockefeller. John Wanamaker and other pioneer leaders of industry. These men were the kind Horatio Alger wrote abour from poor boy to richer. They proved that th? platitudes, much laughed at. get the money. And their lives are Indelible lessora to young men of today who grumble at having to start at the bottom of the ladder. o THE WORM TURKS Times change. The danger of yesterday becomes the victim of today. Each step in progress presents some new and interesting phase. Witness, for instance, the decision of the courts in TTew York and Cleveland which have just awarded a claim for damages in favor of the NewYork Central against the driver of .a truck. There was a day, and still is in some localities, where damage verdicts against railroads furnished the legal fraternity with a most fruitful fiebl of operations and from which its. members were accustomed to draw larce revenues. It was fiomethin- of a tradition that a verdict could be easily obtained on any showing of facts against a railroad. Its killing of cattle, its running down of wagon?, its killing of passentren?. joined to its methods oi' entering politic, had made the railroad very' unpopular with juries. Now comes the day of the heavy truck which carries a considerable load. One of these trucks happened to drive across the track's, never heeding the whistle or the ar preaching headlights. The wreck happened. Th" courts said that the railroad is entitled to damage for the wrecking of trains by its most recent competitors and that motorists, taking the place of railways on long und short trips, must be as careful as the law formely educated the railroids to be. It is something new in the law. But all law an evolution, changing its interpretations to meet th1 changed conditions. It clings to principles, generally those of common sense and Justice. New Inventions change -.heir application. o MM" - , - nr' WKgrT - -"-tttt - : r C;OOI MORNING. (Philadelphia Public Ledger.) "Good morning" is a simple wish, and it i3 a commonplace, like conversation about health and the weather; but the race would be poorer if we held our peace when we met and did not use the pleasant, ordinary salutation. Those who can not say the two words with a smilinsr grace are not adjuster to mee what the oay may bring them. Perhaps they could not slep. Terhaps they carry to the breakfast table pain and worry. Perhaps they are in r.o mood to answer even a kind, assuaging word. There may l e all sorts of good reasons .for complete absorption in a black and desrerate mood. Yet the strong ones .are they who somehow rouse themreives above the investlrg and abounding cares. Those who carry the heaviest of burdens often are the cheeriest. Those who have an abundance of possessions, who seem the minions of fortune and the darlings of the gods, are often the hopeless. . gloomy pessimists. It may be hard to feel that it : a good morning ani it may be easier to confront the other human bfirg? with a long-drawn counter.ar.ee. inviting their concern. Put it is a sheer, rank slf;hness to assume that tl. reft are better off than we are; that they do not reed the cheer that we have it In our power to bctow. Fach of us must have known some radiant invalid whose sinful aspect was a blessinc. In the prtser.ee of that obstinately cheerful person we felt rebuked thu we had i v. r uttered a complaint. We made a firm resolve that ve would rer again find fault with our lot in life. If this ore. who had every cause to rail at the cruelty of fate, coull 'still be happy and keep foing. then surely we, in the prsr -.-;on of health nd strength and so many of the cood things of l:fe. had no risht to bewail our condition. AH over the world friends and acquaintances are meeting and greeting; and some are really trying to mike this new niorninc bricht ar.d beautiful for others just as. in the places where at th.s hour It is dark, some are bent on makirs: nicht hideous with fear and foray and slaughter for their fellow men. Where It is day half the time, or nicht half the time. at the poles, too much light or too much darkness becomes an intolerable monotony. It -s a blessing for us whee hr.rs of life are cast in such pleasant plictv that as we enjoy th sensonal permutat 'ons even so we htve the oft changes between the lich and the darkness, through rosy dawn ar.d the quiet dusk: and though heaviness may endure for a n.cht.. joy cometh in the morninsr. if we have the spirit and the will to meet the day with courage and unconquerable faith.

One fly doesn't make a summer; but a bilh.on make It pretty bad. o About the smallest thing on earth is a knot hole during k home run.

m TheTowoty ßaM lü LliiJ Ml Armstrong L U -2rr-. t a

A TALK ON l.imslMi.

We are In the adwrti In L nu.- . j 'tis true, bat It w un t,, b-!lrn!

ALL of the ads, we would t,av b bli.e the following, and in. in, other things too numerous t- mmtio n:

That about half the population invariably says everything with flowers. That a.l one ha. to do to pet Into the movies is to use a certain brand of hair wah. That Velvet Joe sits around all day long, with half a skate on. ma kin?: vise cracks about everything fmm tobacco to the Dirwin theory. That a Ford rides as smooth as a feather tick after you have purchased 1 1 , 0 1 0 different acccorie, for it. That some kinds of automobil tires would a whole lot rather go back to the factory or be sentenced to Jail, than puncture ar.d break the heart of a poor un?up-rtincr tourist. That you can remove the most ohs.tlr.ate, corn as easy af taking; dust out of a ru:r with a vacuum cleaner. That a man can go home at night, worried and tire 1 out from a busy flay with customers and bootlet:ers. feeling mean enough tc slap his kid':, front tooth out. and all his wife has to say k "It's Paramount night." and he forgets all his troubles and goes prancing off to the theater with his pack, as proud and happy as a circus, horse. That some soft drinks are so peppy, tangy. toothsome, invigorating and whilesome. that if you take ju'-t one Swlc of the delicious beverage, you'll pro out and immediately start throwing kisses to hoboes, and tipping waiters witii Liberty bends. Tht the doorman .at the T51a- ksfnne s'aps you on the back and asks you to have a clear if you show up there :n a hickory hirt or a sweater. That the Prudentiil Insurance company owns the Pock of Gibraltar. That if you buy a lot and build a home(ir. unnybrook, you can become so independent cf your former landlei.l. yon an snap your l.n:;ers n: him. twerk his nos.-. ami have him thrown in jail if h

e v

b. -c

o be Id a to t rv to

wn'.h down th ame lUde of thS hi i r-1 you aro on. Tint fOTno kinds cf gase line tiwik your auto o wild and unruly thnt you have to drag a 100 ton weight behind to hold It in the roa 1 and keep it from running away. That some newspapers are so pur and clean, that the reader Immediately concludes that all the ads 'and residing matter have been rulur.it t d to L'llly Sunday previous to publication, for his olTlcial ckey. That there are some lako report where mosquitoes would fee a ? out of place as a pair of felt boots on Pro nlw ay. That if you can equip your shoes with a certain brand of rubber heels, you can step out of your door in the morning, sneeze, right hard and keep hopping around all diy like a kangaroo, without any further exertion of energy. Th-it If you will but drop a postal card to the Unintentional Correspondence school without delay, the very next pay day will find you in a brawl with a half e'.ozen Rovermr.cnt income tax collectors. "Mar v. I've made up my mind. I will send that card in tonight." says Gus smilingly, as he removes his plasterer's uniform. "Bravo, Gtvlrivas." repls the little wife, with enthusiasm, "you'll probably have to take lunch tomorrow with Charley Schwab, so you can plan vour work for next week." That bowlers don't ever get appendicitis, mumps or dandruf'! but live to a ripe old age and finally meet violent deaths from tampering with some strange mul at the annual bowling tournament. Tht if you are dressed properly, have parked your Spearmint temporarily and have equipped youre'f with several be.xes of the little Magic deodorizer, you can sweep ii to any swell party and make the bulk of the guestr. dizzy with the thought that you must be either Mr?. Potter Palmer or Mrs. O. K. M. P. P.elmont. you're so arictccratic and sure of yourself. That the. Wonderful, new. just discovered Iwanta-Serape safety razor gives you uch a smooth, comfortable shave, that you conclude you are ellher being shaved bv radio, or hae been taken unexpectedly stewed. That if you ride in the r.ilr of ,a certain taxi company, the drivers are going to Sir Walter Raleigh vmi all cer the town.

Mmo Trum oTUan Pootru Tili: RIFT IX THlTuTK. A British Magistrate says that !r.co women have got the veto they have become absolutely truthful.

HiH'!'''!pj'!i'H''''p'i''I!j" Sj'll'li'iiiihiuithuJiilii ! SHOP EARLY S

AT WYMAN'S

Er? lovely worr.en had the voto She basked In man's benign protection And used (a learned Judge we qucte) To seek her rl.rhts by Indirection. Although employing artful tact When she was bent upon persuasion. She'd quibble, on a. print 0f fact And even fib, upon occasion.

In court rooms it was understood

(So this same; learned Judge has

stated)

That woman's word was alwavs good

Whon it was v.-eii corroborated.

Opposing lawyers (always brutes)

Would frequer.tly attack ker fit- J To testify in suffrage suits- i fj Unless there was another witness. But now that she- has got her richts. 1 i With neither hindrance nor re-j stniction ; On holding ottlce she delights i ETj No longer ir. the art of fiction. f When she looks in a Judge's face , Her brow is calm, her eyes are i level. ! :- Fhe sits serenely In her place ' pEr And tells the truth ar.d shames; 53 the devil. ' E

on Five Dollar Day

See Large Ad on Page 14.

Come and Sec Us

We're glad that woman has the voto'rr

And occupies -.he loitie.-t siaticns. Fr i

And with deep interest wo rmte

The learned Judge's observations. We're k1.h1 she's gaining; power and

fa me. That in the future she may mold us To higher forms, but just the same We're going to miss the fibs she told us.

oi'' ; rr: . iiiSiiiiiilh ns. .

j i .1 1 i 1 1 . i j . . i ' 1 1 I ,

t'.h.iii..-

AND THE HOHE NZO L.LT7RNS FIRLD HIM. Bismarck was worth more, to Germany than all the marks sh. ha.issued since his time.

YOUR HEALTH

By Dr. R. S. Copeland

i

THK FIRST DEFENSIVE MEASURE. The crime wave in New York has abated considerably, but the law forbidding the fctivities of ticket

speculators aco jr.ted fcr part of the exodus of the highwaymen.

ALWAYS SO.M LT.OOY. As soon 2.S 1'nclanel stops f.chtir.g the Irish. I'Valera hop ins it. (Copyright. lf22.)

FECIALS FOR FIVE

DOLLAR DA

1 JL1

v w

Amber is cor.sidered to be the solidified resin of extinct coniferous trees, sometime enclosing inserts, pine-needles ar.d so forth.

The Polyne-ions and the Malays i always sit down when speaking to j a superior. j

Fire Place Screens J Fire Place Coal Baskets Andirons -

Unusual Specials in Art and Garden Pottery mi Thor Electric Shop 109 South Michigan Si.

?.00

;s

,e

the

I O Ii -that is

Nobody wants to grow old. It a corumoti thing t hear somebody fay: "I wish I nut- ten years younger I"

Three score years and ten freep.it nt ly-i epf ate d reminder expected span of human life, jtct to this limitation, but

another story. Think over the list of persons you know who have reae hed the ag of 7c. Isn't it remarkable how they differ in physw I appearance, in mental aitrtnt. ar.d in sweetness: of spirit S'me are old and broken down. On the contrary, some are as young and cheerful and as aetie as they were at 00. Why the difference ? This is not an easy question to answer, and it must be admitted at once that there r.re many t'aeters involved. Put there is one very definite reason. The mental attitude has much to do with one's state oi health at TO and at all other aw, too. In a sense, the brain is like a searchlight and the intelligence directing the light. Its operations depend on the direction of the path of light. The mind dwells on the thint-as and events illuminated by the lamp ( f memory. Put memory of the past isn't the only function ef the mind. There are also imagination, vision, calculation, inte'rest m human affairs. dVtion to country all these indicate forward looking. A Kcriie for Youth. You may die from physical disability, but you will never grow old so long as the searchlight of your mind is turned ahead. Forwardlooking is the seer, t of youthfu'.ne.-s. It is a hie-ssed thing that memory is not marred by the recollection of unpleasir.t experiences. Fortunately, the pictures of those periods when we suffered are smeared over or cim.plete'.y effaced. Memory travels alone pleasant paths. To

change the figure aain. memory is t'kr a placid stream flowing alT.g

with imperceptible curr;-nt.

There ;ream.

is no po'.wr m sueh a It must meet with obstac-

retarded in its course then it develops its strength. A sheltered life, free from perplexities, protected from every disturbance, big and little, tends to

(soilness oi cnaracter anu .seminuienco

of inental vigor. The mind.' unoccupied by forward-looking thoughts, dwells in the pleasant fields cf memory. It idles away its tin: and usefulness by lazy indulgence in the at

mosphere of the lotus dreamer. If "you wish to keep young, you will keep your searchlight directed ahead. Turn it around now and then for the sake of knowing just where you are, and how much you have progressed. But let its main use be for illuminating the future. If you wonder enough about how the school in your neighborhood i; being eonduoxed you will walk over to it ocvasionally and take a look fr yurself. Mop IxK)klng Ikackuard. What kind of an alderman have you? Go down to the meetings of the aldermen and find out. If he desn't suit you. run lor alderman yourself or help some other good man to get the job. Don't settle down to the hli.-ful thoughts of the excellence of the aldermen of forty years ago. If they are net better now than they were then. you. in part. ar to blame. Stop looking backward. To keep young you must look aheal. You cannot settle down to the dullness acel monotony of contented old age without giving up to the certainty of early realization of the end you are expecting. There is no good reason why men ar.d women of 70 should consider themselves "out of the- runninf." Give yourself real problems an! real work. Fom-e-hody said that if you life a calf every day you can lift It when it gets to be a ccw. Of course, there must come a day when, try ass you will, you cannot, lift a calf every day you can lift that the time must come when you ar throuch. but to postpone that

I vil H-v M von Viav tr fln 1c fn

keep doing the things you always

9

t r r- CV "

FiveOoüarOc

l!i 'tUtmezrs

Save

Your

Kmnay s

For Thursday,

Mav

llth. .which is S5.00 Day in South Henri, Kiiinrys will, as usual, ho alive to jive you

greater ever.

valu

es

than

n hi Fnnfwoar At I

h

$5.00 S5.00

! r: u

I--s. row

it mus' ba nks.

be co

have done Keep y our li?ht flashing

r.ed within nar- forward and make the century mark

Ladies' Brown Calf Strap Slippers 2 pair at -Ladies' Brown Kid Strap Slippers---2 pair at

P All Misses' Strap Slippers and Oxfords-two pair $5.00

1 1 j Ladies' Pure Thread Silk Hose, Lisle top--3 pair $5,00 M

f Growing Girls White Buck Lace 3 pair at - 55.UU

Ladies' Glove Silk Hosiery2 pair at - - $5.00

t i

.A

tst be damme.l and y. i:r real

Just Folks By Ed par A. Guest

Tlv

MMMU.M'IKT. an wh1"'.-5 wrd w.is never

Whose Up? a lie have never spoken. Wr.ove . tnd h is truly earned its pay And d'-alt k in '.u " diy by day. M iy not b-- rich .r known to fame. Hut all men must respect his name. The man who bars ro rvi! tales Nor worship-. w-h-r. anothT fills, m.a'.l grs.,.' cf thv rasor why. Mav recr rise so : h;s:h.

Reflections of a

Bachelor Girl Ferhaps a man wouldn't 5" so many .-h-kir.g things al out the molem cirlV clothes, if thit wasn't the kind he always turns around to st ir at.

j M

j Men's Black and Brown Lace Shoes 2 pair at $5.00 1 Men's Black and Brown Oxfords 2 nair at - $5.00

- - A

j Ladies' Pateni One-Strap Slippers 2 pair at -

Ladies' Brown Strap Slippers 2 pair at Ladies' Brown Oxfords 2 pair at -

9

Hi

i ray stay

:ntei the er. d.

I'u V.e c-hall r.e : r lack a frini.

Th- i -an who .1 i;. I

Vor.

or"s s.ik?

It is awfully hard for a bachelor to reconcile the queer little spring springtime palpitations In his hear', with his cynical views of love and his morbid determination never to marry.

S5.00 ll

$5.00 $5.00

Children's and Misses' Black Lace Shoes 3 Pr. $5.00

!1 II

To spurn ta iv ir.u.r- hn m.Uht take Who scorns the pre fit he might pain May liw hi- life :n sqjalor grim, put none shi'l .'.ire to no-; it him. Nt all the pocl ir.e-n come to skill. N'e-t all tle brave r. r.d strone oi will A ' '. i ' hcl; k o 1 s f, r oft v. e e ll T'-r in t h ." r f low degree; r.v:-- til wh" do th v-t-st they can. May v. lk the worll and fear na r. ..an. At Tv with consirnce to reniain. lCcpyr:ght. l'-'-2.)

A'.as. If a woman could only-

like th circus never to grow oil cr tiresome: always to be thrilling, da-zl.n-. beautiful, with a hundred fascinating: tricks that a man r.v-r wearies of app'.aulingl

The funniest thin? on esrth is to har a bri ierro -nj and a confirmed bachelor so'.en-.r.Iy enlight? r.ir.g ach ether as to how to run a woman.

You can melt a man's heart, as y.-.u can melt Iron. a lorg a the

f. im.e there; but. one his

nothing

ha cooled.

but another flame

will mel- t

ar ;j W' u f -ti it j if i i h i ih I yy i ?--- a a

I've ff