HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times-Advocate, 1925-1-8, Page 2Automobile
EMNNING OF WISDOM. the inteeler a elosed autionehiles,
veed to tighten loolte and "tuts,
Aud etraighten things thee were
eskew;
ntilator to be installed it the roo
and Whielt 91294Chte43 en the Car is,
in motion, is being made, says Pepuleri
Mh
mend the tires, fill the cuts, ecanie'
e
Aria ansrayantitthen the ear eta& Besidettieg up eireulation en
.1tIte inside a the machine s it inoves
eeP thinge clean i would contrive,i against the air, the deviee draws out
I'd bathe the Working parts in oil
efore and after ever)? driven
My daily Iife wee one of tell,
What pleaeure, then, did I derive?
1 dreaded every drop a rain;
To shun the dirt and dust I'd strive,
From country rods would I ab-
stain.
13ut now I scorn the med and rut,
I climb -high hills to get the view;
My ear is quite disgraeeful—but
I see worlds that I never knew.
—Harold S. Osborne,
'
DEATH OF SPARROW SAVES
„eMAN'S LIFE. To 'make this gas available required
The death of` a speeern saved the a -trench 32 miles in length. Into thi
Oles
of a promma
prominent business il of trench a tee -inch pipe was laid. There
St. Thomas the other day. are 8,500 lengths of the pipe, each 20
The man was •warning the motor feet long. The pipe was made at
a his antemobile by letting it run in Welland, Ont., anti weighed 2,500 toes.
his garage, In a couple of mintitee Calgary is now receiving ita natural
a Sparrow fell at his feet and as he gas supply through 221 miles: of pipe
etooped to pick it up he felt dizzi-
ness creepieg over him, He immedi-
any inrourities, and conipletely
changes, the atmosphere every few
minutes, even in the largeet sedans.,
It is easily and quickly put in place,
and cannot be entered by ramn. or.
snow, The Miter surfactes are finished,.
In black or aluntinum, and it is de-
signed so as not te neer the appear -1
epee of the vehicle.
Calgary's Natural Gas Supply.1
1
They do things in a large way on
the Prairies. Calgary has just awns
plated. an addition to its natural gas
se ply from the Foremost gas field.
ately rushed out of doors and the
fresh air revived him. Carbon nem-
, oxide gas fumes of the burnin.g gaso-
line had killed the searrow and un-
lirie. The four gas wells at Foremost
can supply 49 nrillion cubic feet per
day, mote than double Calgary's•pres-
ent conSurnption. Canadians not so a
fortunately situated with regard to a
feel supply can hardly eippreelate the
doubtedly would have overeeme the advantages of having .a gas supply for
n in another minute or two if the both cooling and heating purposes.
death a the bird had not given him
timely waiming„
The bow of the neweet of American submarines, the has the appear
-
mice of,the head of a giant whale. The undersea dreadnought, is, now, 111 NeW
York, being Made'reidy for its trial trip to Portsmoutn.
, „
teni
1
ROOF VENTILATION FOR CLOS-
ED MOTOR, CARS.
What has become of the old-fashionn
ed livery stable with its over -driven,
often half-starved and, suffering
horses? Henry Ford could probably
answer that better than any other
To insure a supply of fresh air to man ehae,
vrtiE PURPLE
SWEATER
f3Y J. Ad, Arennes.
Translated bY
William L. McPherson
"No, Moneieur, not for a thousand
franes would. I go with you to -day up
the glaceer., We gaides have ,our
gloomy anniversaries, on Which phan-
toms pursue us,
"I have 'olimised Mout Blanc thirty-
seven times--whieh is nothing—and
all Ab.e other peaks, and you can go
and see for yourself that they are con-
quered more with the head and the
wrists than with the leg's.
The Richard family of Isloyent-sur-Maree, France, were awarded the
10,000 franc prize for a "large family." The parents, are twenty-four' years
'eld and have six children, the youngest being 18-months-a1d-tw1ns,
Ne&tfra-Remi,urces Bulletin. Foreign Pop -illation of Paris
Th Natural. Resources Intelligence
Service Of the Dept. of the 14*.erior at "Good Aniericans go to Paris when
Ottawa, says:— ,
But at the same moment the husband,
Lorenzo, shouted, ,from the upper floor
Atethe,wes ready. In spite • oe myself
I felt a cold Ohill'ean down my back.
fifteen minutes later we were on
our way.
"The climb up well marked ,paths is
never interesting; it is moChanical
work, We spent the night in a refuge,
inteuding to start again befere dawn
with our lanterns. After that the real
ascent. begins.
, "I did not need to awaken my come
'Anions. Neither of them had elept a
'wink.
"Willie I was getting ready to at-
tach the ropes panic, the taciturn,
drew me asiee and said, brusquely:
" '1 am the one who will climb be.
, hind you!
I "His arbitrary tone did not please
"Thou -we waited silently Wo t"Five Poilu Ciati.*Pd as A tiorot for .f$I"'
,
19 imn.
I Totally Mind titb' egive Sight
i;1't1 reeetie caravan arieveil . • . , • e
at A 1 t
last' the wotnau rusiteti toward its. 00141elelin rentle
ttvahed-
New Ilene for the weir blind of the idea thartA. lie $
Qdfills' livellreenco8ghaelz\ev?the sfietiverisett"trIls141 . aW.47 _....Frtite. *CiS field out in St POPrt Of the 115hed f&V b.:1 iel,,,Ir dren.
nTiten, for the fleet time, Ielieenner- wm;g1t beilI doll? by DT' (3' 13Q11",f°11)' ins., k,in*e841...1"VAM.e.' C_.4,4 44 -4i/," " 14i8
ed the yellowish enter of her dietended °°1'llist). who °nee the' 14441' has peen, tiletil°u',1048"-M14tkeirtl.110, At'''' -Is not
ey,$. treating eases ef..41indness considered enough to ha,ve, Cebeletianeoe human -
"She azed tvithont underetanding,
incurable. Out of 230 patients totally '. ita,rian sympathies.- Sernapathy.. and
at the mair atanhine erect, whom she bbleinsducheeeslartslifi;noupdelf.naltlerdteletnpovhwolethdualdti Sooueii.alkinsediehheeeatsehdoldieibwe ;liaynoutlhaetiiie_aseor,(1,
g
had believed thrust out of her lite for -
least paetial, resteratiori of eight, say I studied the• Whole subject before,jumeite
77)1 and at the, PUrPie spot 2 ou the a parts _despatch. . ,rio., to tile coveinsion than, n Home
Dr. ,
"She opened he mouth.. What a cry Iionnefon first operated on a , shonld be established. We wovildhavie
she uttered! - weeded soldier onnoet three years eon [sought diligently felt answers to sea.
"The next moment she fell on her but for two Years Made no public re-, questions as these: 'Are there many
knees, overcome with amazement and port in order not to arouse false hopes. blind babies?" "Why should there be
fear. , His report this year, he states was any?" 'Should blind babies be taken
"Thereepon Loreezo gently laid his
made only after great hesitation, buteaway from their mothees?" "Would
as an exeou, t due to the mmoureging resalts of his the mother part with them?" "If Bo,
.hand on her shoulder,
tioner would do."
British Leaders Protected
from Stage Jokes
Prominent British politicians have
been protected flicen the irreverent
cheffirtgs of theatre' catiediarts by re-,
cent rulings of the Lord Chamberlain,
the official responsible for censoring
plays and songs, says a London de-
spatch.
His most recent ruling was againat
a West End company whicli was about colors. In twd of these cases an elm -
to produce a new edition of it e frothy eleation operationnhad been made in
musical revue. One of the songs, in order to relieve the incessant pains in
the piece was not allovred to be sung the ,eyes„ Sinee this operation, whieh
because in -it four eminent politicians was performed some five or six months
— Austen Chamberlain, Winston ago-, th.ese men have been coMpletely
Churehill, Ramsay MacDonald and free from such pain.
David Lloyd George—were portrayed "Two cases of improvement in re -
Week felt an.L'ouncing.to ought not the babies ,P
IaeeCt In
'the, blind that "thynmay hava. eanii- foster homes nntil they are oldenaligh
• dence in scionce,and.in tha devotifeie f to ge te` sehoei fgrithe blind'?
Feetieh, oenlistennall, whose, condition As • -ty, matter, of fact, ,there are not
Call be improved or relieved will be Many blind babies. There ought to
treated to the laet man." be none. Blindness in babies is al -
the, emineet ocullet reports as follows: and nurses and mid -wives ar,e4as leaver-
"Pive cases of re-establishment of vi- ful and skillful as they ought to be.
In regard to thefourteen operations most wholly preventable if cloctows
for the
sion, sufecient to permit the patient He had raised about $2,000
to resume hie,nermal life. • I-Iome. This money, until lately, was
"Four eases of 1\e -establishment of on the hands a the trustees, Who -were
the ability to distinguish fotme and perplexed to know .what to do with t.
They took counsel of an experieneed
soeial leader who advised them to con-
enit with the Canadian National In-
stitute for the Bliach This they did
with the result that the money is be-
ing handed over to ,the Institute to be
used for the purpose of either caring
for or giving sight to blind children,
which is often possible, or in their ..,
eclecational work for the prevention
of bliedness in babies be securing
proper „care at their birth. A simple
solntion applied -to the eyes of the new
'born babe /mime sure that it will riot.
be blind even though there were in its
eyes the seeds of blindness because of °
disease of the mother. •
in a lightsorne vein. acting to light.
Such immunity in times of peace "In three cases a second Surgical op -
has -heretofore been given almost ex- eration will be neCessary and will be
elusively to royalty. performe ily this year.
d ea • •
The United States Forest Products An Alberta „judge not long ago
Laboratory will build painted fences assessed damages to a planted wind -
at various points throughout the Un- break at $1,000. In this ears° the wind,
ited States in order to -determine what break thee not de,stroyed, but merely
is the best way to paint different damaged and was quite capable of
WOO
"it is my profession and I am proud //r, nor his secreey. I turned my back _
of It. on him and aeswered: • h
"But it was all because of those
"What heve I to do with that? You
three devilish Italians that I experi- must arrange such a matter -with your-
ence nights when r grope out of shad-
. ..
repair.
friend.'
ows aastiffing as a black cloud. "I could have dvawa him out fur -
w
"They came one morning to engage er,,but it is not wise to mix in other's
,•'..,
my services. The woman sat wneret
, lilfairs:
you sit, The *two men antedto1,
-.Lorenzo, who had seemed not to
climb the Grepon. 1 sa*---that I was t
hear,,us; came tranquilly between- us,
not dealing with novices anil they -did seized\the rope and said, looking the
not.ba,rgain. We soon reached en „other sktuare in the face:
agreement.- i•t '
1 " 'Vow, are the one who wanted to
"When it came to fixing ,re..lee day
Pa.olo You will walk laet:
for the expedition one ot. the meo
Zeteae, "e me - •
,
tall, red-haired fellow who always had Perhaps hat doesn't suit you. 1Vlay1e
a oking manner, turned to the ,
woman you 'feel cold. Here, take the thick
j
sweater which beautiful hands have
and asked her: • • -
look, lik
knitted . , ..t.
kni oi ine.
" 'Will you grant us permission for
[ "He °tiered. Paolo the briiht purple
to -morrow, Bianca?' '
"She was knitting. Not tonee had: sweater*
,,,,,,,,, ,
she lifted lier head, and I did not --"'.' ."
know the color of her eyes: She ans-
c, trap.
urther, On IT17
flushed inY work by esaen
sides, it will -soon be ti f°
finished purple sweater, and said, with.
a grin: - to recognize -es-through her glass.'
"I thought that they were going to
fight like 'dega•
" believe that you are maltieg me
"Bute time pressed and the ascent
t• cl
con inue „
Chrisbania is Now Oslo, Pioneering in the Forest..
tter refused it, with a wicked -
that of a beast caught in a
4. o 1 o . Otherwise
" 'Yes, Lorenzo. I
" Tut
all have
• will not
"He 'bent oeer her, touched. the un- W.Pr , I betiene You, are afraid.> See1
icaolm.emonai ,
One such blind child eecently in a
western village was discovered by a
worker for the Institute for the Blind,
taken to a city, operated on, had its
sight restored or bestowed` and is now'
happy in God's sunlight and in all
the matchless beauty of the world and
fa,ces life almost wholly unhandicap-
pea. How much better to 'put this
money to such use rather than' -to
establish a new "Institution".169: be a
burden and a source of peraexity
future generations of kindly disposed
people'? ,
Another fad of kindly bet socially
untrained people, is to launch the
building of great orphanagesLorlittle
children. Any worker of social ex-
perience knows that to place these
little orphans out in private faster
homes is a much wiser t lag and much
less expansive. The ly uee of an
orphadage is to haw and care for
orphan neglected- children uhtil
such time as ftesterrlic es can be tse-
'cured fee' them. And ils is what the
beetatal ineenteteg,?.spe, ekingtdiligent-
y to do.—Dr. -J. -G. fearer. ••
• When some irregulailocal Mutinied. 'at Gardai Iddia they took
Possession of a block house And ,detied`the world. A' Small British gun, hot.- Nova tta Lanoetst
. • ,
Making Journey to Rome
The night watchman on the hoase-
boat of Marihal Joffre, atpopular res-
tuaeant in Paris well knewn to tour-
ists, wae startled the other night when
a canoe drew up out of the darkness
on the Seine end its °eminent:jumped
on the deck., The visitor asked if he
could -leave his canoe On the deck of
the houseboat. l'ermisslon was grant-
ed. The watchman politely asked
ever, upset their calculations and they Were capture&
a fetich and that you will pin on it a
medal which you have had blessed.'
" 'Don't blaspheme. I wisli :to fol-
low at'lorig 'range -the brilliant little
ladtabird which you, will he.'
The voice 01 a young woman, of
1.1 r
Estimated at 620,865
• In difileult places,' Lorenzo seuck
to my heels, ae if he were afraid of be ' Ancient
Ing overtaken by the other.
"I complimented him on his vigor.
.Nalue.o ap
whom I saw nothing but the massive
head-dress, scarcely reached. us. e
He said boastingly:
Weeds fell like a confestion against ''Oh, my corarade hasn't had as
tee ears of a confessional, much training as I have. If I were
ee imaerstood all that these people lastn would have to push him ahead.
"All went well until 9 o'clock in the
were saying. I had crossed too many
of oil.' Mountains not to know tile morning: They were then clambering
language of those who live on the up the last vertical walls, ahnost with -1
"when they wept away their Gem.' " 'Remember wn'oi is nookintpa.t us •
On New Year's Day the capital. of
Norway changedtits name from Chris-
tiania to Oslo, and all the,.geography
boons in all the schools .of the -tvorld
Were•made wreng. • •••
. e
The city has beeo,celled Christiania
for the past three centuries, but it was
celled Oslo for the six centaries before
out a footing
ecefthern elopes •
Paolo' Lorenzo kept saying
Probably few are eloser to the actual
forest than the farmer. , As the pion-
eer h is ,oPeeing up the: conntre to
settlement 'and living on the -very edge
of .the primeval -forest. Aa such, no
on stands to suffer more from forest
fires.. lleusuallytiten• his all-nfarnily
end possessions--- enea e roe a
;her the yisit,or had come teen. the
is fi-st homestead. Clearing, of
latter 'answered "Nova Scotia "
c,
ourse, /nest: be done and clearin
The paddler' was,George Stnyth, the
fires are necessary, but care mustfibe •
who is 1' h* b
canoe from. Nova Scotia to Rome. His
face of the winnirig- roen, we could name of, Oslo. trip So far has been 'suceesSfule end
I 0
navigator, w is ma mig iS way
by
in the setting of clearing
fires. 'Settlers should- get in touch
with their nearest forest ranger. who
Is well acquainted with .the danger .of
not spoken a word., but the other man • Sometimes, cltnging to the smooth that; so .it is now going an o e , -
panion,•whom they called Paolo, b.ad
coetinued to laeigh.
"The next afternoon I went to meet
them, as had'been arra'nged..
"They occupied a rented chalet in
the valley.
"While they were busy with tlieir
they die," is the Saying here, says a ma p t down in a cor-
s -o became Christiania three cen-
t ee one anothet
"In one of these eioments a, great turies ago after a conflagration which
cry filled the oytude. InstinctivelY wiped out the city and compelled King
I took a firmer grip so as not• to be Chiistian W to build a new capital
dragged down. I waited, iny heart of Norway aerol'a the bay from Oslo.
throbbitag. Nothing happened. Then in his honor it was called Christiania.
I turned back and foimcl Lorenzo, During the past' three cerituiies,
motienle.ss and livid. , newever, the eubuthe have. recrossed
1 "Paolo slipped. Tne rope broke,' he the bail and included the'site of Oslo;
said: and th-eenationalistic spieit of Norway
11 i
clean cut a reetly made vnth a Christiania Chamber of Commerce in
There are conaiderable areas of land Paris despatch. To. their infinite num- ner .of. the hallway with my ropes, my
in every province a Canada that are hers must be added 38,e28 living chi- bag and ity pioietnto fill mY Pipe. We
unsuitahle for agricultural. perpoSes- rens of the United States now in were going to have plenty of time- on
,he cultivated, or sandy soil that 31-- since they have satisfied the Parisian "A little later I heard the whiSpered
' by the wieue to the detriment of OA- and have earned a Plate in the'consus forget those words of flame:
Stony areas that cannot econfmileallY Paris. They are presumably good, our feet. .
not produCo, crops and is blown aholit police of their desirability as residents 'adieu of the woman and / shall never
"I examined the rope. There was a .nas ernp s zed ite old traditions. The
, Pne. ,
knife. '1hailing the name' of Oslo announces
7
I "Without any vain discussion we , that "The Norway of te-day feels
' descended. more tlian ever itemiehroken continun
, • • ,
"We found only a corpse on a fiat ity -with the Norway- ofe Harold- the
granite rock, the bones crushed, the inir-haired who. founded' Oslo as his
s • . • 1, • • .
vrith the eeception of the Atlautic
micontrolled fires. He will advise crossing, *hich necesitated Pa5sage -
on a steamship, lie hes made his way
set and if conditions are favoreble, ddl •
pa e. -
will iseue a burning permit,
in ano
ther fnrrn alsn tne feret. aP- the mest difficult leg of his Eui•opeat
when it ts safe for clearing fires to be alone with the help of a staiwnee
The English 'Channel eepreseeted
.peals to the farmer.' .9.It is `largely iv,. t 1 d 't to k tt ts •
iave. s an o two a emp
h. foeest and wooded areas that lie • •
him to make the French coast. On his
obtains his sport. Ilenting,and snoot-
oui the forest, ot. with riothieg within
les reach except a parially burned
oeer area in his .irerte late noighbor-
e
beed, lie would greetly tniee this plea-
.
Inn is -usually the faverite.receetition
first trip _from Deveteto Calais a wave
td his ‘vitih. washed his compass otierboerd.
He
o
loining lands'- These These areas should he returns. "'Have all, the courage that is neces-
,
Planted with ti es, as a fhture fuel Ita,lians, it would seem prefer earn, sttry, iny love, and 1 will be your re-
ct '. .
stinnlY, Woodle 5' on the farm eau. lzi„e ing a good living now, in prefeeence ward.'
of great value m providing firewoc,d, to enjoying- Paris in 'future Meanie- "We are eccus•totned to hear every
a no attention to us
. head opened like chestnut. capital in 1047.
as well as affording protection against. tion, since there a,re no less than 113,- th ng.Poolep Y
storms and winds. 574 of them registered with the pence. nen....--------------...........--------
Few farmers appreciate the value Most of theee sone of Italy are em -
of the erap that can be obtairtecl from ployed in the building. trades. in aid
evoodlot, If even given a small pro- around Pari.
portion cif the attention given to other The Belgians come next with 96,457.
crops was given to the protection and The Ituseieeis total 56,909 and the
Swiss 53,571. The total numbet of
foreigners registered as residents of
Paris and its suburbs amoents to 620,
865, of a population of. 4,500,000.
ciai chiefly for heneng purposes. ,t
- This time he,wae-able to .•,ctre,,,eci on a
Sure. his canoe, and barely escaped being
The latest '.figures' alienable , eve swamped, , •
the amount ot.fireeinedcut in
...Annually as nearin'etne millioneo.t. Dover. after this tieeticoesse, tnea eternal,
was forced to pelt back: toward the
English coast and; WaS picked ,up at
,
the • South Goodwih. Ligletehip after
. .
fourteen hours bat of the,.
time he waS,forced t� keep:ban-et; out
..'.,mvth Immediately pa • d.t.,„
The larger'. coatree of- .no,pulation use ,ind thenet day tarted ' 0111 again
improvement el the "bush," a good
iiinOtncial return -Lould be secured, A
• eeniidlot ehould, tnierefore, have a place
et every farark...„,-
Livestock slicSuld be excluded as they
desteoy the ntural reproduetion and
e the Tat„,er trees. Defeetive and
ecte eheuld he remelted first,'
that are crooked or very
t interfere with the growth
ency Ilan been to encourage
of softweeds, such as pine,
but from the farmer's
w, it would be more profit -
w hardwood, shell es maple,
and hickory. The feel Value
af hard maple or 'hickory
13oolgred Dead by Court
No wi-lo Must Stay Dead
t
etteenee
is tile rural districts, therefore, that
straight 'course for Praace-; 'Prom
ianiCeed11.17-11Oet iolliitlYilbme7neinsetfirtesinteecantil came ix) Faris .41'Y rlveL and
fort in winter bilt it 31-s° Provide' 'a trip accotding to his rote -eine Ilis
eatiah, tile most pleasant part ca his
et -
111
51
Anguet Irreycler recently returned
to his home at Gambshelm, 018 10W-
er Rhine, Alettee, after an absence
of forty-three years hi the United.
Statee, to lied hiniself deprived of all
his property and officially and legally
dead, says a Paris clespa'leh, ,
In 1881, wheti he was deelared
to 1,800 to 2,000 pont& cd eligible for military eel- '
vice reyder,
misequently fromm
la' that ie het deeiring to serve in the German,
f agrigaltured value, When eon- ariny eroeeed the :frontier in lo France
ed. leto a woad:tot, which 8116-ajd and ernbarked for Atherton. Hid Dela..
neletee le, a comparatively few years, 'lives, after waiting tweittY nears, had
"an thinning awl wincifailea a con- Freyder declared legally dead. Then
ehle quantity , firewood, per they took poeseesion ef his property,
the eeterne Wouid be nataen Freyder hae been told by the come%
weifo peevidieg an i.;:turarieel that he must reneain deed•jtidicially
t shortao. tertil t -he tribenal shalt restimet hien,
e• ',","neetna
`
sawaging- oporatiens baing
ShoWn'111 tito abeve PhotOgraPh, rx'
AO &nor ttibitie it contalcm,
de;tskCn by Grea neiteih.t
Vrallie of ihe ii1t /lab' elii
. .
,Ti -'11T. deal of eine,oiripenette W90
uT: " 0111 P`1TIS $`1'11 z.ve..Ine into
require, to, help out the faieet, Leconte. 'etc: down the
poefttri°8*eifyvoe;-.1tCiensi7't:lil;01.1.1211•11100atto.cei..,' Stietemil‘ot, ttl'tcnticitotr13rannetaltrie
qUaYitlllldC at T,I1ae J E1
pelpwoed, ete.>. are taken • will sent th(,,esh.oves t,t) IVL,.:1
.`‘,v , eereen, would .11.3c:'
eeetei ta,ear and sold eettle Inc
out, •tbis welconie help. .
po'irhnt!nthaegaffianr'mferin,rnisjibnete"IraLgt7d in thri B:vtoaLsnd ?iraieLTI.:1k-6'471,;irew.tturitlieoteTfririob,:'(',,ii:ept:,:11.r415t."%°;11P;:enti°',3„.„
torotection tne forest beceuse it
meane so much in the wealth ef Can-
ada and Canada to him Means horna
After agriculture, the foreet end for.
eet products are the lergest class of
oar eeports, and go a long way to pay
for those things Which 'we find neces-
sary but which We ate unable to pea,
duee or have an insufficient giOntity.,
There is constant dehger of forett
fires, and the -farmers of Oa:hide tan
de a great deal, persenelly trel by
interesting others to assure a
tinuartee of the forests, With all they
aise, the sunken German ileet.at, Seapa MOW00 mean ee reereatiorial region% fuel
itt the enormous dlaSS Of maelliherY anlbraaa suPPlios and, Where neeceserie em-
ployraent,
, SUCceSG,
S,uccess in .Life is 'the reward W011
by that man, who hae doveloeki, those
gifts and talents with which. lie was
)born to tile utmost postelen ander the
given cireunutannes nnd environ-
ments, who has a:eget:sit others, and
thra proper spiritual; pliteileal, and
mental experien•ceso ines fund hie
IP-Iicialeei,1301ce.airrerYlil,11:Nga6tillontltreanfictilbtlitle!'-7'"'112!riLt
dl -
Mathematic -Attie, Suteess in Life is the
ratio of What a man rata whet he can
htt• "
en,
ee