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The Exeter Times-Advocate, 1925-6-18, Page 2he Autoni. obil DARE AT. DUSK WILL CUT TOLL 'OE ACCIDENTS. the driver 'and his ear out of commis- sion for several days perhaps for sev- eral months. Hurry=ing to get ahead of a train, a street ear or another ve- siorher of Public Safety of the Ilonae hide saves only a moment or two at Empire, A.D. jFr1. - Ever since those the ultimate destianatlan, The gain is ancient days traffic has been getting not worth the price when there is da_a. heavier : and: heavier until now it ger of accident. would seers that the point of` traffic The best drivers are especially care- eatu'ration has about been reached, ful at dusk. There is then neither. But, there is 'it laig difference in re- enough daylight nor ,eufileient artia- apect to volume of fatalities that oc- dal light to make objects distinguish- thesedays as contrasted with able at ordinary distance, Slow up. Gur in t for all turns in the road. Blind cor- of Roman chariotshEmpire times, Then a eouple� ners are dangerous. When it is im- possibility might collide with little possible to' see;what is coming front ossibility of any ono getting serious aroundibthe iprepared o stop, y hurt, Now, however, the man in corner a n be distance before tea automobile ie operating a heavy Sound horn n.d powerful vehicle which can read- reaching the intersection, ;y become 'a medium of considerable Use chains whenever them is doh litttortality. ger of ` skidding. Install chains on About fifty deaths per day or 18,000 both rear wheels or none at all, One ann um ' with 100,000 accidents chain is sometimes worse than none, that n Drive slowly deal out no death, only injuries, at bridges. A badrut is the record of auto fatalities in or a stone in the road may throw a America, The question that must be driver's car against the structure_ When attempting to pass another ve- hicle going in the same direction start turning out to the left at least seventy-five feet to the rear, If you get . too close 'your view : of the road ahead is obstructed and you nay turn directly in front of another car com- ing toward you. When you have pass- ed a ear do not cutback into the road nor slow down too soon. BE •CAREFUL WHEN BACKING. Always be careful when backing, Sound your horn,, signal other cars laid up against the drivers. Some ped- and look back to see where you are the most reckless driversTheycourttimes Bumpers also have a safety at all l estriansarefar more reckless than going. mirrors are i death by the•way in which they violate. feature not to be ovsriooIted. Clean traffic rules. wind -shields give the driver a clear OIv`E OP CHIEF Evu.s. ` view ahead. Every car should have One of the chief evils which affect a wind -shield wiper which will pm - the auto accident situation is drunken- ness, Other causes included reckless driving, speeding, under age, violation of highway law, causing accidents, couldn't read signs and wrong plates. If a motorist really desires to avoid accidents let him consider the follow- ing points: In the first place when go- ing driving he should be sure his ma- chine is in first-class condition. That It is said that `regulation .of street traffic" was one of the duties indus- t.rieusly performed by Marcus Aurel- ius Aatonious, Emperor and Commis- as'srered is "How can these automo- tive disasters be reduced to a mini - muni?" The answer is not so difficult as is, the task of getting folks to rec- ognize the answer and act accord- ingly. The .answer to a large extent is "careful driving." People who oper- ate automobiles must exercise more care if such accidents are reduced. Butthere is another answer and that is,, "careful' walking." All the respon- sibility for auto. accidents cannot be vent .snow or rain from obstructing the driver's view. When driving, do not attempt to carry on a conversation with others in the car. Small children should prefer- ably sit in the rear of the car and cer- 'tainly they should never be held in or between the arms of the driver. Safe driving demands the full and undi- vided attention of the driver. Be sure will insure better control in an emerg- to signal when driving toward or away eiicy. Then be can well. afford to drive from the curb. The traffic officer hat' at 'a moderate rate of speed. A ono- a difficult job at the best, and drivers meat or two saved by reckless speed- should make every effort to assist ing is not efficiency, for speeding may him. He is responsible for all accidents result in a. smash 'that will put both which happen at his station. Do Not Pick the. ovivr `: 'Goodell was reputed to be the. largest landowner yin• the-eountry, and it seemed' selfishin m to putSigns 66696.6666 CROSS -WORD PUZZLE HORIZONTAL 1 -Early form of an Insect 6-A kind of lily 9 ---Girl's name io--Lacking, moisture 11 -Note of the dove 12 -Ever (poet.) 13 -Russian national drink 15--Changos In position 16 -An acclamation of praise to God 21'-Sador evil destiny 24 -Interjection 25 --To have existence 26--A tribe 28--1" the year of our Lord (abbr.) 30 --Prefix meaning "with" 31 --The bird of peace 33 --Bereft, without friends 84 --Gained . 36 -Generation 37 -Suffix: expressing quality or state 39 -An Inland body of water 42 -Trim, orderly • 43 --Conception, mental Image 44 -Girl's name 46-Peracnal pronoun 47 -Latin for "for the sake of ex• ample" (abbr.) 48 -Solitary 61-A noted living French philosopher 64.•• -To move smoothly and easily 66 -Unmounted, as a gem 58 -Personal pronoun 59 -Male child. 80-lrpyae_ name• "61�To go wrong - 62 -Abounds ©TMC INiURHAYIONAL SVNdiceee. , VERTICAL• 1 -Lead -colored 2 -Unnecessary activity 3 --Wireless ` 4 -Hebrew orhament (Gen. iV 19) 5 -Stupor 6-A horizontal -surface 7 -Famous Southern general in :Civil War 8 -Malicious burning of property 14 -Fourth musical note 17• Interjection 18--Interjection-"Stand as you are!" 19 --Province of Canada (abbr.) • 20 -Point ot-;.compase (abbr.) 82—Poeseseive pronoun 2S ---The Virgin -Mary 26 -To convert from fluid to solid 27 -An insect 29 -Receiver of a' gift 30-A small rail -bird' 32-A church festival 33 -Symbols of Easter 36 -Definite article 38 -Identical 40-A musical direction meaning • "slowly" (abbr.) 41--A metal 44 -Lacking In weight 45 -Racket, row 49 -One of various European thrushes` 60-A small hallway 51 -Girl's name (famlilar) 52 Proceed 55 -To give a deceitful. .impresaipn _53 -To make fast, as a rope ,- 57.---HistprIcal period that, although h of fair quality, had n . . #ttni=' them and throwing them . away withered, but in seeing them growing in -their natural surroundings. We want the children to enjoy theme How to Keep An Umbrella. handle. The Physical Basil. -„Dr. Eliot, of Harvard, says that he hoe • spent' little time during `his nine Groves : rough. the Ages.. Gloves »nye a curious euecdotage oil their own, especially In regard to their decades in 11"tlziltihzg alattztt Ills state of use as symbols. Perhaps the fact that mind or body, Slid, be advises young gloves were an initxoetant item in the men not • to indul$'e In' the inerow.lug and deleterious habit of iutroapectioii,, It is sound and warrantable counsel. What we all need to' realize is that a geed 'many major, and: niinou' worries dismiss themselves like a ground mist dispersed by the morning sun when we eat .aild'keep the'heftily machine in ex, cellent repair. ''Much of the disease 'of the soul autos of poison through .richly orna; which produces morbid and lacht'Y- nisutod gifts of this sort brought with "lose mortals. is the direct outcome of easily 'rectifiable t:ihysical conditions. The outlook on life is .tingued. by the way we feel. ` Our nerves react .to a Proper or improper regimen of sleep and food. A man who gets in a tan- trum and flings his job, along With a taunt, in the face of his employer may be the victim of maladjuatntents in his home life which are not publicly adver- tised.: - The" woman who is 'dreaded among her neighbors- as having the tongue of a fiend is like a puppet pull- ed by, jangling and intertwisted wires, marling her to gestures and postures that are really. not essential in her na- ture. She •does not rule her being; she is the unhappy creature of a physi- cal condition; and when -that is correct -- ed, as if by a miracle the trouble dis- appears.,.• A man travelling amid'-�lrigh snow mountains was moved by their majesty and beauty to a sense of their• eternal peace and illimitable.strength and felt rebuked, by a; sense of his own little- ness in the worshipful presence of 'na- ture, But when he came to snowfleds and glaciers the wind blew down hie tent, snow six days on end whirled and whooped about him,. the poetry faded r Shackle - ton's of the landscape. Z41ten S ton's -men rowed 800 miles in an open boat across' wild Antarctic waters to Elephant Island •they lost :the beauty of the sea; it became hideous. So our own'condition changes• the text in "our . reading of the world. Whether it is a vale of tears or a Mill of sunrise depends on our will to be- lieve, our spirit to fool; and the first thing to do is to put under the life of the -soul a corporeal substance that is an. eiiective agent. And even a frail body can be made a remarkably good servant by compliance with the -rules of the greatest of games: the thrilling adventure of living a day' at a .time, though our eyes may. contemplate eter- nity. growth of luxury •during the age of chivalry bee something to do with their promtuende-•over al -i other articles of wear in regard to symboli'c"use. Gloves tidorned with rubies' and sale phires, and perfumed gloves front Spain, were part of the outfits of tine wealthy _people at an early period 1n our history, and stories of the •convey - AS mile. ' A single thought of kindliness, And one small word of cheer, Do more to help a man along o .Than preaching for a year. A single act ofufriendliness, A handshake, firm and. trine, _' Do more to help a lane'dog on I Than most advice will do. But just one word of sympathy, With just one sunny smile, Will mae a fellow square his jaw. -- And things seem worth his while. -P. N. Hart Scott. Children of Jewish parents are, as a rule, well fed, well clothed, and, age for age, slightly ahead ' of Christian children of the same social class in intelligence. "That's mine; said the judge . and and we also' want them to think of -lie lime chief justice of British Co.! s I takieg a beaiiti iFl tl4er haitttle iron e bee a 1 ck other children who will: come after iumbia Sar Matthew Baillie B g that read: ` Ao not pick with more notable qualities an hie fences p • combined the flowers." Surely' lie ought not to them." „ i his pocket and screwingit on the crip uncommon shrewdness and humor iu' pie, added: "Now ing • losow how begrudge a few overs to the boys' and • girls who loved to wander over his 1A the" small affairs of life. At a time keep in' umbrella." Freckle Facts. when many complaints were heard of.I grassy fields and through his flower -Tine presence of coloring matter un- the theft of umbrellas from public ; besprinkled woods.In fact, he seldom der the skin is.. not' confineci• to the , places a friend asked him how he man -1 Make yourselves nests of pleasant saw his 'own flowers, for his business Negro or colored races, but is common aged to keep possession of his -a very i thoughts. None of us yet know, for in the city took ail his time. Why to al•I. 1 handsome umbrella with a chased sit -t' none of us have been taught in beat, should he deny them to the children? . In the darker races it is, of •course, ; ver handle. iynuth, what fairy palaces we may bund To tell the truth, it was Mrs. Goddell abundant,probably due to The judge evaded the question, but`of beautiful thought -proof against all much. more, who was responsible for the signs. She the stimulating action of the sun. The � a week later they met again in the ;adversity. Bright fancies, satisfied had been an eager student of botany pigment or coloring matter is found cloak room of a court. The judge call- i memories, noble histories, faithful say - in her school days. She loved flowers sion t i and wanted everybodyin the fourth of the five layers of skin I ed his friend's attention to the umbra -tinge. treasure -houses of precious and pad a ey Mrs. Simmons was calling on Mrs. Houses for Our Souls. of which the epidermis or outer skin I la rack, which contained half a dozen' restful thoughts, which care cannot Goodell one afternoon when the con- else to love them. is eomPoSed• • umbrellas of allsort and, conditions4dleturb, nor pain make gloomy, nor n 'thou ht that the and asked which -of them he consider- t poverty take away from us, --houses It has long bee g p. browning of the skin Is due rattier to ed was least likely to be taken "by !built without hands;; for our souls to m captivity have been known -to reach the age of fifteen. them the ill-omened phrase of "poison- ed gloves," Naturally the poets took an eately op- portunity of making a prettier use of this article of apparel, and "0 that I were: a glove upon that hand, that I. might touch that cheek!" was only one of many conceits of a similar kind.' From this it was a short step to the, granting of a lady's. glove to her cava- lier as a symbol of ,his championship, and the prize of the. Queen of Beauty's glove in tournaments. The symbolism of the glove was used again between Men at variance, A common way of provoking en enemy to: a duel,was to flick a glove across the :Ease. A glove, too, 'was sometimes a mark of fealty between friends. Then there was the custom. of flinging down a glove to be'takenup in- defiance, of which the last 'relic in. this country was the challenge of the King's •Chamn- pion to all and sundry at a coronation. Another form : of syinboltsm has passed into: our .proverbs with Cow - peers "As if the world and they were hand and glove," Again, we have the phrases about "kig-glove diplomacy" and "kid -glove methods," which may be set against that "mailed fist" of • weheard too much in the first which e d w c years of this century. Sentence Sermons. Nothing Worth While --Was ever ac- complished by watching the clock, -Can be expected of roue who is al- ways telling hard• luck stories. -Ever resulted from passing the buck. -Is accomplished by the one' 'who will not earn more than he is paid. -Was ever settled by a religious controversy. -Ever needs . to be promoted by fraudulent advertising. -Is ever gained by selling out a friend.. Natural ' Resources Bulletin. `he, l attiral 3'teileuroes Intelligence LSrs''. ice' otlze pit;, of tile Interior a ,Qtta•wa oaye, ' In, 1.4/a3- there wero,'thirty-two thou. -mid.'s n. working in the sawmill and pulp and paper'Mills:in Canada. In, this work they earned seventy-two million dollars. The milia and timber limits, with their equipment reprea seated an investment df' nearly' "six hundred million dollars. This 'might with justice be termed .;big business, Canada has a variety of such large organizations, and they are the back- bone of the manufactueing life of this country. As a general rule, arts live i•Ictm ,eight''to ten years, although specimens •varsation drifted to wild flowers. Mrs. Simmonsehad the reputation of asking for what she wanted and, true to that reputation, she asked Mrs. Goodell directly: "Why does your husband put up those signs? It does no harm to let the children pick a few flowers where there are so many." "I'm glad you asked the question," said Mrs. Goodell, "far I have long thought that the signs were misunder- stood. They were put up at nay re- quest, and not that the children should be denied the flowers but rather that they might have them. Flowers that children pick soon wither in their hands and are thrown away. The seeds do not mature, and in a little while the flowers axe gone. The large brilliant man. yellow lady's-slippers thatadorned the Soon learns how to eliminate the evampy places of my girlhood home , "on -essentials. are almost gone. The bloodroot, the i sr wood anemore, the yellow violets and i the sun's light than to its heat. In re- mistake." The friend pointed to one . live in. --Ruskin. cent years it has been proved that this effect is caused chiefly by the ultra- . violet rays present in sunlight. =--C- - Sentence Sermons. The Punctual Man -Wastes a Iot of time waiting on the tardy ones. -Usually has good credit , at the bank. --Finds it, easier to be the master of his time. -Never mortgages to -morrow's sue- cess uecess to. to -day's delays. -Does not 'confuse busy -nobs` with business. --Wakes a better employee than the the Dutch -man's breeches are fast die - appearing. " nlesg our wild flowersare allowed t to reproduce thenisetvea by seeding we shall soon have none, Cattle,, horses and sheep are .binning them • out. The greatest, joy in flowers is not Wood In a Newspaper. It takes a block of wood two inches wide, three inches high and four inches long to supply the pulp iii a, twenty- four -page net,spaper. A cord of wood, it is estimated. informs 3,600 persona of the day's news. ani a eM• ur ref? .21� Desolation marks this view of King's Bay, on the west coati; fromof'Spitzber- gen, 630 miles the North Pole,where „Amundsen's two seaplanes will take off in their sensational Arctic dash. MUTT AND JEFF—By. Bud _Fisher. JEFFtwwir Atte ''fou 6 �GA"y . Yov trate& F-ooL, IiAT wee tDe• e? 5 ---srasease Think for a Moment, however, of what , these, large industries mean. Canada's virgin natural resources are being developed. Her forests are be- ing utilize. d in building up' Canadian industry and commerce, and this is as it should be. In providing work for these 32,000 men the forests . were' pro- viding wages that enabled them to purchase the necessaries and sonic of. the: luxuries of life. The development of the forests thus made itself felt in providing work for the factory work- er who produced the foods which the forest worker required.' The latter, also, was a consumer of foodstuffs,. and the wages, ;earned from forest de- velopment reached the -farmer ;who produced the grain and meat supplies that the forest worker required. The farmer, is thus interested -in forest de- velopment. To' follow this intere t in the' forest to its logical conclusion we would of necessity have to include every trade, every industry, every business, every - profession and the workers therein, because none is exempt from a connec- tion, direct or indirect, with' Canada's forest, development. With a population s� closely allied to forest interests, it would appear to be the duty of every Canadian to see that the forests are protected from de- st'nctien by fire. -4- •-•--•... The, Folly of Worry. How serenely Nature rebukes the, impatience of the fretful 'woirier. A. man plants corn, wheat, barley, pota- toes-or otstoes-or trees, that take five, seven years to come to bearing, such as the Orange, oliv.e, walnut, date,'etc. Let him fret ever so much, •worry all he likes, chafe..and fret every hour; let him go and' dig up his seeds or plants to urge their`upgrowing; let 'him even s,wear in his impatient worry • and threaten to smash all hie machinery, discharge his men, and turn his stock loose; Nature goes on her way, quiet- ly, unmoved, serenely, unhurried, un- disturbed by the folly of the one erea- :tare of earth who is, so senseless as to worry -viz., "tan. -George Wharton ,Tames; Origin of Ozark. Ozark ie a eorruptiton of the French words aux arcs, meaning "with bows," a term descriptive of the Indians who inhabited tine•country. . Two .salesmen met in the outer' of- fice of a prospective customer. . The one coining out said: "N9 use to see him to -day. He is not in -a buying mood." The other one said: "While I am here it is my duty .to see him." He got the order. ' Answer to ..la,ut w'eek's puzz'.e. Romance Enters the Little Fellow's Life. Atob Now b'ee e.$ LOVe w711-1 ate:,.SoT- tee Love-. t5 HoPeLese. sHe'S OF tzo4Ai. Ball -H .minces Vest niotsou cel h AIM v Go't eseT)TL., To (*Fere Noir Y'y d KICKING' orf Ua Atone„ MLAT ;�% f! D ote'T GtVd OF So -cease,- The T Fas`,-her f -1A`('3 RO' fit' litLoos> IN `IOtIR Vs' ANS, Dila you E VeI HAuE' ANY. or' YoVR . ANceSToF s TRAce lame lee; Ii taisee hIC SOL -b me SOME Beim oto ,5•t-oCle ease rt -dory TRAcc b• Hee\ AS Fe* As CHILI AN;h h1ierN LOST t'UM- nom e. -.:� Ore aia�i i It � ii{'�ts "'4�5ti9 1Z:11,; I,glla�;; oaf ... :ere"-^ 64y,Yan,,1l1'w•, Figure of Alfred the Great Oldest Statue in London. For about -a hundred' years a statue, which is believed to be the oldest in London, and also the effigy of King Alfred the Great, has stood in the grounds of Trinity Church, Southwark, unrecognized` until just recently, When, in 1395, Richard II. ordered. the' restoration of.. Westminster ''nail after a fire; the walls were heightened, .new windows were added, the cele- brated roof was set up and the north porch, with itsmany niches and sta- tues, was built. A century later two taverns bearing the remarkable, names Heaven and Hell were erected against the. north wall of the porch. The taverna were allowed to stand till a hundred years ago,when they 'were pulled down and the statues revealed.. The statues, with one exception were either destroyed or buried, The exception found fts way to Southwark, where it has remained ever since. The right handis missing. The left is somewhat mutilated, and is thought to have held aloft a short sword. Frequently, in passing the grounds, One hears the slum 'children of_Ber- mond'sey and Southwark mutter, "There, did 'yer see 'is 'and move?" They also believe it Is the "ghost" of a bygone King, and are afraid to go through the grounds at night,' or even pgss along the earns side of the road. There is alp a very, curious. legend attached to fo statue, which hods that when Me church clock ` strikes midnight the statue steps Prem its perch, raises its arms aloft and walks round'the ehaisehyard three times, But, as the clock has never been knowp to strike at any time, this hat not been seen by the oldest inhabitant of South- wark. NoGdl a "Rule far Excellent Waiting .. "There is. no golden rule tom • good writing, just as there is no golden rule for good living. Writing is an expres- sman of the man; one man's, meet is another man's poison, `and one naan':t excellence another's snare. And the great writer may break' all the rules ante yet remain a great writer." says C. Gr. M. Seed in the New Leader. 'What of the ,twat 'ic and beauty of words, do I take no account of these?' I reply that they re valuable indeed, blit t1•atthey must n.tb osuffered come of themselves. If they refuse, then no amount of trying- -will make.. them.. Good architects decorate a construe - tion; ••t.ltey •do not consti•act a tle-rota- ti;on, and it you aim at beauty yap will "flies hell "You cannot; take the • icingelogtt of beauty e • ut `storm, more 'than you y by ,h can command a ple.ic t;r•e at will. Har- chess is 'a flower that su, prieus ,snit, songwhich you can bear as you pat`s the hedge, suddenly, simply, rising iii the night and dying 'down again. "Anti. so it is with beauty, '_Beauty is not to be captured by direct as cult; she' is.a`,'ay rotrnd eve corner, t'ea+i•i;ewe' — dart out and enter our liven when we are engageden doing or achiev- ing something else," Deep Roots Draw Lightning. Treed With foots that teasel deep in1„, to oist. soil are in itir,at clanger of being etrticic' ley lightuittt;. Leads In` Cbd Liver Oily ,N5Wfoundiaud, With an annual out - pet of 1,000,000 gallons, leads all coon tries in the production of cod Teter oil. Host (to departing guest); "IYI7 wife'" mother tt ariy latigbsd herself to death •at your.fgiuty stories; 1 hope you'll conic often Atld stay lonjrer. N •TRQ121Cia •` C ".= .**12 AGO- R la®• ASP ,.•I3- R•� • TM ®j ON 'AH' ,ri OvEW'foc:i'-. L Ela t E A 1.:::.; I A!:Po 0' -rt P. hfI .o5,ri O rD ••' e u t. fR R e j K I DS =•a - s Rr{3 RD, .• r'7"ARY.' ;a I e T OM 1®F.: 0'=' • ' . IatilLjII '-1L,REl • E. S 5 T Romance Enters the Little Fellow's Life. Atob Now b'ee e.$ LOVe w711-1 ate:,.SoT- tee Love-. t5 HoPeLese. sHe'S OF tzo4Ai. Ball -H .minces Vest niotsou cel h AIM v Go't eseT)TL., To (*Fere Noir Y'y d KICKING' orf Ua Atone„ MLAT ;�% f! D ote'T GtVd OF So -cease,- The T Fas`,-her f -1A`('3 RO' fit' litLoos> IN `IOtIR Vs' ANS, Dila you E VeI HAuE' ANY. or' YoVR . ANceSToF s TRAce lame lee; Ii taisee hIC SOL -b me SOME Beim oto ,5•t-oCle ease rt -dory TRAcc b• Hee\ AS Fe* As CHILI AN;h h1ierN LOST t'UM- nom e. -.:� Ore aia�i i It � ii{'�ts "'4�5ti9 1Z:11,; I,glla�;; oaf ... :ere"-^ 64y,Yan,,1l1'w•, Figure of Alfred the Great Oldest Statue in London. For about -a hundred' years a statue, which is believed to be the oldest in London, and also the effigy of King Alfred the Great, has stood in the grounds of Trinity Church, Southwark, unrecognized` until just recently, When, in 1395, Richard II. ordered. the' restoration of.. Westminster ''nail after a fire; the walls were heightened, .new windows were added, the cele- brated roof was set up and the north porch, with itsmany niches and sta- tues, was built. A century later two taverns bearing the remarkable, names Heaven and Hell were erected against the. north wall of the porch. The taverna were allowed to stand till a hundred years ago,when they 'were pulled down and the statues revealed.. The statues, with one exception were either destroyed or buried, The exception found fts way to Southwark, where it has remained ever since. The right handis missing. The left is somewhat mutilated, and is thought to have held aloft a short sword. Frequently, in passing the grounds, One hears the slum 'children of_Ber- mond'sey and Southwark mutter, "There, did 'yer see 'is 'and move?" They also believe it Is the "ghost" of a bygone King, and are afraid to go through the grounds at night,' or even pgss along the earns side of the road. There is alp a very, curious. legend attached to fo statue, which hods that when Me church clock ` strikes midnight the statue steps Prem its perch, raises its arms aloft and walks round'the ehaisehyard three times, But, as the clock has never been knowp to strike at any time, this hat not been seen by the oldest inhabitant of South- wark. NoGdl a "Rule far Excellent Waiting .. "There is. no golden rule tom • good writing, just as there is no golden rule for good living. Writing is an expres- sman of the man; one man's, meet is another man's poison, `and one naan':t excellence another's snare. And the great writer may break' all the rules ante yet remain a great writer." says C. Gr. M. Seed in the New Leader. 'What of the ,twat 'ic and beauty of words, do I take no account of these?' I reply that they re valuable indeed, blit t1•atthey must n.tb osuffered come of themselves. If they refuse, then no amount of trying- -will make.. them.. Good architects decorate a construe - tion; ••t.ltey •do not consti•act a tle-rota- ti;on, and it you aim at beauty yap will "flies hell "You cannot; take the • icingelogtt of beauty e • ut `storm, more 'than you y by ,h can command a ple.ic t;r•e at will. Har- chess is 'a flower that su, prieus ,snit, songwhich you can bear as you pat`s the hedge, suddenly, simply, rising iii the night and dying 'down again. "Anti. so it is with beauty, '_Beauty is not to be captured by direct as cult; she' is.a`,'ay rotrnd eve corner, t'ea+i•i;ewe' — dart out and enter our liven when we are engageden doing or achiev- ing something else," Deep Roots Draw Lightning. Treed With foots that teasel deep in1„, to oist. soil are in itir,at clanger of being etrticic' ley lightuittt;. Leads In` Cbd Liver Oily ,N5Wfoundiaud, With an annual out - pet of 1,000,000 gallons, leads all coon tries in the production of cod Teter oil. Host (to departing guest); "IYI7 wife'" mother tt ariy latigbsd herself to death •at your.fgiuty stories; 1 hope you'll conic often Atld stay lonjrer.