georgetown herald sixtysixth year of publication the georgetow herald wednesday evening october 19th 1932 150 per nnum in advance 200 to ujsjl the georgetown herald j m moore tobllsher and proprietor member canadian weekly- newspaper association cnr time table standard time going east passenger and mail 1020 ajnn passenger 239 pjm passenger and mall 630 pjm paiieenger stops or passengers going bast and toronto 956 pjn sundays going east nger 812 pjm hssehger 0 55 dju spnd wisely this winter going west passenger and mall passenger passenger psasenger and mall t passenger sunday passenger sunday 725 ajm 854 ajm 208 pjm 625 pjm 850 am 1022 pjm going nortli mali and passenger 835 ajm going soaul mall and passenger 638 pjm arrow incrrased 3j seivice eastern standard tmw 9 15am 1055 ajn sundays and holidays only 12j5 pm 356 pm 655 pjn 10 55 pjn eaaiboond 715 am dally except sunday 955 ajn 1 15 pm 4 40 pm 715 sundays and ho5ays only 9 15 pjn dally reduced fares to holders of season tickets tickets and information at longs directory heres a sensible winter time treat just pour good hoc milk over two shirrmrrl wheat beano delicious m and a boost for canadas y industry ht shredded wheat made in canada by canadian 12 big biscuits in every box nadiarf wheai uk rot dale barrister and solicitor georgetown ontario offices gregory theatre bids uu1 st clarence h wiggins barrister soueltor notary fehlac offices oneill block oeoigetown telephone 16s graham- graham ana bowyeat barristen ete brampton ontario e o orsham k b qraham oh bowyer 1 kenneth m langdon barrwer soueltor notary paatta pint mortgage money to loan offices main street south phone 88 aeorgetosm p r watson djds huvs marion priest uus ddjj georgetown office hours to 6 except tams afternoons f l heath ih8 djjls great value in either of these red rose tea red label 25c lib orange pekoe 3oc ld 2 they never let you down n a robinson live stock dealer aoi bolcher norval live stock trucking all loads fully insured phone georgetown 101 13 office in lane block one door north of oneills carriage factory hours 8 am to 8 tun chiropractic nktlson the palmer graduate ib years piacttee no medicine surgery osteopathy xray service offloe over dominion store monday wednesday and satanday 2 to 5 and 730 to 930 pjn other days and hours by appointment p how irnlatiaes 15sj frank petch licensed auctioneer for the cosmiiea of peel and bsrsx prompt servloe telephones cheltenham atrss georgetown hi post ofttoe cheltennam satisfied on sept 28th a grand valley client wrote us as follows this will notify you that mr as account has just been paid to me accept my thanks for your prompt work will have a further list for you shortly kelly aiken the collection specialists orangevillr ontario phone 90 est ism monuments pollock a ingham successors to cater or worth gait ont designs on beosjest phone zeal inspect our work in greenwood cemetery the new way to buy coal blue coal on orten for i tq0bt fwl or more no extra delivery charges to norval stewarttown glen wiixiamb stone bchooe discount allowed for cash bt not owing aiasvaiiiiiaal john mcdonald phone cmsosujusxowrt have your eyes examined by o t walker d03c j eysssjeght specsalvt linuuipsjun who will be at wataons drug stone georgetown the second wednesday of every month phone wat80n8 drug store for apposttment or yarn asay easaws a t walker at ass oases ta 1 the newest style of sdeaaea at i sum ajaw and theres no seed for id at otlia no- z new satas glow oa yonr bosair or botwater furnace into a clean oanweniea oil baraiajr tmit no saore ashes no more bard labour and i heat at the temperature yon like let us show yon how silent glow win save yon money and seedless labour next winter 13hjboo ho hare chosen silent glow r of its enlxne svatum and e operation the ntsmenxgixwfusuacebusltis com- at plenty ustalkd ready sorose ws 250eauoe storage yj edu only more than ftil mil somi omt oil barasr in mm mnhr satisflbjjr wssumsaaabniamasw thamm mtmrn iwjm mmmm aw ewtag urn imd swan minim mmmmm maaf aaaa if sa any juatbtj essta najmsat sbvm cfaw andri w ilentul magaklsjbtsicsji snbllspatcjsi ilburner b maoe in canada ud by caaadna hdk uooadim afmrs auss er jataaf gmm pagrim iuomfir urn etc mvfriwcw rvawr benarrt g r muckart phone llsw sr j georgetown fall and winter millinery in all the leading shapes and colors at misses claridge ijpstaira hmld block if i should die tonight with ir i should die tonight my friends would call to mind loving thought some kindly deed the ley hand had t wrovight some gentle word the iroaen ups had said errands on which the willing feet had ped the memory of my selfishness and pride my hasty words would all asideti and so i should be mourned tonight dead oh friends i pray tonight keep not your kisses for my cold brow the way is lonely let me eel them now think gently of me i am travel worn my faltering feet are pierced with many a thorn forgive i o hearts estranged forgive i plead i when dreamless rest is mine i snail hot need the tenderness for which i long to night jjtobert meyer the silver lining elizabeth palmer muhanks it seemed to tom avery that the day of coneyville fair was a long time in coming on that day he was to see an a fcp for the flrst time so far he had seen airships only in pictures suppose it should rain be on fair day his father trying- to make joke- hu wouw not smile well began chandrns avery even if it should rain i know youre going to say every cloud has a silver lining tom in terrupted be was grinning now every cloud does have one grand ma answered serenely sooner or later but there was not even a speck of cloud much less of lining when the great day dawned at lasttv the avery family hurired through thelr breakiast and the farm chores and by ten oclock they were all piling in to the new car which the children said had been bought in the nick of time mrs avery an grandma avery and the wo younger children sat behind and tom sat beside bis father he could think of nothing but ttoe airship in tact he bad been awake shoos midnight thinking of h the very sky for a fair said hfr avery as they sfarted off the very sky for an airship i torn answered joyfully ha had nlrined o press iirougii the crowd and to see the great mac hine at close range perhaps he might even get a chance to touch 8 he leaned back oontetmedsy as they swept out of the farm lane into the pubuo road then all at once tot car came to an abrupt sta tom looked up in sdrnriae bus father was leaning across the wheel peering no a field at the left tom followed his look and under stood the cows are in maggarts com again the boy said he knew what that meant and his heart sank the fanuly sat in dismayed silence for a moment then afr avery turn edtotom what are we gong to do son he said tom knew there waa only one thtngf to be done the cows were working terrible mischief every moment it would take a long time to drive them back into the pasture and mend ttw place in the fence where thay came through ooneyvule was many miles away and the airship was to fly at eleven oclock if mr avery himself undertook to drive out the cows the whole family would miss the fun tom scrambled hastily out of the car 111 get em he said you go on dad mi avery hesitated and all the others began to protest even phil and dotty lifted their shrill voices there was a chorus of no no but tom was already running down the road he was afraid that if waited he should not be able to do the thing at all maybe i can get- ride wltn some body else i he called over bis shoul der he heard bis father shout something in answer as the ear started his mother leaned far out you can open a jar of strawberry jam she called strawberry jam tom exclaimed bitterly he glanced back and saw only a cloud of dust where the car had been it was impossible to be- in half a minute the thing had ac tually happened the machine had come to earth and was rolling along the smooth ground tom went rac ing to meet it the aviator stepped out a tall young man with goggles on hellol he said you happened along just at the right time can you tell me where i can water my horse hes so thirsty he won t travel tom undertsood instantly there s plenty of gasoline at6ur house he be puf sad come on itt help you bring some of it down the aviator straightened up with a long breath thank you old chap he said want to go to coneyville pair go to coneyville pajr tom echo ed stupidly he could not believe his ears jump out of thoes overalls if you do ahe young man went on im already two hours behind time just sixty seconds later tom avery was strapped firmly into che areo- plane and the ma wa flying far down in the pasture the red cowu their idle talis the road like a ribbon the farmhouse looked like one of dottys toys white clouds went slipping past and the wind almost stopped his breath when he stepped out of the areo- plane on the oaneyville fairgrounds the first thinjr that he saw was will waters face with mouth banging open and jayes like marbles the next thing he saw was grandma averys smile as he walked up to join hfa as tonished family silver lining i called the utteold lady in a loud whisper tom gave a joyf ul jgrna gold lin ing this time h salt and no mis take what the clowns did clowns highways of death w i have just ended coasttocoast atomoblle tour one fact stands out ueve that he was not going to ooney- ville yet here he was scurrying in the opposite direction he thought of his chum will walters and of the run they were to have had tagether he rushed to the house pulled his overalls over his best suit and found a hammer and some nails if i hurry with all my might he panted i may get there vet but alas although tom hurried the cows did not they we up to their neoks in delicious green corn and they saw ho reason why a breathless boy with a red face should make them leave it round and round they ran breaking down the stalks and pre tending that for me life of them they could not see the place through which they were supposed to go by the time tom had driven the last red scamp into her pasture and made the fence secure the sun was nearly overhead and vehicles bound for ooneyvtlie had stopped going by tom straightened up and wiped his hot face well you old redtails he said youve done for me now he tried to whistle as he started home across the adjoining held but the tune went wrong must be nearly noon by the looks of the sun he thought a few white clouds had come into view and the sight of them reminded him of o rand ma averys words humph silver ityingir tom said aloud not when four red cows go on a ra n by a long shot all at once he stopped short and began to squint at the sky a butch speck was rounding the edge of che whitest cloud a speck that seemed to behave in a curious way tom gave a short whistle lf thats a bird it must be an eagle he de cided and a wt big eagle at that he stood stockstill gazing with all his might nearer and nearer came the dark object then a purl rig cloud covered the sun and tom saw the thing ptainly at the same time his ear caught a strange droning sometnlrnr uke the buss of a giant bee he gave a whoop ttsan alrshipl he yelled 1 he held his breath and stared in stead of flying straight ahead the big machine began to fly in a circle then all at once the bussing stopped and the airship began to slant toward the ground a moment later tom gave another whoop and threw his cap in to the air jt wa goin to land in the airsrys own istoatl level fields right radar ttfs aoml vividly in my recollection of the trip the wanton and cruel destruction of all kinds of animal life on our high ways from new york to california i ifound the highways crimson with the blood of countless dumb tures slaughtered under the whirling wheels of speeding automobiles the roads i travelled were literally high ways of- death for the beasts of the forest the air and yes the streams i nothing stseared sale from his monster of detubrthe automchlle animals of ii kinds wud and do mestic cats dogs ss rabbits deer even a fox and a coyote birds too blinded by headlights or knocked down by speeding cars their m lea thered little bodies hurled to the side of the road and finaliy the cuindnaling trage dy i found the crushed shell of a turtle a slow harmless innocent turtle witwiif by an automobile on a highway in southern indi qoukj it be possible that the driver of the car that killed it did not see h or could not stop or swerve the necessary trifle to avoid the slow sedate un hurried turtle th wasnt evidence of the heartless savagery of the motorist i wonder after leaving new york i began to see evidence of this ghastly ton of animal life on american highways snakes were trequenv in the eastern states cats and dogs were the most e victims i did see a nmngjed cow halt on the highway left where the s automobile bad hurled and the chickens and other barnyard fowll a hat of them would all pages it seem ed every car in america wens out to kul lis share of ch then came indian and a rain i remember swinging out to avoid a turtle crossing the road i enjoyed in iu bead and legs giving me the the way the slowmoving reptile drew rightofway but all the joy of the episode vanished when a hundred yards farther on 1 came upon the crushed body of another turtle smash ed into the fresh tire tracks of an automo from then on the luglsways become a veritable shsmbles a fox more dogs cats chicken a doe even betthen the west with the highways red with the blood and bodies of rabbits and ghoulish ravens screeching tmr the feast this trail of death made me think deeply was there any corollary between this huge toll of animal life by the automobile and the mounting list of dead i human beings is the wanton motorist who runs down a frightened blinded rabbit dog or chlrirrn in sport responsible for the deaths of human beings does his killing mania extend to man is there any connection be the autoist who runs down animals in fun and the murderous hitrunners who leave their victims dying in our city streets one of my friends never turns out if an ansmal darts in front of his automobile he prefers to kill the animal to risking striking another automobile the obvious answer to this applying the brakes and stopp ing apparently has not occurred to him what would happen if a child darted in front of his car would he stop or turn out or would he run it down the countless animals that daily suffer this fate are a grave indication of the state of mind of a certain type of motorist unfortunately our laws provide no punishment for a motorist who kills an arrht outright and of ten inadequate puwohment for one who runs down a human being frank plassi in our rjumb animals when the ctrcuj goes to boston it pitches ltw tent in a held not far from the chlldjens hospital the child ren in their cots are within earshot of the wonderful bands and the bustle of people and the ma cries of the circus recently one of the children wrote a letter to the manager of a circus asking that a clown be sent to the hospital he had never seen a clown the manager a largehearted busy man read it to the employees of the circus and asked fpr volunteers the natural thing happenedlthe thing one would expect who believes that all human folk are pretty much alike in being hunuu all the clowns vol- ired all the absurd complexity of seep the crowd at a three in a roar asked the ni-ivl- inding to the invitation chldrens hospital the teered and the acrobats volunteered until it seemed that the manager would have to move the en tire clrcua down into the sreet the managers of the hospital were informed the balconies were hung with streamers and toy ballons chil dren who could walk crowded against the railing those who could not walk were wheeled out so that they could turn their little white faces toward the street expectation raised many a little heart that the doctors had tried in vain to stimulate first came a hundred bags of pea nuts from the manager of the circus for those who could eat those who could not eat were not envious they were soon to feast their eyes mother ly nurses moving from cot to stretch er told them that the circus was corning presently there was the music of a band down the street came the clowns and the acrobats and the trained dogs and before them marched a squad of policemen not to keep the clowns m ordeir the ap pointed business of a clown is to be out of order but to keep adult well- bodied citizens out of the way and to see that nonegot between the eyes in the balconiesand the performance in the street the children were ready at a signal from the nurses those who hsd lungs to spare blew upon tin horns the clowns looked up and smiled one clown who had lived a hard life drew his band across his white paint and said god bless the little hlinpsl my boy is in the hos in lun non and another clown beard him and said gruffly shut up do you want to spoil this show presently the clrcut began in the street the tat clown with a pneu matic stomach was tackled by the little dog pete and rolled over and over in the dirt the acrobats did wonderful balancing acts on the ends of their noses and their toes the giant down who was nioa feet high but was really a short man with an artificial body broke into two parts and his legs went running up the street a preposterous clown tried to sell a dog that was only stuffed a mother cjown washed a baby down that was really a burly big man and when she scrubbed his ears out with a scrubbiagbrujh the chudera in the balcony laughed loudest for they knew that trick so the p went on until it was all over and the clowns went back to their work better for what they had done and the children went back to their wards better for what they had seen use ontario farm products and help the fartner hon t l kennedy since be be came minister of agriculture two years ago has made every effort to improve agricultural conditions in ontario by p of pubjc addres ses and 1 departmental activities he has sought to impress upon urban communities the necessity for mak ing greater use of our own agrteultur- al products statistics show that year after year the people of ontario im port a very large amount of such pro ducts from foreign countries if they turn from these foreign products and consume our own there will be f double advantage runners will bene fit financially and they will in turn be better able to buy the manufactured articles of urban communities the result is obvious but some edu cational effort seems necessary to bring it about with this object in view the epartsnent reoexrtly nounced an ontario farmv products week from october 17 to obtob we are gratified to note thai the idea has been taken up with enthusiasm in all sections of the provinces retail merchants manufacturers civic n and other organisations are coopera ting to make the week success in many cities plana fiavf been made for parades special window displays and other attractions designed to in crease public buying interest in on tario farm products at this season of the year there is one product which must be disposed of quickly to the best advantage ontario is noted for the htgh quail ty of its fruit ian other years we have frequently iheen distressed by reports of fruits of various kinds lying rot ting on the ground because there was no demand lor them- there is always a demand for good fruit but the difficulty seems to be in methods of collection and distribution if fruit growers can be assured of ready market there will bevjfctle left to rot this yearf the objefet of the ontario farm products weea is to enlist the cooperailon of c in cities towns and villages in mak ing use of aeato products h fruit with these urban dwellers it should be as we have explained matter of tntellbjent selfinterest toronto mail and empire because of thy grkatmunty because i have been given- much i too shall give because of thy great bounty lord bach day i live i shall divide my gifts from thee with every brother that i see who has the need of help from me because i have been sheltered fed by thy good care i cannot see anothers lack and i not share my glowing fire my loaf of bread my roofs safe shelter overhead that he too may be comforted because love has been lavished so upon me lord a wealth i know that as 110 meant for me to hoard i shall give love to those in need the cold and feed bffqius shall 1 show njy thanks indeed looks uke record season magic trick rvrforbtkd woman recovers purse when her baby hurled her purse with money railway transportation and other valuables out of the train window a few miles west of a prairie village called eden a woman aboard a canadian national train gave up all hope of her trip abroad and ap pealed to the kindness of the con ductor to get her as far as winnipeg today ahe is in europe and there is a station agent and a section fore man mentioned in despatches with in a few hours at ner loss the purse had been found the train on which ahe rode had been caught by a speed ing automobile and the woman was again in pos of her purse and all that it contained they worked the nttglot trick very simply no sooner had the woman reported her loss to conductor abbott a mile or two west of bden than he got in touch with the agent a clark mr clark sent out a section gang to hunt for the purse and wired neepawa to- hold the train a few minutes in case the purse was found j w lee section foreman bund the purse ly ing open by the track two miles west of bden he hunted about picked up the stuff that bad been scattered about and tore back to bden aboard handcar mr clark unllmbered his qsr and started his race to neepawa where he oausjta the train which was toronto oct 17th the hunting season this year gives every promise of setting a new record for the rail ways in the point of transporting hun ters to northern ontario according to h c bourlier general passengei agent of the canadian national rail ways never before have such a large number of enquiries been made to hunting territory or advanced bookings for guides and camps been so heavy as they are this fall the interest shown this year far exceeds anythings i have known in the past mr bourlier stated possibly this is due to the excellent reports received from the north which states that game is unusually plentiful and also the early opening of the grouse sea son after eight years of closed hunt ing the partridge hunters were out in full force for the opening day and traffic to the muskoka and lake of bays district was greater than antici pated as practically all got then- bag limit and this fact may have helped in awakening an early interest in big game in any event condi tions for hunting are stated to be ideal this year and every hunter ap parently intends to profit by the un usual season with a vijvw to accomrnodatlng the anticipated heavy traffic mr bour- lied stated that the national system has completed its schedule for the operation of special hunters trains northbound these trains will leave for capreo on november 2 3 and 4 and will stop at intermediate points for the convenience of passengers southbound trains will leave chpreol on november 12 15 is and it and will also make intermediate stops for the convenience of hunters train servloe on the north bay line will be strengthened aso to meet the re quirements of the hunting season a disappointing occasion how was the lecture demanded mrs sawin with the impatience of one who had been denied a coveted pleasure as mr sawin stopped to re move his overshoes before entering the sittingroom my cold a sight better i bleieve i might have gone s well as not i guess you did well to remain at home said her husband as he seat ed himself before the stove as far forth as the lecture was concerned the entertainment opened with a selection by the band then prayer by the congregational minister then the band again then a song by the methodist minister accompanied by his wife at the cabinet organ and then the lecture after that the band once more and then the benediction by ikhe episcopal minister well what about the lecture ask ed mrs sawin i can hear ministers any day the lecture was on scotland said mr sawin slowly i never felt much drawed to scotland and i guess after tonight i shall give up all thoughts of ever going there folks that have no more idea of the english language after all these years need a mission ary but i drat feel any call to be one and as for their houses there wasnt one single good towostorey frame building in all the stereoptlo that man tsirbwed on the sheet if it hadnt been for the band i should almost have felt 1m wasted my fifteen cents the right ttmr to sexe pigs yea the old irish peasant knew his pigs knew them rather intimate ly as a matter of fact when vto sell them in order bo get the best prices never troubled himr he bad his lhtle rule for judging but let maj a w long in irish sport of yesterday tell what that rule was the major writes here in a straggling wood of stunt ed oak and birch trees was a low thatched oottage where robert told us a river watcher called pat lyden lived lyden met us at his door sur rounded by barefooted cluldren the smallest in a dress made of a flour sack and bearing the brand of the flour in huge blue letters across the little chest hens ducks and several dogs and with the western peasants usual courtesy he insisted that we enter bis cottage to rest but charles flrtnly declined seeing a look of pain and surprise in the mans eyes i at once entered and tried to make myself agreeable while in the river watchers house i heard the loud grunts of pigs but failed to catch a glimpse of them on the way back i asked robert whether he knew where the pigs were indeed and i do well yer- honor he answered with a laugh sure pateen always loapes his pigs under his bed charles shuddered thankful that be had stayed outside and remarked that tt was an unusual place in troth yer right master chariesv replied robert but sure that same man has a fortune made out of them same pigs and all through imping them neath the bed for some time charles did not speak but at last his curiosity got the better of his dignity and be asked robert how a man could amass a fortune by keeprng pigs under his bed begorra replied robert laugh ing many a man has asked that same question of pateen and got no satisfactory answer but sure til tell yer honor its easy enough to sell a pig but bad enough to know the light time to sell that same pig and thats where the bed comes in again charles walked on thinking hard at last he reluctantly asked robert to explain sure yer honors letting on to be mighty simple today said robert pateen has the bed set so that when his pigs is big enough to make bacon of its how theyll be after rising the bed on him scratching their backs so they would the craytures and when he cant sleep quiet and alsy like he knows its time the pigs be gone iscqu1 uragingl divorce public opinion 111 canada on the vexed question of divorce will be stim ulated in the right direction by the altogether worthy derl of the general council of the united church at hamilton after a spirited debate hi which the issue was largely the de gree to which dtvorce should be con demned tt was resolved the united churdh therefore would drjeourage solemnisation by any of he minis of the marriage of any person during the lifetime of a partner in a previous union divorce is a subject upon which opinions may differ but ther is no question of tle need of a strong opinion being created to resist the ex tension of the practice m this coun try only a few months ago a nest law enacted at ottawa extended the ooeration of divorce courts of on tario and thereby fsjclljtated dissolu tion of marriage beyond the previous operatlonof the senate committee toronto olobe pensioners artd pcructty major j s roper president of the canadian legion is in the midst of a discussion with the rjomlmon govern ment m which the major nesl- jectlon to the oovensnients proposal to issue a blue book it and particularising the pensions being paid to canadian war veteran majo roper fears employers and govern ments too will take advantage of this information and reduce s hut this objection la hardly st it is argued instead that those veter ans who are honestly in receipt of pension payments have no reas to be ashamed or to fear publtsatton of the facts the ones improperly re ceiving public bjoney are the ones from whom the objections are sure to come according to the argument being put up from the governments side if the government intends issuing information for war service pensions would it not be a good thing to issue them as well for those on the old age pensions list this too would cause objections hi certain quarters but those really entitled to a pension would have nothing to fear we have often thought it would be a good thing if those applying for pensions were mane to submit to some similar procedure it might be a good move before they were finally passed upon if the names of the pro posed pensioners in each county were posted for a week this might oe thought rather hard on those worthy citizens on whom fortune bad frown ed but we believe it would be a real deterrent to a lot of those now on the pension roll who should not be there at all and who would not have ap plied if they knew their names would be made public before final sanctio was given go where you will talk to whom you like and they can tell you of per sons in their neighborhood now on the pension list who are better able to support themselves than some who ana- paying taxes to keep them durham chronicle the acme of life the electric eye and careless drivers the grim hand- of the law is slowly stretching out to reach those foolish people who persist to ignoring the traffic laws when driving automobiles the latest plan to compel them to obey is an electric eye which oper ates just as effectively as if two po licemen were stationed along the road operating a speed trap photo cells are concealed in the roadway at stated points and when a car passes over them a bell is rung in a police telephone booth at a distant point this bell shows how long the car took to drive from one photocell to the other and h it is in excess of the speed limit the policeman on duty hands the driver a ticket as soon as the latter reaches him regardless of the speed si which the car is then being driven this contraption is now in opera tion on the old boston post road lead ing out of new york and is said to be producing perfectly splendid re sults if it operates so that no error is made in serving the right driver with the ticket then it certainly is an invention of which excellent use could be made around here to ronto already has installed in cer tain sections the signal lights that stop the driver and then turn green to pass htm on when he sounds his horn that is another wrinkle which might be considered nothing that tends to make the breaking of the speed laws more difficult for the speed fiend should be ignored a woman was having the upper rooms of her house painted and she fancied that the pemtefr was s on the job painter are you working she shouted at the foot of the stairs yes maam came the reply i cant bear you well do yer think rm putting it on wuvb a there are many differences between youth and age but the chief is that as far as this world is concerned youth looks forward and age looks back op to a certain period varying greatly with the individual hope is the main tissue of our lives we are always making of wealth plans of achievement plans of benefit to others sometimes all our thought centsts on one great project ample in its details rich in its develorsnetsv at to crown a life with glory if we carry it to success sometimes our ambition is less or our imagination more limited and we are content with a succession of briefer efforts each aoaorblng us for the moment and then giving place to something else fortunate the few who can go on thus hoping and achieving to the end who can turn from one success to another with inexhaustible buoyancy never having the leisure to regret to such persons life never seems long or empty or unprofitable with many of us with most of as is it not so we may be busy en many live hurriedly from inptam until night yet setnehew there cornea a time we hardly know when it comes when we and we are looking not forward but back perhaps the one great aim of our lives has failed or succeeded which is sometimes worse perhaps- we are more occupied than ever with moo efforts hut they seem little not so much worth while or so shsorblng one of the most characteristic marks of that change is the pleasure we take in doing things seeing people visiting places not because they are significant in themselves but be cause we have done the things seen the people visited the places of long ago the young with whom we some times try to share this interest simply do not comprehend it the best cure for that malady of age if it be a malady is to all our lives as rull as possible with interests that cannot grow old worldly p sures and ambitions will fall and pall but the charm of nature the inexhaustible delight of thought the endless resource of seeking others happiness stick to us as long ss we stick to them only those things can not be taken up at a moments notice when more unworthy tilings have fal len away a long wait my dad who deals ha beef and hogs says trade has tumbled to the dogs my garndpa notes the worlds worn and says were going tothe dogs his granddad in his house of swore things were going to the dogs the caveman in bis queer sfctn togs said things were going to the dogs but thlk is what i wkn to state tbaga 1mm had an ssjtol war