Kawartha Lakes Public Library Digital Archive

Watchman (1888), 24 Nov 1892, p. 3

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PRICES AWAY. DOWN IN THE VALLEYS. ' ‘ """’" â€" M' {LE-:SEVEN GABLOADS OF .~. ..- of new fall stOck received during past few weeks are now open. une Car Teasâ€"our celebrated 25c. Brand. One Car Sugarsâ€"Gran ulated, Light and Brown. Three Cars Saltâ€"Jib be sold at the popular price. , . One Car Celebrated American White Oil. \ i one Car General :roceries and Fancy Lines. ' Two I; undred Boxes New ValentiaRaisins. :7 One Hundred C ses Canned Goods. These goods are all Fre 511 and Reliable. Heads of families will do thE‘ffi selves a service by callin upon us BELL, _â€"_â€"â€"â€"-â€"â€"’ _______4 FAMILY GROGER u) buy at the new For Sale or to Rent HE WEST HALF of lot 10 in the 7th Con. of Eldon, County of Victoria, containing 100 acres more or less. Apply to DALLAS WRIGHT, owner, on theI premises, or by letter to Argyle P, O. Eldon, June 11, 1892. .use. Lindsay. Barley, nd Alsike c; Potatoes l â€"-â€"-â€"1 SRAYBN MATRAIT é FRAMES ' To all our htsulhers for m2. Isl my Fm reliouse. 89" ‘36-tf _____*..â€"â€"â€"- We the publishers of “ North American Hpmes,” . v“ in order to increase the circulation of our ournal If, - I . . .- , I. . ,I .IIIIII "v" 3 throughout the United Statesand Canada,w11 e E I 8')" I_ I . . II II IIIIII this year over one hundred thousand dolI rial. P} ,1 1.5 I , . , . .. , I.IIIII .3422 5.7....- among our new subscribersm the form ofanamscufi 31$; it ’7 . .2 j‘ ‘3 I : L .. Is. _ I _I m... {an}. ,III in" 37‘31’ .. Crayon Portrait and a. handsome frame (as per -"*".’23‘\Q. . I III . II .» I I IIIIII IIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIII . " ”u" ” » below) to be made free of charge for every new ' I .. . " I I. .. ""'."Ԥ'ki,., pit: iii? subscriber to “ north Amelie?!) 'Homest”‘ out i J l ‘ Am. i“ s‘vl'l:tnillllldvnfdsl family journal is a. monthly publication consxstin of ., III M I . IIII _..»n IIIIII IIIII emâ€" 16 pages, filled with the best literature of the ay, :I‘ , ,I . I . ' IIIII IIII \IIIIIIII IIIIIIII Full v I . V .' by some of the best agthors,f and isEychnIâ€"Ithy 3:81:23 9, -._..,, ,, , - _ u». ‘ x U ... ash, must. i "1‘" ' * - ., k V i M vii-- reat e use we are oing or It. ign yea . I U 4‘â€" ”A ' j '630 J The Nezipf’ork World had osilyraélgout 15t.000dd:111y :11; L' . I T' ‘r ‘ ‘ ' ' ' ed 'udiciousa ve emen an I- .. . .iii.l°'di¥§rlԤs $133913. 5.333333%. r. W has accomplished we feel confi- 5:. .. , , . H 3. Dean, BARRISTER, SOLI £13" .83 1525. We haves. T’geca ital to draw upon,a:nd the handsome Premium 1' if . ' , . . CITOR Proctor Notory Public Conveyance .. 'Ol'nb oursc Y rmnl‘ ' s the i2: est circulation or any pa r in the world. I , . ~,, , , , . 1 33 glan you “all “how £13331“ subscgbers 'i11 soon come b8 t0 ‘13 in. ““385 Etc omces in Bigelow's Block, Corner York Ken Gala}: .énlgfihiiidséfims. The Crayon Portraiézve willrlii‘aye £31263}; fpgeygnu $111313; and we Street Entrance on York Street, Lindsay, Ont. :e Largest association of artists in this (:1 . Ieir wc tds e on _ There isno . g l I it: 1‘ 2 V“ be “ ‘88 you an artistic Portrait andha d aim? Crayon Portrait of yourself or , I I .- c en ..:sezul as well as ornamental than a _an som . lif time to at one already -,-.,~ ., ~ -ber of your family: therefore this is a chance in a e g fun or absolutely free of charge- ‘fi-r EE:P.I“S€OL3ISEL URE EPOIR f” 3 never mem‘mgmyom pm cunts mm All LSE FAILS. tn) 9 lost Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Use a: 192.; '5 us in time. Sold by druggists. ,4 ' 93 2‘3. . N ’ECtONlSrl-JM RT I-Q NI . . ‘ if or any me much tint pe or d truerrotype o yourse is we’will shake you . rom same an artistic .9 , ! ..., ' .~ 1 - ' ,I ,_ . , _ ___.___.__.â€" â€"__â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"- i. g -" h I ,, .\ ~ r 1 - .. - v" a" v. ' r . ' w , - .. .' ' t K . .- . ’A'; a r. -‘ ~ 4 , ‘3. r I 'l , . \ ‘ ‘ ‘ T . I ..... d K t s"\ ‘,\k ’ ~ ’ .. , ”MA I .. m . . . ., .1 ...... ,. _.. _â€"â€"â€"‘~ ' a A » -. . ‘ ‘ â€".â€", »,;»:>- . .n ’» », ~ . ’ I , ~ , 7 w . w. » , ,. n 1 . e 4. k: 1 »~ U _) "1 a . .m»-..- _â€"~e-,~â€" â€"' "‘ . v.----. -v'..“’1" 4’ .Tâ€"r. ,: -, . ”3.7.32“? . 4 .- - I - I n n' . -. ..‘ ~ ‘» .,4. limlt‘llll ‘, I1,» ‘4‘. I lu~ 4.. 'h u I: i I» b u ‘ h‘ "r‘ iqlâ€" p “ 13 same free of expense. Cu I e" . 7 , .. ._‘_V 1 u. - - I . - n . .. _-~_, . and send It With your photo- J 24/ n{.;/> HZ? : r. v t - 1 " “ - ‘..»’__/.‘\w ".7 «I ‘ \ -~_ ~ y?) »II t - f: : HIE n at once. also your subscripgios. 7630 C‘ L¢fi§fl§§f y’.€? . - DENTIS T 35:21 you can remit b Draft, limey'Order, Express hfgpey Order . . ,. . .. . lfivstalemmadI esaya e o ‘ NORTH AMERICAN HOME "A“... ‘t‘,. 1.. ‘ " ' " h ' Office over Fairweather 8.: Co’s Store, Op- 8 PUBLISHING CO" - km ' posite Post Office, 94 Kent St. Lindsay. ! ~ - . k Gas and Vitalized Air administered. - . m Talmudge. woesâ€"Any mysPaPIer PUbhcfi“,sn‘deeavn'kTs'm'Dgievii York City} ’ world Building! “8‘ Y0! Charges moderate. For Sample of our work see Editor of this paper. KNOWLSON BROS. """'â€"â€"â€"' REAL ESTATE NSURANGE. FINANCIAL AGENTS FIRE INSURANCE- The Aetna. Fire Insurance 00,, of Hart ford, Conn., incorporated 1819, losses paid saw-m in 71 years about $65,000,000, assets over ’ $10,000,000, absolutely the strongest Ameri- can Co, in existence. The North British and Mercantile incor porated 1809, paid up capital abt. $3,500,000 total assets $50,376,064. The N B M is . a $585 the largest and strongest Co, in existence. We also represent other Fire Companies (“‘5 of high standing, and can give safest se- Z,‘ ‘U 0 curlty for the .owest rates. 93,303, KN OWLSON BROS. LIFE INSURANCE- The Confederation Lite Association, of Toronto, ‘ssues Policies Incontestableafter three years. FREE from ALL RESTRICTIONS as to RESIDENCE. TRAVEL or OCCUPATION. The New Annuity Endownment Policy affords absolute protection against contin- , gency of early death, provides an INCOME 11 old age, and is a. good investment. ing Lots, Brick and Frame dwelling houses, ' Farm properties, and choice lots on Stur- ‘ geon ake, which can be had cheap for Z i M [4 N cash, or mortgage at a low rate of interest, I? H E W MONEY TO LOAN at a. low rate of interest. We have a. large list of valuable Build Rate 15 to 20 per cent lower than ”ordin- ary rates, Persons desiring to place their property it the market can have it advertised free KNOWLSON BROS. f AIL I publ: ST ed every ThurSday morning, and sent of charge and will be sold or exchanged by .' , S , REAL ESTATE, us at a small commission, KNOWLSON BROS. . 50 G E NT S PE R ANNUM. Rlepresent the Beaver Line of Steamships gying between Montreal and Liverpool, oats large and well equipped and cheap rates of passage. Represent the Norwich London Acci- dent Insurance Co. Capital $1,000,000. Rates extraordinarily low and security un- urpassed. [OFFICE WILIJAM-ST. NORTH OF KENT STREET. Lindsay, Nov. 19th, 1890.â€"45-1y. __.\ THE GREAT NIAGARA TUNNEL. It is Nearly Ready to be Tested and Pro- duce 100,000 Horse Power, “701k on the great tunnel is nearing com- pletion. The "head-houses” have been iful servant.” And the joys prepared for taken down, and, with much of the machinery, they will be conveyed to Wee- hawkcn and used there by the contractors who are to construct the Bergen tunnel. The excavations on the large inlet canal are practically completed, and the inlet masonry is laid sufficiently to permit of "step planks” being put in. The side-walls of the canal also are completed as far as in- tended for the delivery of water to produce 100,000 horse power. Of course this is llkely to be extended as soon as there is de- mand for increased horse power. There yet remains a. small section of earth and rock midway across the canal as a protection if the outside dam should give way and let the water rush in. Engineer Baumann of the Swiss firm who made the plans for the turbine wheels is in this country yet, and is busy arranging his plans for the location of the upper end of the penstock. As soon as these are receiv- ed, the work of making the connections to the wheel pits will be finished. Then most of the work at this point, viz., in the canal, on the inlets and connections to the wheel pits will be done. All that will remain to be done will be to make the connections from the wheel pits to the tunnel proper, anil water can then course through the tun- ne . For it must be understood that the tunnel is in three parts ; first, the canal, which conveys water from the Niagara River, to the wheel pits, just as an ordinary mill race carries water from above the dam to the mill wheels ; second, the wheel pits, which are perpendicular holes hundreds of feet deep, at the bottom of which are placed the Swiss turbines, made to revolve with tre- mendous velocity by the terrific fall of water upon them ; and, third, the tunnel proper, which is nothing more than a gigan- tic tail race, conveying the water to the river gorge below the cataract. The canal is so constructed that it can be extended at any time, and additional wheel pits may be put in as required. The “head-houses” above referred to are built over the mouths of the wheel pits, and will be replaced by iron manholes. All fears that the mouth of the tunnel would be left in an unsightly condition have been dissipated within the past few weeks since the workmen have begun build- ing the massive stone arch. Messrs. Rodgers Clements, who had the contract for excavating the tunnel, are now putting on the finishing touches at this point. The bottom of the tunnel is 10 feet below the level of the river, so a. dam was built across the mouth of the tunnel in the slope below the portal. Inside of the portal 3. tempor- ary dam has been constructed to keep the water from washing the workmen away while engaged on the masonry. This dam is five feet high and checks the flow from the surface that falls into the tunnel through the shafts. Here pumps are stationed that carry the water over the dam out into the river, and 20,000 gallons are pumped every hour. These are the drippings ; what must the full volume of the torrent be? Work on this great project has stimula- ted local capitalists to improvements upon . their property commensurate with the pro- gress of the city. The old hydraulic canal, which for years has furnished power for two large flour mills and several paper and pulp mills on the bank of the river below the falls, is being enlarged. When com- pleted it will furnish double the power now supplied. In anticipation of this two of the largest concerns have consolidated, and will erect a. mill of double their present unite‘d capacity. Many other changes have . been wrought in the village of falling water, due for the most part to the stimulus given the place by the work of preparation for the future development of our great water power. ' Two new hotels aroin process of erection; the city is to have another daily paper ; the big- ost bank has been enlarged, and there is Talk of forming another. The horse rail- road is a thing of the set, streets are be- ing graded, paved, an sewored, while real estate has takon a boom and prices have gone scurrying skywsrd. The whole as- pect of the place has changed from a quaint ._____.__._/ _â€"____-.â€"â€"_â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"-â€"___â€"â€".â€"â€"______.A_. l ““â€" ' ,. --'-_â€" best use you can intake of your spare moments will be to spend them with these safe and silent counsellors. Let industry, adaptability and cheerfulness characterize your work, and then somebody will say to you: “Well done, thou good and faith- you will be the feeling that you have tried your best, and that you have gotten that best of all things in returnâ€"a word of encouragement. The Latest Sales of Wives. In 1877 a. wife was sold for £40, and, what is more remarkable. the articles of sale were drawn up and si ned at a. solicitor’s office, the money pai and the phattel handed over with all the gravity of aw. In the course of a. county court case at Sheffield in May, 188], a man named Moore stated that he was living with the wife of one of his friends, and that he had pur~ chased her for a. quart of beer. This trans- action was brought under the notice of the Government by Jr. A. M. Sullivan, who re- quested the Home Secretary to take meas- ures for preventingsuch reprehensible trans- actions. This had no effect, evidently, for since that time many sales have been re- corded. During the hearing of a School Board case in the course of 1881, at Ripon, a woman informed the bench that she had been bought for 253., and had assumed the name of the purchaser. At Alfreton, in 1882, a. husband sold his rib for a glass of beer in a public house and the rib gladly deserted her legal lord. One cannot expect a. wife for less than twopence halfpenny. Two years after this a. bricklayer at Peas- holme Green, Yorkshire, sold his wife for ls. 6d., a “legal” document being drawn up to make the bargain binding on all sides. In the Globe of May 6, 1887, there ap- peared an account of a. well-to-do weaver, at Burnlcy, who was charged with having deserted his wife and three children. He admitted the soft impeachment at once, but urged that, inasmuch as he had sold the whole family to another man before the al- leged desertion, he be acquitted of all re- sponsibility for their maintenance. It was nothing to him whether their purchaser pro- vided for their wants; the law had better see to that. For himself he had duly re- ceived three half-pence, the amount of the purchase money, and there his interest in the affair began and ended. During 1889 a. paragraph went the round of the papers to the effect that a. manIcon- nected with a. religious body in a village in the midland counties had disposed of, his wife for the small sum of ls.â€"All the Year Round. The Conquests of Modern Science. Surely I have established my thesis that dirt is only matter in a. wrong place. Chemistry, like a good housewife, ec. no- mizes every scrap. The horse shoe nails dropped in the streets are carefully collect- ed, and reappear as swords and guns. The main ingredient of the ink with which I now write was probably once the broken hoop of an old beer barrel. The clippings of the travelling tinker are mixed with the parings of horses’ hoofs and the worst kinds of woollen rags, and these are worked up into an exquisite blue die, which graces the dress of courtly dames. The dregs of port wine, carefully decanted by the toper, are taken in the morning as a. seidlitz pow- der, to remove the effect of the debauch. he 063.1 of the streets and the wastings of coal gas reappear carefully preserved in the lady’s smelling bottle, or are used by her to flavor blanc manges for her friends. All this thrift of material is an imitation of the economy of nature which allows no waste. Everything has its destined place in the process of the universe, in which there is not a. blade of grass or even a. microbe too much, if we possessed the knowledge to apply them to their fitting purposes.â€" Lord Lyon Playfair, in North American Review. Dlnin g Cars. Dining cars are generally run at a. loss and are attached to trains simply as a. mat- ter of attraction, according to the Public country town, when over visitor was on I Opinion. A steward, f0“? 0001“, and five object of curiosity into a ustling, thrivin city, where every man has nought. stton , waiters are attached to each car. The food costs from $1,000 to $1,500 a month. It to mind his own busihoss. All of those I costs from $16,000 to $22.000arear to run changes have been made during tho past one of these cars, exclusweIof the wear and your, brought about by the building of the tear on the property Iand incidentals. In tunnel, of which as yet no practical test 1 some places, and particularly in the South, has b n made. Prominent among the im- rove cuts for next year will be the build- ing of dockage along the river and other- wise improving the harbor, so that lake craft can enter and discharge cagoes. This May Cheapon Electricity, Two French scientists havc recently disâ€" covered an entirely new property of Fara- day’s disk, and as a result may be an im- portant improvement in the dynamo. It will be remembered that Faraday discov- ered the principle of the dynamo when he attached one end of a. wire to the center of ’ a. copper disk revolving between the poles of a magnet and the other end ah the circumference, A current of electricity was thus produced on the wire, and this simple experiment resulted in the commer- cial dynamo. Instead of the F aday disk the French scientists employ t in plates of a. certain constitution not yet made public. These plates are composed, in the direction of their thickness, of a very magnetic and highly conducting metal,and are so placed that the lines of force of the field of the magnet are perpendicular to this direction of thickness. Thus, it is said, the flow of in- duction which proceeds from the north pole of the magnet is divided into several sheets of parallel lines, which are very close to- gether and which only traverse the magnetic portions of the bimetallic conductors. The discoverers of this property con- structed a. small machine employing this principle, and it was found that the avail- able energy of the machine increases at a rate which is practically proportional to the height of the conductors. The results achieved are remarkable, and are believed to indicate a. valuable disoovery of great commercial importance. â€" Philadelphia Record. Opportunities Will Come. Keep your eyes open for opportunities, and if you have any ability the time will come when you can display them. But do not worry, and fret, and fume over your work, do not believe that you were intend- ed for better things ; instead, make the best of the situation aud go ahead. Encoura e in yourself the habit of reading ; do not y from one book to another, but try to familiarize yourself with what is elevating and refining in literature. Gdod books are hhsheat f "ends that yogI canIIhsve, and the J. sleepers are also run at a loss. A sleeping car leaving New York for Chi- cago is supplied with 120 sheets, 120 pillow slips, and 120 towels. The wash- ing is done in different cities, and is given out in great quantities at the low rate of $1 per 1 0 pieces. An equipment of linen, which lasts a. year, is purchased in amounts of $50,000 worth at a. time. One company, for 700 cars uses every 30 days 2,400 dozen cakes of toilet soap, 1,200 dozen boxes of matches, 35 dozen hair brushes, 50 dozen Whisks, 60 dozen combs, and a. vast number of sponges and feather dusters. Porters receive from $30 to $50 dollars a. month. Wives of Literary Men. Dante was married to a. notorious scold, and when he was in exile he had no desire to see her, although she was the mother of his six children, says the Chicago Herald. Shakespeare lost the sympathies of the world by marrying Anne Hathaway, 3. wo- man eight years his senior, who was coarse and ignorant. Lord Bacon enjoyed but little domestic bliss and “loved not to be with his partner.” Milton was not great in the character of husband and father. We read of him that his first wife was disgusted with his gloomy house and soon ran away from him, and his daughters were left to grow up utterly neglected. Moliere was married to a. wife who made him miserable, and Rosseau lived a. most wretched life with his wife. Dryden “married discord in a. noble wife,” and Addison sold himself to a. cross-grained old countess, who made him pay dearly for all she gave him. Steele, Sterne, Churchill, Coleridge, Byron and Shelley, were all married unhap- pily, and Bulwer and Dickens have been known by all the world as indifferent hus- bands. Sir Walter Raleigh married a beautiful girl eighteen years his junior, and she ador- ed him with increasing ardor to the very last. Dr. Johnson’s wife was old enough to be his mother, but “he continued to be under the illusions of the wedding day until she died at the age of 64.” he being only 43. Shelley’s first marriage was unfortunate, but his second was a. model of happiness. [into the mansg A CURE FOR THE‘BLUES A woman from one of Canada’s most beautiful cities, living in a. home of elegance and refinement, as she tells me, writes : “T try to be cheerful and happy, but somehow or other I cannot overcome constant spells of the ‘blues.’ What can I do ‘2” Now almost every nature, however sprightly, sometimes will drop into a minor key ora subdued mood that, in common parlance, is recognized as “the blues.” There may be no adverse causes at work, but somehow the bells of the soul stop ring- ing, and you feel like sitting quiet, and you strike Off fifty per cent. from all your worldly and spiritual prospects. In such depressed state no one can afford to sit for an hour. First of all, my sister, when “the blues” seize you, get up and go out of doors. Fresh air, and the faces of cheerful men, and pleasant women, and frolicsome children, will, in fifteen minutes, kill mop- ing. The first moment your friend strikes the key-board of your soul it will ring music. A hen might as well try on popu- lous Broadway to hatch out a. feathery group as for a man to successfully brood over his ills in lively society. Do not go for relief among those who feel as badly as you do. Let not toothache or rheuma- tism and malaria. go to see toothache, rheumatism and malaria. On one block in Brooklyn live a doctor, an undertaker and aclergyman. That is not the row for a. nervous man to walk on, lest he should need all three. Throw back all the shutters of your soul, and let. the sunlight of genial faces shine in. Besides that, why should any woman sit with the blues? Shone upon by such stars as dot the Canadian sky, and breathed on by such air, and sung to by so many pleasant sounds, you ought not to be seen moping. Especially if light from the better world strikes its aurora. through your night-sky ought you to be cheerful. You can alford to have a rough luncheon by the way if it is soon to end amid the banqueters in white. Sailing toward such a. blessed port, let us not have our flag at half-mast. Leave to those who take too much wine “the gloomy raven tapping at the chamber door,” but as for you and I give us the robin-redbreast and the chaf- finch. Let some one with a. strong voice give out the long-metre doxology, and the whole world “praise God from whom all blessings fiow.-â€"Dr. Talmage.” The Catholics and the Public Schools. IThere ought to be no quarrel between the Catholic church in the United States and our common school system. There is a. misunderstanding ; but this is easily clear- ed up, for where both parties are equally earnest and sincere in the patriotic pur- pose which prompts them to educate and in the religious conviction that would have our youth train up in the knowledge of Christianity and the practice of its noblest virtues, it is impossible that all grounds of misapprehension should not disappear. American love of freedom, of freedom of conscience before and above all is too deep and too honest to wish to enforce a law, or to support a system, demonstrably hostile to the essentials of religious liberty. Our people have only to be shown that the law strikes at the dearest rights of the family, and confiscates to the profit of the state the most sacred and in- alienable prerogatives of the parent, to con- clude that such legislation can only be pro. ductive of evil, instead of promoting the public good. It is my convictions, therefore, that there is not in the United States a citizen, desirous at once of the progress of popular education, and of the spread of enlightened religious sentiment among the masses, who does not, in every essential re- spect, agree with the Catholic church about the requisites of early education in the home and in the school. Let an educational con- gress, representing every religious denomina- tion among us, meet during two or three years in succession and discuss the necessity of permeating education with the light and. warmth of religion. We should, ere the end of the third year’s friendly discussion, see our way towards a. satisfactory settle- ment of this controversyâ€"Mgr. O’Reilly, in North American Review. The Great Library of the United State]. When it is considered that the larglir existing public library. that of the Fre ovornmont at Paris, contains as yet bfi ,300,000 volumes, and that ample spam exists in the edifice now rising on Capitol Hill for storing more than twice that num- ber, it will be perceived that the wants of the future are well cared for. While near- ly every government edifice appears to haw been built only for a. generation and its uses have long overgrown its limits, this one, through the far-sighted liberality of Congress, will provide room for the nation’s books for nearly two centuries to come. The ultimate cost is limited to six millions of dollars, a sum somewhat less than half the cost of the Capitol or of the large building erected for the accommodation of the State, \Var, and Navy departments. The library building covers nearly the same space as each of these government buildings (about three acres), and is constructed of solid granite, with iron, brick, and marble interior. Its ample interior courts and numerous win- dows will render it the best-lighted and best-ventilated library of large proportions vet erectedâ€"A. R. Stafford in the N ovem- ber Forum. ._â€"-â€" Success Of the Woman Manager, The world of the managing person is dig vided into those who allow themselves to be managed and those who object. Generally! the managing person is a woman. \Vomen are the born managers of the world. Tb; woman who has this “executive ability”soog masters the affairs of her own partied“ household, and then, says the Boston Times, she looks abroad for fresh worlds to con, quer. She devotes herself to the businesaI with energy. To those of her neighbors and friends who will allow themselves to be managed she is untiringly attentive. She studies each case with ardor and persist. ency, arranging circumstances publicly, and privately, and giving adv1ce ny wholesale and retail. The woman With a talent for management is quite a boon to those weak creatures who cannot settle their own affairs and who are willing to take counsel and help from any outside par- ties willing to give it. It saves them trou- blesome and fatiguing thought. They are content to do the proper thing without con- troversy and are thankful for the instruc- tion. But the people who object to being managed are a. constant thorn in the Side of the busy manager. She marvels that m terious and short-sighted providence sho thave so blinded them to their own inter- ests. Their obstinacy and opposition to their own best good are maddening and um accountable There is something wrong. The world should have been divided only vidence has made some mistake. era and the managed. Pro- I -- ‘\\"‘W~,-

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