• •
•
*
•.
•
o
■V
- *
o
.*
«r
y
o
i
rstt'f arranged on th« shelf below • i
taatMMTUBb about the size of tiie shoe
trueb of human use; a Jar about the
——
size of • half barrel, containing the
latcwt tooth powder advertised in th-
street cars; a two gallon cut' glas»
OILBOON
BANDON
bottle of eau de cologne, and a five
pound box of violet face powder, to
gather with the creams and other
things supplied by the beauty shops
After "Bossy” has had her morning
It would certainly be worth going shower, had her teeth brushed, and per
miles to see a $500.090,000 Panama iiape been massaged with an electric vl
brator, she may then draw up to a neal
sanai.
little glass-covered table for the man!
France's increase In population is curing of her hoofs. It will next be In
Only 84.000 a year. Germany's is near order for somebody to Interest the cow»
ly a million a year.
in ■ brand of cud flavored ns In tlu
chewing gum of commerce.
Were he pinned down to it even an
■ntl-klsslng advocate might hare to ad
Of late years a wave of sympathy
mlt that he really likes it.
has swept over the world for those
whom we call "shut-ins”— men. women
“An Ohio minister says klssfs are and children who are forced by illness
Intoxicating as much as liquor.” All or by accident to lead their lives cut
tn favor of the motion say "aye.”
off from the outside world. Societies
and warm-hearted philanthropists have
If you listen intently, you can hear vied with one another to bring sunshine
the chortles of the goat which did not Into the crippled lives. Meantime thou
participate in the Masonic initiation of sands of [versons delllierately choose
Mr. Taft
employments which, almost as com
Andrew Carnegie knows how to get pletely as physical disability, separate
a lot of fun out of a tariff discussion, them from the great Influences of na
since he Is in a position where a little ture. The factory and the shop, and
even the kitchen, shut In the wonmn
revision can’t hurt him.
and hide front her the glory of sky and
mountain and meadow. The grim law
One by one, the old rivermen are of habit accustoms her to her loss; and
passing "over the river.” If they could at last she makes no effort to enlarge
only stay to see the new and regen her vision. When occasionally some
erated Mississippi a few years hen«‘e.
woman rises In rebellion and throws off
the yoke, we regard her as eccentric or
Society women are taking up the
foolish. A woman of thirty, who had
cause of woman suffrage. If woman gained by twelve years of hard toil a
suffrage Is to take the place of after responsible and lucrative position In a
noon teas everybody ought to be for It. great paper mill, gave up her place,
with its generous salary, and put all
If Andrew Carnegie is still fearful
her small savings Into a little farm by
of the disgrace of dying rich let him
■the side of a beautiful bike in Maine.
build a “Carnegie boulevard” across the
She was reproached by her friends for
country from the Atlantic to the Pa Improvidence and threatened with tiie
cific.
tedium of the long winters and the
Perhaps you have heard why King hard work of the short summers. She
Alfonso didn’t go up In an airship? llis replied. “You forget what big pay I
wife told him not to do it. Married am going to get.” “Big pay?” queried
kings haven’t anything on the average her astonished friend. "Yes, a dollar
a day In the pleasure of setting foot
husband.
on the ground Instead of on board
It Is suspected that the anger of the floors, two dollars a day In satisfaction
Congressmen who have been robbed of by looking at the sky. and my board
their right to name fourth-class post and clothes out of the farm by way of
masters is designed mainly for home chickens and pigs and vegetables.” The
Anal misery of the "shut-in” comes
consumption.
when she loses the desire to get out.
The hen that laid 3,<150 eggs is dead By every possible device let her keep
and burled in a rosewood coffin, She her love for the open. Fed on ten min
made the goose that laid the golden utes a day of unrestricted vision, It
egg look like a piker that got into will not die. She who grasps and
hoards the picture of sunset or field of
poetry under false pretenses.
daisies or evening star need never be
Bulgaria's tax of $2 a year on bache alone. At her call the vision will
flash upon that Inward eye
lors can make no practical difference.
Which Is the bliss of solitude,
Any man who would marry In order to
save that sum is too poor a financier and in an Instant, spite of four walls,
she Is free.
to be worth while as a husband.
■nr
BINOON RECORDER !
China has presented to the Congres
sional library the Chinese encyclopedia
of 6,000 volumes. Senators and rep
resentatives are thus provided with a
little light reading to refresh them be
tween periods of arduous labor.
The United States has been and
■till Is very fortunate In her relations
with China. We have some advan-
tage over other nations In that we
manifested our national friendship be-
fore China showed such marked signs
of her awakening and promise of rapid
modernization.
Thus our national
friendship Is not tainted with glaring
self-interest. This good will of the
Chinese nation Is worth retaining and
fortifying. The Boxer uprising and the
boycott were hysterical Incidents, and
■ re past. They never represented tiie
nationality of China. In taking the
lead In prompt recognition of China's
forward effort as the forecast of a ma
terial greatness, the United States
might achieve a sentimental foundation
for a very practical foothold In China.
Our grandfathers owed much to the
district school, but in many parts of
the country the rural school has fallen
behind the liest standards. Such Is the
case in Connecticut, according to the
report of a special committee, which
finds many of the buildings In bad con
dition and the teaching of poor quality.
On the other hand In some parts of
the country the union school which
takes all the children from a wide ra
dius is a model Institution. It will be
a great pity If the states do not keep
up the standards of education in the
thinly settled districts; for If the peo-
pie find that their children are not get-
ting the best, they will make any sac-
riflce to move to the city, and the de
population of the farming sections
which has been going on In Eastern
states will be hastened in spite of ef
forts in other directions to "improve
the conditions of country life."
Since the higher education of the
cow has t»een taken up and our unlver
titles have been turning out a superior
quality of lowing klne, one Is not sur
prised to hear that the up-to-date queen
of thd cattle barn and her college bred
companions should be made the objects
of a fastidious solicitude undreamed of
in the days of yore. A member of the
Covington. Ky.. tw>ard of health has
■prong Into fame through a demand
that cows have their teeth brushed
with regularity, Health experts in
other cities have treated the demand
lightly, professing not to see how the
innovation would tend to purify the
milk supply. If the scheme ever d'»es
take hold, however, the dairymaid of
romance Is likely to become confused
with the servitor who. assists In the
preparation of the aristocratic cow's
toilet. I» w.lli not be difficult to picture
the time when eVerc fashionable •■«>*
wW lute • UUir-r lh it»
ir, and
GREAT WEALTH AND HAPPINESS.
By Andrew Carnegie.
Beyond a conqietence for old age,
which ueed not be great and may
be very small, wealth lessens rattier
than increases human happiness.
Millionaires who laugh are rare
Ths deplorable family quarrels
which so often afflict the rich gen
erally have their rise in sordid dlf
ferences about money. The most
miserable of men as 'Old ago ap
proaches are those who have made
money getting their god; like files
on the wheel, these unfortunates
fondly believed they were really
ANDREW CABNEOTB.
driving It. only to find when tired
and craving rest that it Is Impossible for them to gel
off, and they are lost—plenty to retire upon but nothing
to retire to, and so they end as they began, striving to
add to their useless hoards, passing into nothingness,
leaving their money behind for heirs to quarrel over.
Gigantic fortunes, in the nature of things must be
fewer and harder to build up lu the future than In the
past, Most great enterprises are now tn the corporate
form. The writer knows but one man now in active bust
ness who Is likely to have an exceptionally large estate,
and the foundation of that was laid more than half a
century ago by the purchase of timber lands which have
Increased enormously In value. Meanwhile, our lmmedl
ate duty Is to distribute surplus wealth to the best of
our abilities In such forms as we believe best calculated
to Improve existing conditions. We must all learn the
great truth that only competence Is desirable, almost nec
essary, wealth non essential, and when It does come It is
only a sacred trust to be administered only for the gen
eral good
VACCINATION FOR TYPHOID.
By Dr. J. C. Torrey.
Typhoid fever Is one of these distinctively
human Infectious diseases for which pre
ventive vaccinations huve been attempted.
The results are of general Interest because
of tbo widespread prevalence of this fever,
l’felffer ami Kolle reported In 189(1 the [»he
nomena following the Injection Into man of
the bacillus typhosus killed by heat. Tlielr
most important observation was that these in
jections imparted to the blood of human beings specific
baeterla-killing properties. Just as they protected guinea
pigs against fatal »loses of the bacillus
Taking advantage of the almost certain epidemics of
typhoid fever in military camps. Sir E. A. Wright In
stituted nn extensive test of anti-typhoid vaccine among
the British soldiers in the Boer war. The vaccine con
■isted of cultures of the typhoid germ grown In broth
for several weeks and then sterilized by heat and an
A
Plucky
Woman.
Japan has thtrty-two time piece fac
tories, which turn out annually goods
valued at nearly $800,000, the latest
figures being 209,792 standing clocks,
441,755 hanging clocks and 25.3(10
watches.
I’rof. Louis Agassiz, many years ago,
first announced that the lee sheet, or
j glacial flow, at the northwest of Maine
I could not have been less than a mile
I deep; while later geologists have con
firmed bls statement, adding the more
recent conclusion that the Ice was of
that thickness at least over the larger
part of New England.
From calculations made by Prof. 11.
C. Wilson, which are quoted in Nature,
there seems reason to suppose that the
conditions under which Halley's comet
will return to us in 1910 will l»e much
the same as those under which It a|>-
peared In lOfki. It was then one of
the grandest objects which ever ap
peared In the heavens, and made a tre
mendous Impression upon the medieval
world.
A great deal of attention has recent
ly been given to the cultivation of rub-
her. on account of the continually In
creasing demand for it. I’rof. Francis
E. Lloyd points out that "the lnelvt
able struggle of man with nature" has
already manifested Itself tn this new
field. Already a considerable number
of parasitic enemies have been discov
ered, “whose energies appear to be
largely concentrated upon cultivated
rubtier trees.” It Is another problem
for science to deal with.
The only person who resisted the
Yellowstone stage robber at the recent
hold-up was a woman and when he
asked her to hand over a ring she
smilingly answered. "Not on your life.”
The growing industry of extracting
Not a single man had her courage,
which goes to prove that women are aluminum has stimulated the search
a little braver than men at such times. for water power In the British Isles,
be»-ause the extraction of aluminum is
Trying to Prove It.
so expensive that only low cost power
“Do you know they'll carry hogs on can be economically employed. In this
this road cheaper than they will pas rea[»eet Scotland, with Its mountains. Is
sengers?" said the red faced man In the coming to the front. The water power
smoker.
plant at the falls of Foyers, In Scot
"Is that so?” replied his neighbor, land, has hitherto been the largest in
who was t»eing crowded in his seat; Great Britain; but now a still larger
“how much did you pay?”—Yonkers plant, at Kinlochleven, utilizing the
Statesman.
rainfall over a tract of 55 square miles,
la about to be put Into operation for
One Thing Ke Could lio.
the production of aluminum. Its nine
Green—I'm looking for a plumber t»,
hydraulic turbines, each of 8.200 brake
do some work for me. Do you hapiwn
horse power, are the largest water
to know of one that does satisfactory
wheels In the British Isles.
work?
Prof. Edward L. Nichols, In his ad
Brown—I know of one that I can
guarantee to till the bill; but I won't dress as retiring [»resident of the Amer
know how satisfactory his work will ican Association for the Advancement
of Science, used these suggestive sen
t>e.
tences: “With the development of the
The Time and the Offea.e.
doctrine of energy has come the con
“Oh. ma; teacher whlpiied Tommy viction of an end of the world. Inevita
Crow to-day!”
ble. as the death of the Individual Is
“What for?”
Inevitable. In neither case, however,
“For five minutes."—Cleveland Plafb Is longevity to be regarded as neces
Dealer.
sarlly beyond human control.” Profes
We suppose there never was a mar-' sor Nichols then went on to say that
rival u ornan wlip did not say’ to some- biologists are beginning to Intimate the
■ ue. at ednie time, that if R wasil't for poasihtllty. remote but tlilnlwble, of •]
considerable exteiisiut» of th® tecaz of
•Us • Itk •ti er», abe «»uld leave blur.
• •
.
•
-
antiseptic. Thousands of soldiers were treated with
standardized amounts of this vaccine As to whether
the results Justified the trouble and disagreeable effects
of the treatment there 1* great diversity of opinion.
Tiie statistics of the British war office were considered
unfavorable, and the prophylactic Inoculations have been
officially discontinued. Wright has claimed that ths
general results were favorable, and In tills opinion ho
Is supported by the majority of the medical men who
followed the experiments.
Metschnikoff lias placed the great weight of his Judg
ment in favor of the utility of a continued trial of the
prophylactic. According to Wright, the most exact data
are those in regard to the army men Isolated at the
siege of Ladysmith, and here there were only one-eighth
as many cases among the vaccinated as among the un
vaccinated, with the mortality very much lower in the
former. Wright has found that especially good protec
tion is afforded by two successive vaccinal ions. He now
Injects subcutaneously in the first dose about 1,000,000
dead typhoid bacilli, and in the second, given approxi-
mately a week later, 2,000,000.—Harper's.
GRAVE DANGER OF THE T00-F0ND MOTHER.
By Edith Shackleton.
When a woman declares: "1 am complete
ly bound up In my children,” or, “I have no
Interests outside my home,” a chorus of com
mendation of these callous confessions arises.
This overdeveloped maternal Instinct, with
Its almost Invariable accompaniment of snob
bishness. Is just as dangerous to the nation's
welfare as the overdeveloped self preservative
Instinct that impels men of the Rockefeller
type to seize and hold everything that happens to be
knocking around, and there la no place for either of
them In the true democracy.
The havoc that can be wrought by a single specimen
of the fond mother Is instanced in history, and has in
spired nt least one great novel. All the misery and
tragedy in "Trilby" came through a fond mother of the
malignant type. This specimen said she wns acting for
the good of her child. To make this statement is one of
the creature’s habits, though she really has not the
faintest notion of what really is the "good of her child.”
The appioved methods of dealing with the fond moth
er nuisance are educational rather than destructive. It
Is possible that none Is past redemption. Even an ac
tive one may be led into ways of grace by being set to
consider her offspring. Let her carefully note their re
semblance to her husband's sisters (whom she possibly
loathes) or to her own great-uncle, who disgraced ths
family a generation ago. Let her consider how much of
them resembles no one else at all. Then she will begin
to realize how small a share Is her own; that her child
Is a member of the human family; not a gift, but a se-
rlous charge. When old English was new, by the way,
the word "fond” meant foolish.
=3
lie Saw
The manager of a manufactory was
suddenly called away to New York,
leaving negotiations for the sale of a
large quantity of merchandise uncom
pleted.
After his departure the office boy,
anxious to witness a big baseball
game, asked the under manager for a
half holiday, but was refused.
In the meantime an offer was re
ceived for the merchandise referred to
above, which the under manager did
not feel Justified In accepting without
the authority of his chief, to whom he
dispatched a telegram, worded :
“Five hundred dollars offered; shall I
accept?”
The boy was deputed to take the
message to the nearest telegraph office,
but before handing it over the counter
added a few words to it on ills own ac
count, with the result that when It
reached New York It read as follows:
“Five hundred dollars offered; shall
I accept, and can William have the
afternoon off?”
In due time the under manager was
much amazed to receive the following
reply:
"Accept $500, and give William after
noon off.”
When all the facts were subsequent
ly revealed the boy was reprimanded
for his audacity, but the manager could
not help but Inwardly admire bis en-
terprlse.
•
o
BY •
•THE
•
• •
bodily life, and that It Is equally con
ceivable that the human race may so
modify and control conditions as great
ly to prolong Its career. The means to
this latter end, he indicated, are the
checking of wastefulness affecting ani
mals. the soil, the forests and the
streams; the solution of the problem
presented by the gradual exhaustion of
nature’s supplies of coal and petroleum,
and the search for ways to utilize, In
the form of mechanical energy, the
radiation of the sun.
Heavy
How
1«
a
Pound.
The favorite question with the
school committeemen of olden time
was, we are told, “What la the
heavier, a [tound of feathers or a
pound of lead?” The first rash an
swer used almost always to be, "A
pound of lead.” Then, of course, from
the older pupils would come the re
ply, “Both alike.”
If this question were asked to-day
the old-time querist might receive a
decided surprise, for the pound of
feathers could easily be [»roved to be
the heavier. A single ex[»erlment Is
all the evidence needed.
With any accurate scales weigh out
a pound of lead, using ordinary shot
for convenience. Pour the shot Into
one of the pans of a balance. For the
feathers, a light muslin bag will be
needed, and care must be taken that
feathers and bag together do not weigh
more than a pound. When the bag
of feathers Is put into the other pan
of the balance, the beam will, after
a few oscillations, come to rest exact-
ly level.
So far the verdict "Both alike"
seems to be proved. But place the
Italance on the receiver of an air
pump, with lead and feathers undis
turbed. Cover the whole with tiie
glass bell jar, ami exhaust the air.
Slowly the feathers sink, and the lead
kicks the beam. The pound of feath
ers Is heavier than the pound of lead.
The truth Is that what we call a
pound was not such In fact; for the
atmosphere
buoys
up
exerythlng
within it in proportion to the bulk of
the object and the feathers, being of
greater bulk than the lead, are sup-
ported by the air to a considerably
Re-
greater extent than the lead.
moved from this supporting medium,
their true weight is made evident.
FLOATING SLUM OF CANTON.
Where the Poor nt ■ Great Chinese
City Live.
Stand beside the Imperial custom
house at Canton and let the eye range
down the river toward Hong Kong. As
far as the sight can reach 11s boats,
boats and again boats There are no
ordinary craft, mere vessels of trans
port plying hither
and thither,
but the countless homes of myriad
Chinese, In which millions have
been born. have lived and died.
They are the dwellings of the
very poor, who live In them practical
ly free from rent, taxes and the other
burdens of 'the ordinary citizen.
Ihelatikia (which means boat dwell-|
era), as the denizens of these floating
houses are called, form a sort of cast«
apart from the rest of the Cantonese.
The shore dwellers regard them as be
longing to a lower social order, and
Indeed they have many customs pecu
liar to themselves which mark them as
a sejierate community. How the swarm
ing masses of them contrive to support
existence is a mystery, but their chief
mode of employment Is in carrying mer
chandlse and passengers from place to
|>lace. In some cases the daughters of
the family go ashore to work In fac
torles. as do the girls of other conn
tries; but the year's earnings of a Chi
nese factory girl would warce suffice to
buy a single liat for her Western sis
ter. Of course as against this low rate
of [>ay the standard of living Is corre
spondingly different.
The houses which make up these vast
floating slums are of all sizes, Homi
are but 15 feet long. From t hese
cramped dimensions, however, t hey
range up to a length of 50 or 00 feet
A boat large enough to ai'commodate a
family of moderate size can l>e obtained
for 120, and since the anchorage is free
It is obvious that the Tankla effect
many savings Impossible to the shore
dweller.—-lady's Realm.
Small Buy'« Pathetic Wimh.
He is a poor little neglected boy
whose mamma is so busy with moth
ers' meetings and club conventions
and such Important matters that she
really hasn’t time to attend to her
children, says the New York Times
This little boy was entertaining a cas
ual caller while his mother was up
stairs putting the finishing touches to
her toilet. Said the little boy, w hose
own toilet was sadly In need of at ten-
tlon:
“What does e. t. c. mean?”
“E. t. c.?" asked the caller.
"Yes,” said the little boy. "It's a sort
of a word. It's in a book I was read-
Ing.”
“Oh,” said the caller. "Etc. Is an
abbreviation. It Is Ijitln. It stands
for et cetera.”
The little boy looko»l puzzled. “I'm
not In Latin yet." he said.
“Et cetera.” explained the caller,
means well, It means ‘and so on.'”
Tiie little boy was thoughtful for a
moment, and then he said;
"I wish my mamma could find tfm«
to et cetera the buttons on my pants!"
And taking In his disheveled appear
ance, the visitor murmured. "Amen.”
Policeman (to loiterer!—Now, then,
what are you doing here? Loiterer-
Well what are you a doing here? I’o
I Iceman—Can’t you see? I’m doing my
duty. T/dterer—An' can't you see I'm
a matin’ the duty for you to do?
Philadelphia Inquirer.
A girl should be given an allow
ance every week, if It Is not mor»'
than 60 cents It will tesch. her how
to handle the great sums entrusted to
her care when she marrleA.
' .
Don't stay up all night because
can't learn it all tn one day.
xX?
Fool—I woke up last night with ■
start. I dreamed that my watch was
gone. Drool—Well, was ft? Fool—No»
but It was going.
An English lecturer on chemistry
said, “One drop of poison placed on
the tongue of a cat Is sufficient to kill
the strongest man.”
“And does your husband still think
you the an angel?” "Oh. yes! At least
he seems to think I don’t need any new
clothes.”—Plck-Me Up.
K nicker—Wouldn't you like to wake
up and And yourself famous? Bocke«
—I’d rather be so famous I wouldn't
have to wake up.-—New York Bun.
Tom—What was that sentence ths
giolr re[>eated so often during the lib
Sny? Ijiura—As near as I could maks
out It was "We are h 11 miserable sing
ers."
Clara—That man who just passed
was an old flame of mine. Kate—In
deed! What happened between youl
Clara—Oh, he flared up one day and
went out.
“A fool and his money are soon
parted,” quoted the pessimist •'Yee,*
rejoined the optimist, “but It’s worth
while being a fool to have the money
to part with.”
Ixvafer the First—I thought this yei
unemployed fund was for charity,
Loafer the Second—So It is, Isn’t ltl
Ixiafer the First—It ain’t. It means
work.—The Sketch.
"I can not tell a lie,” declared ths
eminent magnate. "You don't have to,”
nrged his eminent counsel. “Just say
that your mind Is a blank on that sub
ject.”—Louisville Courier Journal.
“What are the names of that young
couple next door?” "We won't be abls
to And out for several weeks. They've
Just been married, and he calls hei
Birdie and she calls him Pettie.”
Suburbanite (to visitor)—Oh, how
are you? Come right In. Don't mind
the dog. Visitor—But won’t he bltel
Suburbanite—That’s just what I want
to see. I only bought that watch dog
this morning.
“So you have named your little girl
•Investlgatbrn?......... Yes.” "Isn't that ■
queer name?” “Well, we read every
day of some rbh man courting Invests
gatlon and we shall want our daughtei
to marry well.”
The Artist's Wife (In a whisper)—
There's someone knocking. Jack. Shall
I open the door? The Artist—No; It’s
Jabber's knock. It's a special kno<4t 1
gave him, so I wouldn’t let him In by
mistake.—Life.
“All writers are not Impractical, ata
they?” “Oh. no. One man will writ« 1
joke and sell it for fifty cents. AnotB
er will write a comic o[>era around ■
and draw $20,000 In royalties."— Loui>
ville Courier-Journal.
O'Brien—Oh, but me daughter’s ths
shmart girl. She set two mln fightin!
for her hand. Landers—And she mar
ried the winner? O’Brien- Begorry.
no I She married the one she could
lick sislest.—Boston Transcript.
"Give woman the credit she de
serves." the suffragette cried, “and
where would man be?" "If she got all
tbs credit she wanted, he’d be In ths
poorhouse.” sneered a coarse person to
ths rear of the hall.—Stray Storlss.
“Pa, will you please tell me what 4
financial genius la?" “A financial f*
nlus, my child, Is a man who can spend
money that he has never had, and
which the people who think they are
get’lzig it will never
CUkMfi
>l4c\-td Hera.L
•
•
•
o
o
O
o
o o
o
•V.
»
•
«
o
»» «.«•■ «• ■*••• ■ •*«•4
GSurl ••
th« Sr«44t«e.M
"The son of a wealthy old friend «.4
mine, being stage struck. Joined with
a 19-20-30 opera company. I met bins
loafing and strutting about a hotel la
Duluth, Minn ," said the veteran actor
to a representative of the New York
Telegraph.
" 'Come over to tiie opera house and
tee the show,' said he.
“I went, but 1 saw no signs of this
young man on the stage, nor was his
name on the program, Afterward I
met him in the lobby of the hotel.
" 'I did not recognise any of the
characters as you,’ I remarked, What
part are you playing?’
” ‘Why, I am playing the part of
Carlos, the Fiddler,' said he.
“ ‘There was no such part.’
“ ‘Oh. yes there was. Didn't you
notice how they talked about him? In
the first act. In order to get the chorus
off stage, didn't the soubrette put
her hands over her eyes, look off 1»
4 E. and say: “Oh. girls, Carlos the
Fiddler Is going to have a dance on
the g reen » ; ; let us hasten or we will
inlss it?” Then burst Into song and
skip off? You bet they did.
“ ‘Then again, In the second act,
when the bell Is tolled without, don't
the prlma donna any:
"Hark that
bell! That bell can stand an awful
lot harking, for who is pulling ths
rope but Carlos the Fiddler?”
“ That is true, young man, but they
only talk about you. You do not show
yourself on the stage during the whole
performance.'
“‘I am aware of that, but you must
remember I am as yet a raw recruit,
still I feel I am on my way to fame
and glory, though the path may be
strewn with thorns.’
“Oh, If the hope and optimism of
youth could be with us in our later
years,” sighed the veteran actor.
•
J
<1
had an absent f a * v .
••
•
•
•
..
•
•
•
•
*.
•
•*
• • •
•
•
f •
e •
*.