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About Dakota County herald. (Dakota City, Neb.) 1891-1965 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 11, 1915)
DAKOTA COUNTY HERALD; DAKOTA CITY, NEBRASKA. j !, " m IIS is. 4f. 4 H fcV l m I. T-. t w GETTING NATHANIEL (Copyright, 1915, by tho McCluro Ncwspapor Syndicate.) EXPERTS AND SPECIALISTS. Vocations aro divided Into four Great divisions; mechanics, In the practlco of which ono works by his hands; business, covering clerical workorB, buyers and sellers; tho pro fessions, Including law, medicine, teaching, preaching, etc., and special ists or experts. It Is of tho last named that I will speak. Tho so-called specialist Is ono who Is expert In somo lino, whether In me chanics, in a department of science, or in tho manipulation of cortaln parts of business-doing. Tho majority of specialists are, how over, expert in a department of manu facture, liko expert engineers, expert electricians, etc. Tho largo incomes received by this class of workers have been particular ly attractive, and thousands of young men train themselves In this direction and enter technical schools with this end In view. "s I would not dlscourago ambition. I would not advlso a young man to set too slow a pace or to placo his goal only a short dlstanco ahead, but 1 would caution him against being too optimistic and warn him not to fall , under tho 6poll of too great an ambi tion. Comparatively few men ever attain etfpertness in anything. Because they aro ordinary they remain ordinary. By study, experiences and persoverance, they aro ablo to obtain good Incomes, but few of them over reach tho top of tho mountain of fame. To succeed morn than nominally as a specialist or expert ono must have natural aptitude for his calling. Ho must have a talent which is born in him, to bo doveloped by long and strenuous study. Then, oven if ho becomes an expert, it may bo difficult for him to attain a position common surato with his ability, for tho de mand Is limited. Tho technical schools aro turning out proficient workers at almost lncu bator speed. They aro flooding tho market. Their graduates are reason ably sure of positions; but, as there aro so many good men In this depart ment of work, it is obvious that com petition and over-supply must Inter fere with tho rapid progress of any " except those who possess unusual ability. In tho old days, when few enjoyed a liberal education, tho highly school trained man was marked for promo tion; and, because ho had few com petitors, ho was pretty sure of obtain ing a commanding position. Today jythero aro thousands of good men on tho market, many of them ablo to as sume responsibility. Because of com petition, because of so great a supply of experts, oven tho well-trained man of more than ordinary capacity may find it difficult to attain tho height of his ambition. Nothing which I havo said in this ar ticle should bo construed by tho reader as direct discouragement. Tho ambi tious man, oven if ho has only or dinary capacity, can, If ho will, meet competition and win, and ho of great ability can surmount every obstacle and reach tho goal of his ambition, provided, of courro. ho does not allow himself to depend too much upon his ability and does not refuse properly to school and otherwise ti.-ln himself to meet world-wide competition. A largo proportion of failures are down, not because of lack of ability, but because they aro unwilling to make proper effort to train themselves to assumo responsibility. I am presenting a typographical pic ture of fact, words of caution as well as those of encouragement. As Presi dent Cleveland said, "Wo aro confront ed by n condition, not a theory." LETTING UP. Business has littlo heart or consid eration. It does not play favorites. It recognizes largely that which pertains to Itself alone. As a young business man or as an employee, you aro stand ing at the crossroads, ono tho road of business, tho other tho path of your own individual life and rights. You cannot neglect ono without injuring tho other. Each has Its placo, and success never comes to tho man who does not recognize tho importance of both. Tho right kind of accomplish ment, however, that which counts in tho long run, which makes you a bet ter man and a better citizen, does not como from too closo adherenco to tho road of business or from overdovotlon to your own personal Inclinations. Success doponds upon a proper rec ognition of both, upon a compromise DAY OF FORTRESS PASSED Modern Guis ana Mines Have Com bined to Render Obsolete Struc tures Considered Impregnable. It will contlnuo to bo physically pos sible, no doubt, to build a fort so i -ong that no shell could penetrate It, whether fired directly at high an gles or to fall upon it vertically from tho clouds. It would require raere'y to calculate tho force of tho oxploslvos and tho reslst:.rco of steel and con crete, and mako tho steel and con crete thick enough. But it may havo ceasod to bo worth while. A ton would still bo vulnerablo from below ground. Its foundation could not bo laid bo deep that an enemy might not drivo a tunnel under it, and then it would bo necessary only to put enough high explosive there to blow !ho fort away. So, perhaps, in tho future military strategy will adjust Itself to the Idea that fortifications cannot bo permanent, whereforo they bad better bo oven moro Impermanent, serving only a temporary bulwark against an incoming enemy. Tho moBt rigid, the A START By C. FOWLER, Jr, between too strcnuouB business and too great a willingness to do as you plcaso Irrespective of your duty. I would not glvo much for tho man who cannot enjoy a ball gamo, or for ono who sticks to his desk as though ho wero glued to his office chair. No man does his best If ho devotes his energy to ono thing without change or diversion. A friendly game of golf will help tho astronomer tc dlscovor stars. A day or a halt-da In tho country will make it easier fot tho business man to flnanco a difficult proposition. Tho ovcr-tlrod tcachoi will benefit neither hlmsolf nor hit pupils If ho spends all of his off-Unit indoors among his books, forgetting that the application of education can not llvo in devitalized air. Tho timo to let up is when yout work does not como easy to you, when you dread It, not bocauso you aro lazy, not because tho ball field is acting as a magnot, when you aro so tired thai you havo to drag through what you do and forco yourself to accomplish ment. Then diversion Is as necessary to you as air Is to tho lungs. Without it you will suffocate or lose so much of your vitality that you cannot easily return to tho firing lino of busi ness. Often I hoar a young man say, "1 can't attend to my duties If I think of anything else," or "if I do anything else." Ho is wrong. Ho is deluding himself. Ho Is robbing himself of the right of existence. Tho men who mako tho most of thcmsolves, who are ablo to handlo great enterprises, who benefit the world by their discoveries and their oxpertness in science, work when they work, and work hard; but they have brains enough to Icnow how to rest how to obtain a change, oven by forco, and they rest as hard as they work, making a business of it, realizing that no machine, human or otherwise, can keep constantly turning In ono direc tion without too great a Btraln on the bearings and tho danger of accident. To get up, learn to let up. DESCRIPTION OF OLD BOSTON Interesting Old-Time Writer Well Pic tured Street That Was a Feature of the City. There is a description of Franklin placo in Jacob Abbott's "Miircp Paul in Boston," which waB first published, wo believe, in 1853. Marco and Mr Forester while sojourning in Boston boarded in Franklin street. "Franklin place Is a continuation of Franklin street. In Franklin place tho lino ol houses is straight upon one side, and curved, like a crescent, on tho other. This makes tho space between the houses very wide, much wider than is necessary for a street. They have ac cordingly inclosed a part of this space and planted trees and shrubbery in It The inclosure is long and narrow, and extends up and down tho place in the mlddlo of it, and has a paved street on each side between tho inclosure and tho houses. The inclosuro is sur rounded by a sort of fence or paling, and it presents a very agreeable appear, ance as seen from the windows of the surrounding houses; and, in fact, it makes Franklin placo, In tho summer season, ono of tho most alluring streets In Boston to the eyes of a stran ger." It was under the shrubbery of this inclosuro that Marco hid the fishing pole ho bought when ho should have' bought a llageolet. Do boys today read of Marco's adventures In New York, on the Erlo canal. In Maine. In Ver mont and at the Springfield armory? They should, and not only for the "elements of a salutary moral inllu enco" that tho author "endeavored to infuso" Into his narrative. Boston Clobe. Inopportune. "Is It true that a sense of humor helps to smooth one's path through life?" "Not if it's an exaggerated sense of humor," roplled tho melancholy per son. "Do you seo a slight discolora tion under my right eyo?" "Yes." "It's nearly gono now. About a week ago 1 laughed at a man who dropped a qunr of whisky on tha pavement" Safe Bet. A Now Jersey town Is conducting a contest to find Its homeliest man. Without knowing anything about its citizens we'll bet It's tho town beauty doctor. Detroit Free Press. most irreducible thing so far discov ered in this war Is a trench filled with soldiers, supported by artillery and machlno guns. That protection la what has saved tho great fortress at Verdun in Franco Tho caso between coast dofensea and warships Is very different. Thoro tho offensive has not overtaken tho defensive". This has been proved In tho Dardanelles. Tho medernest war ships, carrying tho largest guns affoat, failod to ro co land defenses somo of wHch could hardly bo called up to date, much less modern. Tho tiro from warships must bo direct. Worth Knowing. Every housekeeper knows that in a small housohold whero only one or two servants aro kopt, several guesta over Sunday meat, a great deal of work manual labor for tho domestics and bead work and responsibility for tho hostess. If things aro to go smoothly and hospitality Is to bo per fectly expressed somebody has got to do a deal of thinking and pruparlng beforehand nnd this somebody Is, nat urally, the housekeeper and tius'.ess. , 'Mlong the 1 0 KH WALL UA5 1 Mouth of THE quaint, delightful coast coun try of Cornwall, a favored hnunt of poaco and qulotnoBS, yet whero somo of tho most im portant English naval stations aro now busy, is descrlbod for tho Na tional Geographic society by Florence Craig Albrecht. At points along this coast, England holds concentrated great battle fleets. Hero, west of Lands End, aro tho Scllly islands, and, boyond Cornwall, further up tho chan nel, Hos Plymouth, military harbor and groat naval baso. Tho charm of this old-fashioned, plcturcsquo laud of fisher folk and peasants Is told by Mrs. Albrecht, who explored Its coast boforo war clouds recalled a martial stir to Cornwall, for tho society In tha following bulletin: "Hero aro rock and headland and cliff, now green, now golden with gorse, now bare and rugged; inlet bay and harbor, with hero and thcro an Isolated house, a tiny vlllago, a pre tentious town, a great port. An un friendly coast? Yes, with heavy seas and winds, with thick sea-fogs a dan gerous one; rocks ever ready to tear holes In tho stoutest vcsboI, currents over ready to drivo them on. But a picturesque coast; a wonderfully beau tiful coast, both upon summer days and in winter storms; a coast with many harbors, nono too easy of en trance by reason of rocks and tides, and many impossiblo for any but the smallest craft." All Have Splendid Memories. Thero aro splendid memories re maining to all of theso ports, tho wri ter says, for too many fleets have sailed up and down tho channel since history began not to havo visited all theso places with tho taBk of making history. Fishing fleets havo kopt tho foreground of the picturo through lat ter years, but signs of war prepara tion have never been absent from Cornwall's waters and hugo squadrons of grim, gray men-of-war have regu larly come and gono and gathered there. Tho writer tells of Penzance, tho sunny pleasuro-loving littlo sea city whero tho most picturesque of pirate types originated; of Newlyn, tho homo of tho true old sort of fish ermen, and the Mecca of artists; of Maraz'ion, the old, which, according to Cornish history, was an Important city visited by Phoenician merchants in tho days of Ezekiel tho prophet; of Fowey, once ono of tho greatest sea ports of tho land, which sent scores of boats to tho crusades, to the siege of Calaio, to tho plundering of Nor mandy, a one-time warlike city whose glory has long since faded. Fowey sent moro than twoscoro men-of-war to Calais 770 men. How pitifully small are the figures today, whon ono modern battleship requires a larger crow than did that fleet 450 years ago. CLIPF5 NEAR WANTED ONE DAY OF REST Insane Man, as Strict .Sabbatarian, Could Not Think of "Working" on Sunday. Orvlllo L. Klpllngor, chaplain of tho Michigan City (Ind.) reformatory, tells tho following lnstanco of a scrupulous conscience: "Somo years ago an InBano patient was given to tho immodest, not to say expensive, habit of tearing his cloth ing from him and converting Jeans, ticking, denim or whatever tho clothes wero made of, into carpet rags, "Tho prison physician remonstrated with tho shredding nut as follows: i "'Say, old man, you'ro cortalnly making a lot of unnecessary troublo for us. Wo don't think It's fair Wouldn't you liko to make money?" "Tho InBano man emphatically averred his willingness to earn ready caBh. "Woll, I'll toll you what I'll do.' re sumed tho doctor 'I will glvo you ten ruts rvi ii day you don't tear your the tamar Not fifty ships of modern typo could And place In Fowey harbor today, but for smaller craft submarlno destroy ers It affords adnilrablo shelter. Polperro Is Picturesque. To tho eastward of Fowey Is Pol perro, tho most plcturcsquo, tho most unspoiled of Cornish fishing ports, re taining nil its ancient dignity of life and labor unlluttcrcd by Bummer villas now beginning to crowd the ell IT a nbovo its head. Polporro's chief catch is mackerel, crabs and conger. Thcro aro few, If any, congor-eel In American waters; they aro to somo pcoplo a most unpleasant-looking fish. Cornwall osteoids thorn highly nnd makes them into plo with much cream and parsley. Cornwall, Mrs. Albrecht explains, makes nny number of things into pie and calls tho product Invariably "squab pie," though all things but squabs aro among the materials. "Squab pio" gavo riso to tho following Cornish story repeated by tho writer: "Tho dovil camo ono day to tho banks of tho Tamar, the rippling river that divides Dovon and Cornwall, and looked over at tho rocky land beyond. His majesty considered tho swift cur rent and shook his head. 'No!' he said finally. 'No, that's no place for mo! Everyone who goes thcro Is turned Into a saint and everything else into squab pio. I'm fit for nolther ono nor tho other.' And ho stayed in Dovon." Just boyond tho Cornwall bound ary Is Plymouth of Mayflower mom ory, a city which has never allowed her growing commerce to intcrfero with her position as a fortress of tho first class and a naval arsenal. Ports mouth, considerably further east upon this coast, is also a strong fortrcs.-i and nn Important gnrrlson town, and Its great dockyards and repairing docks are likely over-busied now In tho work of "keoping the sea that Is tho wall of England." Substitute for Rubber. Successful attempts havo recently been made to manufacture a substitute for rubber tubing out of masses of solidified glue. Theso tubes aro oven hotter than those of rubber for cortnln purposes, according to TechniBcho Monatshefte, sinco thoy aro moro Im pervious to gases and moro resistant to heat. It is also clamed that they do not grow rotten so quickly aB rub ber, and that when incased in a suit ablo envelope thoy will withstand high preasuro. Moreover, thoy aro very cheap. Tho Inventor Is Prof. J. Traubo, and ho states that thoy aro peculiarly suited for conductors of potroloum nnd gasollno ns well as gases. Howovor, thoy aro attacked by water, which ob viously limits their uses. POLPERRO "Tho offender assented eagerly, and started In to mako good. Tuesday his clothes remained intact; Wednes day, ditto; Friday and Saturday tho samo. Ills reformation was tho talk of tho institution. "But on Sunday morning thp gar ments tho crazy man had worn all wook woro torn into strips nnd thrown to tho four winds of his cell. "'What doos this mean?' naked the Indignant physician. 'I thought I bad you hired to keop your clothes on and. bo goodl' " 'Woll,' said tho prisoner, innoconk ly, 'you didn't suppose I was going ta work on Sunday, did you?' " Judge. Another Solution. "I havo solved ono problem. I won't havo a lot of soiled dishes on band when my wlfo gets homo." "How'b that?" "I'vo broken most of 'em. Half-Size. Tcachor "What a tiny littlo chan your brother la." Tommy "I guess that's 'cause he's only my itt broth. 11 A BMJF FIRE Australian Tells of Landing on Gallipoli Peninsula. Turkish Soldiers Tested the Metal of Colonial Troops Who Sought to Press Forward to the Sul tan's Capital. "A aea, smooth ns a mirror, covered with a. light mist," so rolatos nn Aus tralian, "and boyond Rrcnt hills and faint outlines of battleships and trans ports, overhead a hydroplane lurking about tho Turkish position, such was tho spectnelo presented to us on April 25, when wo approached tho Gallipoli poninsuln. Our run was Btralght for ward to tho shoro toward tho foot of Gaba Topo hill, but tho destroyer, it must bo understood, was unablo to bring us closo to tho beach. There wo lay in an open boat, looking at each other In n puzzled way, while bullots camo whizzing past right nnd loft nnd over us. At last tho barges wero advanced as much as possible. Wo quickly Jumped Into tho water, al most to our nrmpits, and arrived, half swimming, half wading, at tho shoro. In former times I havo often been in quisltlvo to know how it folt to bo In n dcBpornto position. Now I havo found thnt out. I folt ns if Bomconu had delivered a tcrriblo blow at my chest with tho fiat part of a spado. "Wo passed tho first-aid stations, which already wero overburdened with stretchers bearing wounded. Then camo a toilsome, tiring climb over great sand dunes to tho firing lino. Snipers lny concealed everywhere In ambush and bullets struck nil nround in tho rocks and bushes. In this way, surrounded by a thousand dangers, wo reached tho lino of flro, whero I wns detached from my company for duty to ascertain tho shooting ranges for an Australian regiment. Through tho excellent tolcscopo of my range- ' finder I could obsorvo tho Turkish re treat and had oven a tiny picturo of n bayonet charge of our own men. Still camo tho wounded In seemingly un ending streams; then our tro'-h nwoko to llfo. Ono of tho sharpshoot ers Boemed to havo a grudge against tho rangefindcr, ns two bulletr struck tho Immediate breastworks; tho man next to mo suddenly reared up high tnd fell to my feet. 'At an end,' ho cried, and then added, faintly hesitat ing, 'money in bolt wlfo and chil dren' Tho Turks had evidently got our range, then tho situation becanio moro and moro uncomfortable, nnd thoBO of us who wero left had to shift our positions several hundred yards to the rear, until It was finally possible to silence this dangerous marksman. "On tho following afternoon I di rected ngaln my glass on this tragic group and saw that tho sailor now lay on his back, his fnco pointing townrd heaven. Without a doubt yesterday ho was alive nnd may havo been oven now nfter 3G hours still living. And now It shot moro violently through my holng. In tho midst of the group I observed a movement and saw plainly a man extricating himself and slowly hobbling nlong tho bank. With 'our other I set out to rescue tho unfor tunate, who in tho mcantlmo had col lapsed. Wo found yot four others liv ing and heard from them that last night there had still been eight of them. "To our right rattled n hostile ma chine gun llko a motor cycle and camo gradually nearer. A navalplnno from its mothcrshlp, Arck Royal, anchored In tho nearby bay, hovered over our heads encircled by white shrnpnol cloudlets, coming from tho Turks. Soon thereafter tho flyer turned about and flow back to mako a report. Tho effect of this was not long In waiting, it camo in shape of n ship's shell, which with ear-benumbing screech flow Curative Value In Food? "Recalling that 90 of disease results from errors in diet, then foods properly prescribed by the physi cian can justly be said to have curative value." Dr. Henry B. Hoen, tn The Medtcal Standard. One of the errors in the diet of many people is the use of foods robbed of the vital mineral salts (phosphate of potash, etc.) which are absolutely necessary for proper balance of body, brain and nerves. The result is a long list of ills, including nervous prostration, kidney trouble, constipation, rickets in childreh, and so on. Twenty years ago a whole wheat and barley food, containing all the nutriment of the grain, including the priceless mineral elements, was devjsed especially to correct errors in diet. That food is Grape-Nits It fulfills its mission admirably. Another physician says: " Nearly half the year my breakfast consists of a dish - of Grape-Nuts, one or two eggs, or fruit. I RECOM MEND IT TO MY PATIENTS CONSTANTLY, and invariably with good results." This wholesome food not only builds sturdy health and strength, but fortifies the system against disease. Ready-to-eat, nourishing, economical, delicious "There's a Reason" for Grape-Nuts Oh, Memoryl "What boautlful thought comes to mind, boys, on this bright, priBp morn ing?" asked tho tonchor. "I know," said Jack, shooting up his hand. "Tho bonutlfullest thought that comes to mo today Is of that day when It wns so r.corchlng hot that thoy had to closo tho school." Not So Easy. "My doctor tells me I ought to go south for tho winter." "Well, why don't you go?" "Ho doesn't toll mo how to rnlso tho money." Out of Sorts THAT IS, something is wrong with baby, but wc can't tell just what it is. All mothers recognize tho term' by tho lassitude, weakness, loss of appetite, inclination to sleep, heavy breathing, and lack of interest shown by baby. Theso are the symptoms of sickness. It may be fever, congestion, worms, croup, diphtheria, or scarlatina. Do not lose a minute. Give the child Castoria. It will start the digestive organs into operation, open the pores of the skin, "carry off the foetid matter, and drive away tho threatened sickness. Genuine Castoria always bears the over our heads. Far from us rose n cloud of smoko and earth, gradually dispersing. Now tho guns from tho ships began in earnest. From the bay enmo nn uninterrupted thundering, nnd the whizzing of tho heavy pro jectiles, ns a 'G battery fired ono salvo after another. Brown smoko ascended from tho llostllo bulwarks nnd for a long timo thereafter tho hills trembled with tho long-drawn-out thunder of tho explosions. "Now, cannon of tho enemy began to reply, shrapnel burst ovor us, nnd tho whistling of tho flying bullets scorned to bo nil about us. For three hours lasted this violent cannonade. Wo wero now solidly Intronched, howovor, with very henvy sacrifices. Behind us on tho bench wero brought up grad ually supplies; horses and mulc3 camo to land, nnd tho resorvo ammunition steadily nccummulated. Men carried wnter, munitions and oil for tho ma chlno guns to tho firing line. On all paths moved tho stretcher-bearers with their sad burdens nnd wounded patiently waited In small groups nt tha bandngo stations. In tho hot sun tho surgeons worked llko machines. Many wounds wero boyond all help and a whlto cloth covered many n fnco. Although wo wero only six Hours on land, three wireless stations Bhot up liko mushrooms out of tho earth, and their crackling sparks betrayed to tho warships whero to direct their projectiles. Incessantly now troops wero unloadod, which immediately wero chased to tho firing Hue. "With tho beginning of darkness tho bombardment BUbsIded, but tho Turk ish shrnpnolB continued bursting ovor tho beach and tho wounded woro thoroforo exposed to heavy shrapnel lire. Also, tho norvo-dcBtroylng rifle flro would not cease. Of sleep no one could think and tho digging of trench es had to ho taken In hand nt once, In order to fortify our position. To our left, distant about a halt mllo, a lonoly boat rocked in tho surf; wiyi help of my glass I could dctcrmtna its lond. At least uight dead sat upright thuroin and near at tho beach lay a further 20 men. A seamnn, who rould bo identified by his whito cap, lay thero in a remarkable lifollkb position, his chin supported by his hand. All men in this great and glorious country may bo free and equal, but thoy don't look It whon garbed in bathing BUlts. A boy thinks when ho reaches tho ago of twonty-ono ho'll have his own way, but ho UBimlly gots married. Scares fEm. "How did you get rid of that life Insurance agont so quickly?" ,rOh, I'm always propared for thbno fellows. I keop a largo bottlo of cod liver oil in plain sight on my desk, and when an agont calls I grootjhlm with a hollow cough." What Ignorance. "Shall wo havochampagno or somo other wlno?" "Aro thoro other wines?" Punch. An ordinary bookkeeper's hand travels about 10,000 miles a year ovor lodger pages. signature of GATHERING IN .THE HARVEST Every Month In the Year Finds Work ers Busy In the Fruitful Fields of the Earth. Soraewhero every month In the year harvesters are clicking. Tho world's schedule for cutting grain is as fol lows: "January New Zealand, Argentina. "February East India, Upper Egypt. "March Egypt, Chile. "April Asia Minor and Mexico. 'llny Asia, Chlnn, Japan, Texas. "Juno Turkey, Spain, Southern United States. "July United States, Austria, Southern Russia, England, Germany, Switzerland. "August Canada, Holland, Belgium, Denmark, Poland. "Soptombur Scotland, Sweden, Nor way, Siberia. "October Northern Russia, Siberia. "November South Africa and Peru. "Dccembor Uruguay, Australia. "Then it nil starts over again, begin ning wljh Now Zealand and Argentina. Tho United States exports harvesting machinery to all tho countries named and also many others." Lovemaking Misunderstood. No matter whero thoy wero, ho raado lovo to her Their engagement had lasted for several weeks, but ho could scarco bear to wait for comparative privacy to whisper IiIb dovotlon and to ask for vowb of constancy. And so It was that he murmured sweet somo things across tho littlo glass-topped tablo In tho drug storo whoro thoy wero consuming cooling beverages and messes. He looked deep into her sparkling eyes. "You aro nil mlno!" ho breathed, And than a doubt scorned to como over him, and ho whispered nnxiouBly: "Could you bear to think of another?" "Oh, darling!" she whis pered, blushing a littlo. "I'vo already had two. But I don't think ono moro fruit sundae would hurt me. You'ro bo thoilghtful, dear and so extrava gant." Clovolaud Plain Dealer. Simply Waiting. , "Why don't you learn tho ' now dances?" "Too lazy. I'll Just sit nnd wait for tho waltz to como back." Flattery. "Do you over flatter your huBband?' "Ycb; I sometimes ask his ndvlco about things." A" woman always tries to maka a secrot of' what sho doesn't know. ciii& or."