The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, July 10, 1913, Image 2

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    LITTLE BEAUTY CHATS
BY BLANCHE BEACON.
A FINE CARRIAGE MEANS A FINE MIND.
I must again refer those people who
are always talking about "leaving na
ture alone" to the fact that walking
upright la man's Improvement upon
nature.
It la not natural for man to walk
on two legs, but because he did It ho
has developed a thumb and a pre
hensile hand, and he has also developed
a power to think which no animal,
which atlll walks on four legs,
possesses.
I do not think there Is anything
which has as great an Influence upon
the brain as the way one carries one's
self. The slinking sort of a carriage
always belongs to the person who has
a slinking sort of temperament. The
woman who walks with her head up
and her chest out la one to bo
trusted.
Now here Is a theory that Is gain
ing ground with some of our greatest
scientists. The mere physical fact of
your holding your body upright will
strengthen your mind and will.
The person who shambles and halts
la losing his power to decldo.
The woman who allows herself to
settle Is undeniably growing old.
One of the best ways of keeping
the figure perfectly upright Is to walk
about your room with a book on your
head. This will give you the pose of
body and poise of mind which you
peed.
Pon't fall Into the silly fashion
which seems to prevail just at present
among so many young women who are
trying to look uncorseted, and who are
walking with sunken shoulders and
protruding knees. It Is not only un
graceful, but It will surely have a bad
efTect upon your mind and tempera
ment.
Already it seems as though I can
see a difference In the way the fash
ionable talks. She does It almost as
sloppily as sho walks.
*■■■:■iiasiyfc'ysi jl
“Walk about your room with a book on
your head to keep the figure
perfectly upright.”
MAKE USE OF A HAND GLASS.
■awffi ...———— -...—...
“Always consider Your Hand Glass Your Best Friend.”
If you haven’t a "hand glass" econ
omize on everything you can until you
can buy one, and If possible buy one of
those that have a mirror sot In both
•idea, one of which 1* a glass that
magnifies.
"Of what use will a hand glass be
to me?” you ask.
In the llrat place If you examine your
face carefully In a hand glass every
morning, you will probably see many
blackheads or superfluous hairs long
before some kind friend culls your at
tention to them. Kor just a few little
blackheads, It Is probable that a good
•crubblng of your face with a camel’H
hair face brush and green soap will
be all that is necessary. Take the
few' straggling hairs out with a pair
cf tweezers and rub the place over with
peroxide of hydrogen and ammonia In
•qual parts.
That same hand glass will probably
tell yw' to brush your eyebrows care
fully and that your teeth need atten
tion from your dentist. It may ap
prise you that you are getting an
ugly wrinkle between your eyes from
squinting.
He sure that you look at your ears
—I have seen a woman’s ears that
were full of blackheads, whose face
and hair wore otherwise Immaculate.
This woman would have been much
ashamed If some one had told her of
this.
After you have powdered your
face and neck, (don’t neglect your
neck,) take your hand glass and look
at the places powdered very carefully
and dust off all superfluous powder
lightly with a baby's hair brush. There
Is nothing that looks more vulgar than
a woman with patches of powder all
over her face.
You can make your hand glass your
best friend, and don’t forget to smile
back your gratitude for Its kindness
before you put It down, for that smile
may remain on your Ups all day.
WALK ON THE BALLS
OF YOUR FEET
/ -
I Ui.'. v ly sorry to sen the carriage
that is affected by many young ladies
lately They are "shrinking" back on
their heels which makes the lungs
•ink in; give an ugly pose to the hend
and above nil rounds the shoulders and
the back.
Once in a while a girl as slender and
graceful as a lily stem can affect tills
style of carriage and make herself the,
Individual note among a crowd of other
women, but she is laying up for her
self trouble, however, as she cannot
breathe to the full capacity of the soft
walls of her abdomen or held up the
weight which should be placed on the
vertebrae and other bony structure.
The way to walk Is on the balls of
the feet. Nature has placed cushions
there to help take off the constant jar
that walking on the flat foot or heels
give*.
If you are the slightest way dis
posed to fat you will find that unless
you walk with the chest up and the
head out. stepping lightly on the balls
of your feet you will soon have ugly
rolls of fat across your shoulder blades
aaid your abdomen will grow large und
high. When you find yourself grow
ing ''round shouldered" don't go out
and buy yourself a pair of shoulder
braces; Just poise your body on the
bails of your feet and you will find your
shoulders, chest and abdomen will ad
just themselves to their rightful posi
tion.
«.3.. isrijrCT.jgcsaa:-.._j.■2svzsr."ttcasa:x*-m4.1
“Only when you walk on the balls of
your feet will your poise
be correct.”
Where Do the Watches Got
From the New York Evening Mail.
What becomes of the watches’ The
average man does not buy more than
about two or three watches In the course
of hla whole life, and yet the manufac
turers keep on making new watches by
the hundred thousands. Who buys them
all?
No statistic* can answer the question.
What becomes of the old watches? What
did you do with the one ;»ou discarded
when you got your present watch? Where
ts it now? It was a sliver watch and It
kept good time for years—that old watch,
that predecessor of the gold one that you
now possess. You bad a strung affection
tor It. You called It “she," and some
tiroes. In the solitude of your room, you
may havo caught yourself saying a word
or tuo to It aloud. The watch certainly
talked to you In the middle of the night;
Heine's watch conjugated Hebrew by the
hour. The old watch had a kind of a
ringing tick like a riveting machine, and
you could hear It clear through the pil
low, It has sung you to sleep more than
once. But let's see—what In Heaven’s
name became of It?
And This Prom Atlanta.
From the Atlanta Constitution.
A sane, crackerlesa, grape-Jules Fourth
of July. Amen!
ENGLAND ARMS HERSELF
AGAINST AIR INVASION
Gun mounted on submarine boat (top left), a dirigible as seen from below
(fop right); a 6.5 cm. air snip gun for field service (bottom).
Monstrous, mysterious shapes, loom
ing up large and dwindling again into
the star-spaces with whir of propel
lers and a throaty purr of petrol en
gines have aroused many Englishmen
to a terror that amounts almost to a
craze.
‘‘To us, the sea; to our foes, the
air,” they cry. They fear that Eng
land’s proud isolation is to be lost be
fore the searching flight of French and
German airships, which in times of
peace can spy out the secrets they will
use to deadly advantage should war
ever come.
England is weak in aerial navy, and
for the present seeks merely to de
fend Itself against the possibility of
such a state of affairs. To that end
parliament passed an act forbidding
the unauthorized flying of air craft
over certain specified districts wherein
lie important fortifications; while for
eign airships before flying over the
Isles must get passports from British
consuls.
Parliament would warn of Infringe
ments of this law by pillars of smoke
by day and signals fires and rocket*
at night; with penalty for disregard, *
fusillade from guns that swing their
muzzles from nadir to zenith upon
carriages' of marvelous ingenuity. The
shells by day would emit smoke, which,
hanging upon the air, would indicate
to the gunner in case ho had missed
the correction he must make In hi*
aim. Specially prepared shells, strik
ing the gas bag of a dirigible would
explode and Ignite the gas, which, In
turn exploding, would hurl ship and
crew to earth a flaming, swirling mas*
of death.
Submarine boats, easy objects for
the eyes of circling airship crews, hav*
mounted on their slippery decks can
non which can spit spitefully at th*
airship. This done, they fold their
cannon In water-tight wells and plungo
to safety far beneath the waves.
444444444444444-44444f ♦ ♦ »44
t THE BUSINESS MAN’S *
{ BOOK OF THE BIBLE ♦
■4 Terse Comments Upon the Uni-..4
(4 form Prayer Meeting Topic of 4
f4 • the Young People’s Societies, 4
i4! Christian Endeavor, Etc., For 4
(41 June 15, “Favorite Verses." 4
4 II. In the Proverbs. Prov. iv, 4
4 10-27. (4'
By William T. Ellis. T
4444444444444444444444444^
All the blble Is not alike. Different
books In the canon serve different uses.
The most "practical’’ counsel In the
whole collection Is found lp the book of
Proverbs. Whitelaw Reid once said that
this was the best volume ’of business ad
vlco that a young man setting out In the
world could read. It has less to do with
the heavenlles than with this present life.
The proverbs are the crystallized wisdom
of observers of mankind. They know the
world. They warn the reader of the way
to failure and they give good counsel for
the sort of conduct that wins. ThlB Is the
best collection of maxims on "Buccess”
ever written. The mind that 1b thoroughly
saturated with the book of Proverbs has
mastered an education In sagacity.
Like all great treatises on life, the book
of Proverbs postulates God. Character
and conduct are, at base, matters of re
lationship with the Highest. Any wisdom
which stops short of heaven Is not ade
quate for earth.
1 dom's ways are set forth fully and
In detail by the proverb-makers. These
terse truths are as direct and sure as
the counsel of the policeman to a strang
er bewildered In the city’s streetB.
The “fool” appears often In these trench
ant utterances of the proverb-makers—
wise men blink no facts. Their day Is
not limited to the rosy sunrise of op
timism. They accept the existence of folly
as of wisdom, of evil as of good. Through
this labyrinth of realities they chart a
path for seeking feet to follow.
Since It Is better to let the bible speak
for Itself than to speak about the bible,
I quote some characteristic passages from
the book of Proverbs, instead of merely
commenting upon them:
"The fear of Jehovah is the beginning
of knowledge; but the foolish despise wis
dom and Instruction.”
“My son, If sinners entice thee, consent
thou not.”
“My son, If thou wilt receive my words,
and lay up my commandments with thee;
bo as to incline thine ear unto wisdom,
and apply thy heart to understanding; If
thou seek her as silver, and search for her
as for hid treasures; then shalt thou un
derstand the fear of Jehovah, and And
the knowledge of God.”
"Trust In Jehovah with all thy heart,
and loan not upon thine own understand
ing: In all thy ways acknowledge Him,
and Ho will direct thy paths.”
"For whom Jehovah loveth he reprov
eth; even as a father the son In whom he
delighteth.”
"Wisdom Is the principal thing: there
fore get wisdom; yea. with all thy get
ting get understanding,”
"But the path of the righteous is as the
dawning light, that shinoth more and more
unto the perfect day.**
"Go to the ant. Uiou sluggard; consider
her ways, and be wise; which having no
chief, overseer, or ruler, provtdeth her
broad In the summer, and gathcreth her
food In the harvest.
"Yet a little sleep, a little slumber, a
little folding of the hands to sleep: So
shall thy poverty come as a robber, and
thy want as an armed man."
"He that walketh uprightly walketh
Burely; but he that perverteth his ways
shall be known."
"The blessing of Jehovah. It maketh
rich; and he Rddeth no sorrow therewith.”
“When pride oometh, then comoth
shame: but with the lowly Is wisdom.”
“As a ring of gold In a swine’s snout,
■o Is a fair woman that Is without dls
cretion.”
“There is that scattereth, and increaseth
yet more; and there is that withholdeth
more than is meet, but it tendeth only
to want.”
* “Walk with wise men and thou shalt be
wise; but the companion of fools shall
smart for it.”
“He that is slow to anger Is of great
understanding; but he that is hasty of
spirit exalteth folly.”
“He that oppreeseth the poor reproach
eth his Maker; but he that hath mercy
on the needy honoreih Him.”
“Righteousness exalteth a nation; but
sin is a reproach to any people.
“Better a dinner of herbs, where love is,
than a stalled ox and hatred therewith.”
“When a man’s ways please Jehovah,
he maketh even his enemies to be at peace
with him. Better is a little, with right
eousness, than great revenues with injus
tice. 0
“There is a way which seemeth right
unto a man. but the end thereof are the
ways of death.”
“He that Is slow to anger Is better than
the mighty; and he that ruleth his spirit,
than ho that taketh a city.”
“A friend loveth at all times; and a
brother is born for adversity.”
“Even a fool, when he holdeth his peace,
is counted wise; when he shutteth hi» lips,
he is esteemed as prudent.”
A Ghastly Sport.
From the Christian Herald.
That prize fighting is a relic of barbar
ism and should be legislated out of exis
tence is brought home to the average mind
with intensified conviction by the killing
of Luther McCarty at Calgary, Alberta,
recently. A champion in full health enters
the roped arena and a few moments later
Is dead of a neck-breaking blow, received
in what the professionals denominate a
“fair fight.” This is the eleventh Instance
in recent years in which a fistic encounter
has ended in manslaughter. Such occur
rences cause only a passing thrill; they
rarely arouse sufficient indignation to
make them an object of prohibitive legis
lation, and the mankiller usually gets off
with a nominal punishment. And we call
ourselves civilized and humane; although
when the old savage that is hidden in most
men comes to the surface In a modern
prize ring mob, one would hardly suspect
that it belonged to the Twentieth century.
How Hagenback Filled Contract.
From the Christian Herald. ,
Karl Hagenback, who died recently, was
the most renowned animal collector and
dealer In the world. He supplied nearly
all the menageries and boos in three con
tinents. He kept his animals in a large
park at Steillngen near Hamburg. Dur
ing his last years he did not go far from
home, and took no risks from wild ani
mals. In 1905 the German government
asked him if he would furnish 1,000 drome
daries, provide saddles for each, and trans
port them thousands of miles from Hast
Africa to German Southwest Africa, and
have the first shipment of 800 beasts ready
In three months. He said that he could.
He sent his brother and other trusty men
to do the buying and set sail in a vessel
he had chartered and fitted up especially
for the purpose. He could not find any
saddle to suit him, so ho invented one
and had the saddlers of Hamburg make
them. He had his first shipment delivered
in three months, and then the rest of the
1,000 were furnished. The German gov
ernment was so pleased with the animals,
their quality, and the speed of their de
livery, that it took another 1,000 of them
from him.
Nightfall.
I heard mellow church bells say
The tranquil requiem of day.
I saw the fires of sunset bum
Di n in the great west’s golden urn.
Above one sharp-etched spire afar
Clear flowered one hyaclnthine star.
Then Mother Night her children hid
j Uhder her purple coverlid. *
- -Clinton Scollard.
MOST OF US WAKE UP
EVERY MORNING WITH
THAT TIRED FEELING
People Do Not Get Enough
Sleep, One Health Expert
Declares.
HE SUBMITS HIS REMEDY
Once Each Week Man Should Spend
24 Consecutive Hours In Bed
to Recuperate, He
Says.
Prom London Answers.
Two thousand years ago, when Brit
ain was peopled witn a strong, rough
race of men and women, sleep was ta
ken as seriously as hunting the for
ests for food, and the Briton awoke
from his deep slumbers with a splen
did stretch, as the red sun rose over
the hills!
But today it is a very different story.
Most of us wake up with “that tired
feeling,” rebelling against the com
mands of our alarm clocks, and feeling
very often that we would give all our
small change for just one little extra
half hour between the sheets.
The reason Is not far to seek. We do
not get sufficient sleep. Eight hours
is generally regarded as the utmost
necessary for our health; yet even this
meager portion is often, through the
necessities of w'ork, cut down to seven
hours, which reduces our annual per
iod of rest by an average clerk's sum
mer holiday. One hour a day for 365
days equals more than a fortnight.
This is why we are not able to watch
the sun rise in summer without paying
dearly for it in yawns later on. And
this, also, is why, in order to get even
with nature, we have to resort to doc
tors’ medicines, special physical exer
cises and dogged “srrrile cures.” All
very well in their way, certainly, but
all quite unnecessary.
Sleep For 24 Hours.
Once a week,” a health expert re
cently declared, “every man should
spend 24 consecutive hours in bed.”
Whether we agree with this state
ment or not, it is evident that we were
never intended or built to live such
strenuous existences as the Average
person lives today. We have only to
glance around at the examples which
many animals set us to see how very
far away from original nature our civ
ilization is leading. A marmot sleeps
for a whole month at a time without
having to worry about losing its berth
or place in the world when it wakes
up again.
The grizzly bear practically snores
through an entire winter, because he
knows that while he can keep his
health and strength he can always ob
tain his food when he requires it. Ris
ing and falling shares don’t affect him.
In the same way the caterpillar takes
a lo ngbeauty sleep in its chrysalis
during the period of its life which cor
responds more or less to the cramming
schooldays of the human boy.
Tack On a Few Hours.
What w'ould the human being be
called by his associates if he allowed
himself to relax to this extent? ,
The writer does not suggest that,
from this day onward, you should en
deavor to emulate the marmot or the
bear or the caterpillar. But if your
condition in life allows you to tack on
your usual allowance an extra seven
or 14 hours of sleep a week—that is to
say a fortnight to a month a year—bet
ter health is bound to follow.
Of course, the “rest student” must
be guided largely by his special char
acteristics. He cannot disregard his
age and sex, any more than he can at
tempt to copy the bird, which divides
its 24-hour day into four alternate
periods, of rest and activity. The ex
tremes of youth and age, for Instance,
require more sleep than is necessary
to persons in their prime. Individual
considerations and characteristics must
always be taken into account and
weighed in the balance.
The best test by which one can as
certain whether enough sleep is being
obtained or not is the test of energy.
Energy the Best Test.
If you can spring from your bed with
the freshness which most of us only
gain fully after a cold morning tub
and rub, then you have slept your due.
If you feel tired and sluggish, you may
be nearly sure that you do not spend
sufficient of your life In bed, and the
sooner you set about repairing the evil
the better. Remember, too, that your
revised sleeping hours will have to get
into good running order before they
show what real benefit they are pro
viding. People are too apt to give up
a good thing through being over-im
patient to see the beneficial effects.
Blarney Saved the Day. \
Dublin Letter In the Brooklyn Eagle.
An Interesting Incident of the visit to
Ireland of Mr. Peake, Australian pre
mier, and Mr. O'Loughlin, speaker of
the Australian legislative assembly,
has just come to light, it appears that
a young barefooted boy was selling
newspapers one day outside the Gres
ham hotel in Dublin. After proffering
one to Mr. O’Loughlin he started a con
versation about Australia and asked:
“Would your honor take me there?”
The speaker said he would be glad to
take the youngster If he could be sure
his mother would consent.
The next morning the young hopeful,
washed and scrubbed, but still bare
footed, presented himself at the hotel,
asked for Mr. O'Loughlin. and told
him he had got his mother’s consent.
"But your mother doed not know who
I am.” said the speaker.
Yes. she does,” replied the boy, and
then came a touch of native blarney:
“Saw your photo in the papers this
morning, and says you must be a very
good man.”
In the afternoon the sealter inter
viewed the mother, and as result has
arranged to pay the expenses of the
bov out to Australia and give him a
start in life under the southern cross.
4 WILD FLOWERS. ♦
4 - ♦
4 Thoreau. 4
4 How fitting to have every day 4
4 in a vase of water on your table 4
4 the wild flowers of the season 4
4 which are just blossoming. Can 4
4 any house be said to be furnished 4
4 without them? Shall we be so 4
4 forward as to pluck the fruits of 4
4 nature and neglect her flowers? 4
4 These are surely her finest In- 4
4 fluences. So may the season sug- 4
4 gest the thoughts it is fitted to 4
4 suggest. • * • Let me know 4
4 what picture nature Is painting, 4
4 what poetry she is w riting, what 4
4 ode composing now. 4
4+»»♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦»♦♦♦♦♦+»»♦♦tt
PRINCETON MEN ALL
TO KISS THE GIRLS
At Least Nearly All of Last
Senior Class Pleaded
Guilty.
So much ha* been written about the
likes and dislikes of the college youth,
and so many dry statistics have been
furnished the public regarding the.
means of livelihood of the "RahlRah!
boy” that statistics in a lighter vein
concerning the graduating class of|
Princeton university made public just
before the commencement exercises!
here are exceptionally interesting.
Here are some of the questions putl
to the members of the graduating class:'.
Do you smoke?
Have you stopped smoking since en-<
tering college or have you adopted the!
habit since entering?
Are you engaged?
Have you ever kissed a girl?
Do you correspond with any young
woman or women? If so, how many?
Do you consider dancing morally
wrong?
Do you regard card playing as im
moral?
Have you ever attended a dance?
.Answers to these questions showed!
that the number of men in the class:
who smoke total 184, of which 76 be-'
gan in college, while 61 stopped after]
they entered. Two hundred and six:
of the 300 members of the class con-j
fessed to corresponding with 679 mem-j
bars of the fair sex, an average ofi
more than two each.
One bold youth frankly declared that!
he writes letters to 18 young women.
Almost the entire class admitted hav-i
ing kissed some member of the fair:
sex outside of their immediate families.]
Nineteen members of the class asserted!
that they considered dancing morally]
wrong, and 16 entertain the same views]
toward cards playing. All but 12 of]
them have attended dances. Nine menl
admitted being engaged, while 24 said;
that they had had their hearts bruised!
by rejections.
Errors In Orthography.
From the New York Sun.
How well educated along elected|
lines one may be and yet how ridicu
lously remiss In others Is Illustrated ini
the recent congratulatory letter report-1
ed to have been received by President]
Woodrow Wilson l’rom Tadashlge Su
zakl, a Princeton graduate, now at|
Shlroishl, Miyagiken, Japan. Amongi
other things tho alumnus of the blgl
university says: “I send you my heartyl
congratulations for your throne of!
presidency on this memorable day.
When X knew that Hon. Wilson was!
elected presidency of U. S. A., I could!
not keep a loud hurrah.”
While this may seem laughable, It 1st
not much better or worse than some of)
the glaring errors in orthography, syn
tax and prosody discovered in a num-j
ber of very bright graduates of ourj
best universities when occasion came toj
test their ordinary scholastic acquisi
tions. A poor spoiler at college is ta
ken as a matter of course in most
cases. It is supposed that if he has!
advanced through the high or prepara-1
tory school and has not been turned]
out a proficient speller that he is a]
hopeless case in this respect and there)
is no use trying to Improve him. So|
his spelling is condoned and his at
tention directed to logarithms perhaps.]
A droll story is told of the student]
who was turned out the best mining]
engineer of his class. A task had been
set him by a professor. He failed to
finish it and wrote to his preceptor: “l]
am sorry the work you gave me to do
is not dun. I sprained my ancle.” The!
reply sent him read: “If you sprained1
your ankel, of course that is all there]
is to it. Your work was doo to be done:
a week ago, however, and I’m afraid ib
is now too late.”
Bread That Never Gets Stale.
From the New York Tribune.
What man in the street knows or
cares anything about valency? Or]
perceives in, let us say, the allotropicj
modifications of Bulphur an analogy'
to anything of practical Interest to]
him? Yet these things have much to!
do with our daily bread, and may fig
ure largely in tho statement of somei
bakers’ strike.
Thus Professor Katz, of Amsterdam,,
in studying the question of what chem
ists call valency, has been invesiga
tlng tho reactions. He finds that the]
fresh bread which most men prize and;
tho stale bread which only some dys
peptics tolerate are simply modiflca-:
tlons of the same substance, compar
able with the aforesaid nllotropic mod-.
Iflcatlons of sulphur. But what causes:
the chango? Nothing but tho change
of temperature. If bread is kept at a'
high temperature it remains un
changed. Or if it is immediately re
duced to a very low temperature and]
is kept there, the chemical changes are:
so slow and slight ns to be negligible.!
It is, therefore, proposed in Holland
to utilize this discovery through the
establishment of large storage ware:
houses, either hot or cold, in whioh
reserves of bread shall be accumulated
and kept perpetually froBb, for use in1
case of such emergencies as a general1
strike of bakers or a temporary scarc
ity of supplies of grain. There could'
soarcely be a better Illustration of the!
relationship betweent some of the]
most abstruse researches In scienco and.
the most familiar needs of everyday
life.
Traditional Mandarin Taotlca,
J, O, P. Eland, tn tho Juno Atlantia
"Walt ft little," • say* Yeung China,
"give u* but tlma to art our house in'
order, to organise our finances, and to;
train our army: then you will see,"'
But In this matter, Young China to
merely following faithfully In the foot-:
stops of its ancestors, Precisely thus!
did the mandarin, under the Manehu
dynasty, endeavor to frighten the har-i
barian, and to head off his schemes of1
aggression, H Is in accordance with]
every ancient principle of Chinese,
Statecraft to devise ways and means af|
Intimidating powerful foes: it is also In
accordance with every tradition of that
mandarin, ancient and modern, to get'
credit for the possession of a large
army, rather than to have to pay for
one, This latter tradition has lately1
been powerfully stimulated by the Cijf-j
nese officials' belief that the foreign iW
paneiars might ha induced to advance
funds for the redemption of the "war:
notes" of the revolution and for milUj
tary purposes: it was this belief that!
led T’ang phaoyi, whsu premier, tO:
evolve, from his own consciousness and1
the reports of his fellow provincials, a; .
republican army of S8 divisions, most
of which he proposed to disband, With
the aid of a foreign Joan. (If was aii
this time that the Nanking assembly
was solemnly passing academic resolu
tions in favor of universal conscrip
tion, without any reference to the fi
nancial aspects of that question.)
Ag Example,
From Life.
Tha Governor (Sternly)—When X wag
four age. my boy, x Was making an
feoneet Hitng'. «
, The Boy—And DM look at you| fl