r i , THE NOKFOLK WMKKLY NEWS- JOURNAL , FHIDAY.JUAKCH 18 , 1010. The Norfolk Weekly News-Journal The NCWH , EBtnbllHhcd 1881. The JournaJJI2BtaljilliH ' 'THE H USE PUDU8HTNGCqMPANV. W. N. Huso , N. A. Huso , President. Secretary EvnryTrlday Hy iiiati per year. 11.50. Entered at the poHtolllco at Norfolk , Nob. . UH Miccind class matter. "TulcpIimi-sT"lT < lltorlal Department No. 22. UiiHlnosB Office and Job Rooms No. II 22. _ _ _ i The first nll\or dollars wore coined by the United States mint In 17911. Bernard Shaw wants property and marriage abolished. If marriage Is abolished property will soon go , too. - - Telephone girls have to bo live feel high now , We have often thought they cut us off too short. The postoolllco appropriation bill calls for $241,000,000. liven letter writing IB a factor in the high cost of living. Now the Philadelphia strikers talk a nation-wide strike. You can't make a chain stronger by stretching out the llnkn. The price of meat Is again climb ing , and nothing will stop It but the thlrfty old habit of keeping n pig in the back yard. On reading the riot news from Philadelphia , we have to pinch our- nelves to make sure wo are not liv ing In 1910 B. C. The French senate has just passed a bill granting old ago pensions which the English commend as more busi ness like than their own. A New York man is trying to breed n tailless cat It Is doubtful if the world will appreciate his great effort If ho should be successful. It will come hard on Colonel Roosevelt velt to conform to the ways of Euro peans after having been a confirmed "gun toter" for all these months . The American legation at Bogota , Columbia , has been stoned , but that Is merely the playful way down there of expressing political opinions. The truly domesticated man must now pay the price of his redemption from the nomadic state , by cleaning up the back yard Saturday afternoons. Another blow to the-down trodden consumer ! It costs ? 17o to go by the new airship line from Munish to Ob- erammergau and back , eighty miles. Thirty thousand Frisco people will commemorate the birth of American ideals July 4 , by seeing Jeffries and Johnson give each other bloody noses. St. Patrick's day means more this year In England than for a long time before. The Irish nationalists have become a power to be reckoned with. The waste and sawdust from saw mills and planing mills Is being pressed Into solid sticks of firewood by machinery and thus made into ex cellent fuel. If Senator Hoot Is going to straight en out New York politics , he might as well quit attending to any trifling little job like being United States senator. James R. Garlleld Is a possible can didate for the governorship of Ohio , but It is not thought probable that Secretary Ballinger will manage his campaign. There is so much soiled linen to be washed in the Albany legislative in vestigation , that some patriots will have to go to bed for lack of any thing to wear. The senate favors giving the wan Bering Pottawatomies $447,339 , said tc have been long duo them. This will provide them with lire water for a number of weeks. The American people credit the Rockefeller foundation to our glorious national record for philanthropy , but If churches or missionary societies take "tainted money" they are oil > hypocrites. Colonel Roosevelt Is to receive frorr the lord mayor of London the freedon : of the city In a gold box. Almost any thing would be more suitable to present sent In a little box than freedom. It's paradoxical. A new Incentive has been added tc the war of the extermination of the brown rat , now being waged so ener getically In so many countries. Tht skins have been found useful for several oral commercial articles , such as bind Ing of books and making purses am gloves. Over in Germany they are grlndlni up their mountains to mix with thel cement pavement. They have discov ered that the lava thrown out by vol canoes , when ground up nnd mlxet with cement and baked In blocks It great kilns for two weeks makes thi most durable paving material that hai ever been tried. It Is scarcely safe to refer o tht thoughts which this weather bring ! Jest the mercury suddenly fall. Stil visions of robliiH , crocuses , warm rains , house cleaning , lilacs , dandelion greens , rugs to beat , tomato plants , umbrellas nnd rubbers always some where else when you want them , and n thousand and one spring tokens lilt through one's urn In as winter for n mo ment loosens Its grip on the earth. The John Jacob Astor divorce at tracts little attention In the atmos phere of New York's smart set. Cou ples that live In domestic pence and harmony are more of a news feature down there. There Is a growing sentiment against the overheating of school rooms and public buildings In general. It enervates the body and makes it more susceptible to disease. It has been discovered by actual ex periments that by feeding white hens on harmless dyes they will lay eggs of any color. This will In time do away with that mussy process of dyeIng - Ing Easter eggs. Mayor Gnynor of New York Is a disciple of the Pedestrian Weston. He refiiRCBo newspaper reporters Inter views at his office but allows them to accompany him on his long walks , if they can keep the pace. One paper commenting on the Rockefeller foundation starts with the hymn "How Firm a Foundation. " The Rockefeller millions do seem to give a pretty solid foundation to even a philanthropic experiment. The awakening of Americans to the need of manual training in the pub lic schools Is one of the most encour aging signs for the future. The boyer or girl who can make things has n wonderful start in life. More than a quarter of a billion dollars Is lost absolutely nnd forever each year in the United States through lire. Much of this loss might be pre vented by care. Care in building , and care In tire protection. John Milton was a poet nnd he was also a secretary of state. He left his idea about the conservation of natural resources recorded in Latin so heavy that It Is not often quoted , but It Is there nnd is very much to the point. Variety is not only the spice of life but its continuance. Intelligent recre ation , interests autslde the dally grind changes of scene these are not mere- j ly luxuries , they are necessities of life. Gladstone's son has been elevated to the peerage so often declined by his father. It is doubtful if he will stand any higher with his rank than did the "grand old man" without it. But without regard to this he is a worthy son of an honored man. You can never tell In what unlikely place cupid will manage to get In his work. A couple of ardent lovers aged respectively 75 and 77 eloped from the old peoples' home in Indi ana of which they were inmates and walked two miles to be married. This is not the first time in English history that the house of lords has been In disrepute. It was abolished for ten- years in the Cromwellian per iod. The king was also abolished in the most summary manner known. The country survived the shock , too. From the viewpoint of commerce , of foreign relations , of forld economics , of radical development , or of the spread of Christianity , the education of China along modern lines is one of the most important pioblems confronting Amer ica and Europe today. It directly con cerns the enllghtment of a quarter of the world's population. If the railroads believe that Norfolk has no chance to gain more favorable - able freight rates , they ought to bo glad to have the city try its case and find that out. And In case Norfolk is entitled to hotter rates , which people ple believe who have studied the sit uation , then there is no reason on earth why they should not be gone after. An exchange says "The only reason there are not a million cherry trees In bloom in Texas , is that there are not n million cherry trees In Texas. " The same might be said of many other states. When the soil of the United States is planted and cultivated as it is in the old world countries a wealth of blossom and fruitage will stretch from ocean to ocean. A Chicago packer says the American people could reduce the cost of thelt meat If they would use some of the cheaper cuts which contain just as much nutriment instead of insisting on rib and loin cuts. Undoubtedly there Is something In this. If Amerl can cooks would spend a little more time in the preparation of some ol the cheaper cuts a saving might be effected without any loss of comfort tt the family. So far people have been permitted to walk from one part of the "City ol Brotherly Love" to another. If they pursued their way quietly and peace ably , but drivers of delivery wagons who carried passengers during the strike wore arrested. Philadelphia It rotten politically. That Is why the * street car strike there Is more popu lar than an opera with n new tune. Ambassador-Brlce says In his Ameri can Commonwealth that "In only one particular have the Ameilcan people shown themselves Incapable of coif government and that Is In their cities. And why ? Because most men do not do their duty ns citizens. "Graft and corruption would disappear from our municipalities within two years If the good men wore at the same time good citizens. " says John C. Oswald of New York. Mr. Rockefeller made nn effort to win nn ultimate victory over disease by founding the Institution for Medi cal Research. Now ho has set his face against another and even more uni versally powerful foe poverty. He wishes to place some of his vast wealth to work toward the elimina tion of poverty from the land. Ho has undertaken nn appalling contract but the world will watch his experi ment with keen interest nnd earnestly hope for good results. Professor Zueblln reverses all prec edents and characterizes thrift ns a vice and urges his audience to spend freely In order that the standard of living may bo raised. For months' the present high rate of living In America has been deplored nnd condemned by writers and speakers , and the Inev itable result of a spendthrift policy set forth. In spite of Zueblln a bank ac count is far better than a deficit and it Is neither necessary nor wise to urge Americans to spend freely. It is their nature. It was recently stated that the foe of $775,000 received by Samuel Unter- meyer for effecting the merger of the Boston and Utah Copper companies was the largest fee ever paid a law yer. This is not true. James B. Dill was paid $100,000,000 for bringing about a settlement between Andrew Carne gie and II. C. Frlck and organizing the steel trust. These Immense fees re ceived by lawyers are said to be great temptations to supreme court judges to resign from the bench and once more enter the field where they will have chance to gain in a day a sum equal to the income on the bench in a lifetime. For unknown centuries the human race has been experimenting with different foods and trying to come to some definite idea as to what men should eat and what reject. As a mat ter of fact the problem instead of be ing satisfactorily solved , grows more complicated each year with the in troduction of new food products from foreign lands and the invention of new brands of breakfast foods. If a man were to attempt to follow half the rules laid down by so-called authori ties he would certainly be in a piti able plight. For the ordinary man , the best plan evolved so far is to us his common sense and eat mode rately of such foods as agree with him nnd furnish the strength needed for the work he does in the world. NEBRASKA PAYS WELL. Inasmuch as Noriom is at the pres ent time considering the question of frclcht rates , and for the benefit of the people of this entire section of the state , the following statement by the Nebraska railway commission is of interest : "The rates provided for the trans portation of lumber In carload lots In Nebraska is 11.9 cents per 100 pounds per 100 miles ; in Iowa the rate Is 6.3 per 100 pounds per 100 miles. The rate on wheat in Nebraska Is 11.4S cents ; in Iowa it is 8.1 cents. The rate on corn in Nebraska is 10.2 cents , while In Iowa it is 6.8 cents. On cat tle In Nebraska the rate Is 13.6 cents , while In Iowa It is 10 cents. The rate on hogs In Nebraska Is 17 cents , while in Iowa the rate is 11 cents. The rate on apples in Nebraska is 13.0 cents , vhiie In Iowa the rate is 8.4 cents. The rate on potatoes In Nebraska Is 11.9 cents , while in Iowa the rate Is 7.2 cents. The rate on c.oal In Ne braska Is $1.02 per ton , while In Iowa the rate Is 74 cents. " THE SONS OK ST. PATRICK. The genial and sunshiny good cheer usually associating Itself with St. Pat rick's day Is a reminder of the enor mous progress made among us by the son's and daughters of old Erin's Isle. When the so-called "railroad Irish , " who were doing the hard work of building our railways about fifty to sixty years ago , first begun to come over , who could have predicted how far their children and grandchildren would have climbed today ? Inside of these red shlrted and rough bearded old stollers there was purpose as firm as steel , to make their way In the world. And so today there has mingled with the old English race a , strain of warm hearted Celtic blood , distinguishable from the old stock by nothing except the mellow toned names of the old Irish country families. And today these old Irish names rank with the leaders of politics , busi ness and the professions. They bring here n genius for friendship , that makes them a political force , and n warm heart and whimsical humor that make them delightful companions. A DISTORTED VISION. It Is one thing to have high purpose nnd determination and quite another to have good eyesight If n man Is to do effective mid discriminating work In the world of affairs It Is quite nec essary that ho have nil thico. These elements are Just ns essential to a na tion as they are to an Individual , If that nation Is to "rise on utepplng- stones of its dead self to higher things. " The American people are suffering from astygmatlsm at the present time. They are rightfully alarmed at the tremendous power exorclncd by "prev- atory wealth , " the corruption so prev alent in public life , the low Ideals which characterize so many public servants. There is "a noble discon tent" abroad In the land which ex presses condemnation over the con tinued domination of the general weal by the special Interests of greed ana graft nnd cunning. This dissatisfac tion Is merging itself Into a high pur pose that this state of affairs shall cease to exist and that privilege must give way to the rule of the people. All this is encouraging , provided that the ends Aimed for nro reached In the right way and that wo really got after those who arc responsible for existing conditions and have the power to change them. It Is nt this particular juncture that purpose and Jetermlnatlon need to be accompanied by perception. However worfliv our plans , if we were not careful , we are apt to bungle them , not because of lack of Intentions which arc high , but simply from a vision which Is distort ed. , Such a danger Is peculiarly appar ent in the attitude of the people to ward President Taft. That they are extremely critical of him Is every where evident. At the end of his first year In the white house he finds his popularity greatly diminished. Wheth er or not the remaining years of his administration shall furnish such proofs of his personal devotion to the great principles of progress and civic righteousness as shall compel the people generous and well disposed In their intentions to reverse their present captiousness and give him hearty support , time only can tell. But it is the present with which wo are concerned. The unfortunate posi tion in which Mr. Taft finds himself Is that the presidential office has been so magnified In its Importance by the general public that the other branches of government have been lost sight of. This was due greatly to the career of his strenuous predecessor. Mr. Reese velt's temperament is impetuous and dominant , and while he was president his tremendously vibrant , virile per sonality was so potential that he ac tually eclipsed everything and every body else In anything he had to do with. He regulated or attempted to regulate everything under the sun from railroads to spelling books. He sent special messages to congress daily and the result is that he educat ed the people to believe that the pres ident was the man who not only did things , but the man who did it all. We are not minimizing the'splendid efforts of Theodore Roosevelt in awak ening the nation to the dangers which menaced it. But with all his excel lence , his defects as well bad a mark ed influence on the thought of the na tion and led It into some grievous er rors of judgment. President Taft suffers unfairly bt- cause of this in public opinion. The people naturally reason still from the Roosevelt viewpoint and honestly hold that If the credit is due the president for all the wise and commendable leg islation which is passed , then for all that is not done , he should likewise shoulder the blame. And here Is where the people themselves are man ifestly unfair. They are putting too much emphasis on the president's duty and forgetting that It belongs almost wholly upon the congress of the Unit ed States , the men whom the people of each congressional district and each state , by their own votes , have sent down to Washington as their ac > credited representatives. The facts are that President Taft has outlined and very clearly laid be fore congress a program of legislation remarkable for Its fullness and breadth of comprehension of the real needs of the country. These hills cover the conservation of our natural resources , the stricter regulation ol railroads , postal savings banks , con trol of industrial corporations , urge a bureau of public health , the modifying of injunctions and provides a bettei government In Alaska. No fair mind ed man will deny that hero Is lots ol work cut out for congress to do and work of the most admirable and progressive gressivo pattern. It is not for the president to legis late. That Is the business of con gress. That body has been In session now since early December and hat done little or nothing. It Is up to II to act It is up to the people , whose agents these men are , to see that they do what they wish done or know the reason why. President Taft Is not above crltl cism. When he deserves it it should be freely and candidly given. But he should not bo compelled to stand sponsor ser for the acts of congress. The pee pie and the press should spend somt of the time they devote to "hammer Ing" Taft to a more vigorous pound ing of the men they elect to congress to do their bidding. Legislation along the progressive lines outlined and advocated by Presl dent W. H. Taft should bo promptly ' enacted. The duty belongs to con gress. The president's duty , in this legald , has already boon ilom * . AROUND TOWN. Get that gree'ii ribbon ready. There's a sure enough building boom In Norfolk. Those are the days when you trry to stretch the last half ton of coal Into n ton. Norfolk avenue Is a hard looker. It'll be harder when It's covered with that brick. The Mabrny Mikes at Council Bluffs , being all assembled , ought to enjoy St. Patrick's day to the limit. "Teddy can't go around , " says a headline. But Toddy made a lot of other people go roud and round. Wo just shake off the coal man when along comes the Easter milliner to seize and bind us. Figuratively , of course. No matter how old you get , you al ways have that same feeling about wanting your mother to come homo , nfteT she's been away awhile. A dozen years ago a Norfolk hey attending Harvard was offered a trip to Europe for his summer vacation. There was an aged grandmother at home who was very dear to him and he wrote hack : "We won't always have mother with ns he always call ed her 'mother' and there'll be n good many years left In which to go to Euiope , so I guess I'll spend my vacation at home. " This week "mother" breathed her last and that young man came back to Norfolk to day for her funeral. It would be haul to put In words the Infinite hap piness which that voluntary college boy's act gave to that aged woman and what a remarkable tribute it waste to her. ATCHISON GLOBE SIGHTS. Every lawyer tries to be more or less like Abe Lincoln. Some men have so much enthusi asm that they haven't time for any thing else. I We admire the man who wina a medal , particularly if he leaves it at home. | A boy seldom follows the career mapped out for him by the school teachers. Men are all selfish. Tney would rather be late to dinner than to have to wait for it. Which , by the way , constitutes the Best Families in a town : Meat three times a day , or false hair ? The men can at least point with pride to the fact that no magazine de voted to their fashions has a million circulation. When a married man is an advocate of equal suffrage it is better proof that he is henpecked than that he loves his wife. There is one thing you must always make up your mind to : Some people don't know you , and wouldn't like you if they did. Think it over : How many people have treated you right in everything ? If you can think of more than one , you are lucky. "I am not overly particular , for a preacher. I admire the people who love their friends and hate their ene mies. " Parson Twine. There is some dispute as to which is tne proper form : "Someone's else" or "someone else's. " We aren't sure , but one or the other will apply to most of the hair you see the women wearing. The meanest man In this world Is the man who imposes on you because you are kind to him. People who are kind to you are so rare that you should appreciate them and not im pose on them. You often hear a man say : "Before I made the change i Investigated the proposition thoroughly. " It does very little good for us to Investigate a pro position thoroughly. The worst mis takes wo have ever made have been after thorough Investigation , and what we considered deep thought. Sent by a subscriber who lives In a distant town : "I lately read in your paper that every man hates to walk on the streets with a woman hanging on his arm. I supposed I was the only man in the world who didn't like that , but since reading your piece , I have inquired around , and all the men I know hate it" When a farmer's wife picks up a newspaper these days , her sniffs of scorn shake the cradle. The news papers and magazines have much to say of the Chantecler , and all the spring styles will have some nint ol the famous drama recently produced In Paris. Chantecler , a farmer's wife will tell you , unfastening her collar that her sniffs may have free exit , la French for hen and rooster. To put n rooster on a $30 hat , or embroider a hen on a $75 dross , when it is such a care to bring them through the roup , and rid thorn of mites , makes the farmer's wife hnvo a low-down opinion of city folks. "If they had tc take care of chickens awhile , " she says , unfastening her corsets so that there will bo no barrier to her sniffs , "they'd bo thankful to have chickens to eat , without wearing them. " Home Course In Domestic Science I. SfeScope ofDomestic Science. By EDITH G. CIIARLTON , In Charge of Domestic Economy , low * State College. Copyright. 1910. by American ttt Aiioclttlon. 12 purpose of this scries of ar Til ticles will bo an attempt to allow the illrcct relation between do mestic science and ordinary af fairs In the life of either men or wo men. Too many people have conceived the idea that domestic science chiefly couceniH those people who have more time for theorizing than for actual work. These think the BUbJect deals largely with air castles of the licllamy style of architecture nnd contains little null help for present day bomemiik- ors. There are some who still hold the opinion that such is the meaning and scope of domestic science , but their number Is rapidly decreasing on ac count of the introduction of the study of scientific homemaklng Into public schools , high schools and colleges. To be an aid to housekeepers who cannot take advantage of these courses of study as pi escribed In schools and col leges Is the ulin of this series of talks. One of the chief purposes of domes tic science is in tench men and women how to ll\e lightly , how to use ma terial thing * In such a way as to get tin1 highest good , the best results , from them. The M lein-e concerns men quite as much as UODHMI , and It means much more than ( he commonly accept ed Idea Unit It has most to do with cooUng and eating and washing dishes. These things are of course Included In the Mini ) and. 1 assure yon , that even these t'M eedlngly common affairs of life are deserving of a higher place in the wonderful process of living than is usually accorded them. Life Is a serious business , and noth ing which pertains to It is either a joke or n trifle. Therefore anything which helps to give even the common- COOIUNO BY ItULE. est things their true Importance and assists men and women to be better mentally and physically Is worthy due consideration and a fair trial from every individual. So. while these talks concern the housekeeper more closely perhaps than they do men , the latter tire not exempt from at least an honest Interest in their subject matter. Those who have anything to do with stock know how Important It is that the animals be properly fed tu order that they may be sultuWe tor their special purpose. Men give a great deal of study to the different methods of feeding cows and pigs. They talk wisely about whether It Is better to feed corn or peas for fattening pur poses. They are careful , too , to see that the soil on which the apple or chard Is planted contains the proper elements to make strong , productive trees. But when It comes to the dally bill of fare for human beings the aver age man and woman give It very little thought. At least It Is the common rule to eat what Is set before us or what our fancy and appetite suggest , until we have so long disregarded the laws of nature that our digestive or gans rebel , and we can't eat even the plainest food without discomfort. It is a fact that the average person knows less about his own anatomy and the functions of bis body than about almost any other subject. Think lor a moment of the many noted men who uro laid aside In early middle life because their digestive organs are worn out And no wonder they refuse to perform their duties ! We wouldn't treat a thrashing machine as wo treat ourselves and not expect the machine to be good for nothing Inside six months. The illustration is more near ly parallel with the case than perhaps you think. Te man feeds his engine with coal and wood in order to get en ergy from It. lie also expects to get eiu-rgy. growth and continued life from ills food ; at least that Is the true rea son why he cats. Yet how many men and women are there who from an or dinary bill of fare can select the foods which build tissue make brain nnd bjood-nnd which are most suitable for the .production of beat and energy ? The selection of food for the table In order that It may be truly nourishing and may yield the necessary material for growth la one of woman's greatest tasks. To be the maker of a home from which strong men ant ) women shall uo forth to build und kccu a mi- /tl , 1 EDITH G. CHAULTON tton powerful and united is the high est task given to human beings. This Is woman's true work. Is she honest ly equipped and trained for It' . ' The Task of Homemaklng , Woman's share In the well being ol the family dcmamlH not only an Intel llgent knowledge of the principles ol her work , but also Interest and enthu fclnmn in It. To be a really successful housekeeper a woman must be an en thuslastlc housekeeper. Very few , II any , men have achieved success In any work to which they htivo given only part of their thought and a niggardly share of their enthusiasm. I believe that the largest per cent of UIIHUCCCSH fill housekeepers Is always found among the women who are cither do Ing their work Ignorantly and accord Ing to somebody's tradition or because their Interest and enthusiasm arc given to some other person's work. Why Is the opinion so general among both men anil women that housekeeping requires a little less Intelligence than almost any other kind of work ? Why Is It that the most Incompetent person Is the one who generally offers her serv ices In domestic work ? "She would do better In some one's kitchen" Is the re mark vnry often made of the unsuc cessful woman. What a Housekeeper Should Know. It requires just as much brains to keep a house as It should be kept us It does to perform any other kind ot work. It requires Just us much knowl edge and energy to make a home which truly fullllls all the term implies as It docs to engage In any other In dustry. And no other wo'rk demands quite as much of the whole hearted In terest , the real person , B does home- making. One good reason why there are so many Indifferently managed homes Is because housekeeping In gen eral has not as yet been put on the same plane as other Industries. One reason why so many women are need lessly wearing themselves out In their task of providing food and shelter for their families Is because of lack ol knowledge of the fundamental prin ciples of their work. Lack of train ing and practical education Is re sponsible for many housekeeping fail ures. A woman said to me : "I cook for my family because I must , not be cause 1 lia\e any Interest In the art. for I thoroughly dislike It. " "Arc you a good cook ? " I said. "No. I am not , " was the answer. "If I am ever suc ; cessful It Is due to luck more than skill , because I really know nothing about the science of It. and , after years of experience , I simply can't get Interested In It. " Unless this woman is quite unlike the rest of humanity , her dlbllke can be traced to her fail ures , for no one dislikes to do that which he can do really well Just a little better perhaps than tiny one else. The woman who finds pleasure In mak ing bread Is generally the woman who has won the blue ribbon tit the county fair and who bus a reputation for be ing the best breadmaker In the town ship. She knows something about yeasts und flour , understands the prop er temperature for breadmuklng and finds her task a pleasure because she has had Millie-lout interest In it to be come familiar with Its science. The lioiibekeeper's work. If properly performed , gives regular exercise to nil her faculties. If she understands , us she should , the effect of heat und culd upon fuutl materials , upon liquids and solids , she will have a working knowledge of physics. If she knows something about digestion and per sonal hygiene bhe will not be a stran ger to the study of physiology. Her Intelligent handling of acids , alkalis and the treatment of the different fab rics In the laundry will necessitate a familiarity with chemistry. If she un derstands the scientific side of can ning and preserving and the preser vation of food by other methods , as well as the processes of cheeaemaklng. sterilizing , etc. , she will be on familiar terms with household bacteriology. If she does not understand these simple truths , so closely related to her work. Ignorance of them naturally presup poses working In the dark. The Well Rounded Life. The aim of life should not be to ppcud all the effort of our days In working simply to satisfy the physical needs of the body without any thought for mental development. True It is that a sound mind is usually found In n sound body , but it Is also true that an empty head , like an empty stomach. Is equally susceptible to poi sons. Where all thought nnd effort are given to acquiring wealth , winning social or political position without tak ing into account the other side of life the side which means the right at titude toward the world , our neigh bors and ourselves a great deal of true living has been overlooked an < l missed. A Lon.rj Felt Want. An American once went to Windsor castle and Insisted upon seeing Queen Victoria. He was told that H was quite Impossible , as an audience with the queen could be had only by ap pointment. Still he persisted , and then they told him llntfootcd that before seeing the queen he must state the oh- KM of his visit lie said ho wanted lo bhow her n new piece of furniture , a throne bed-a perfect throne by day and a perfect bed by night