| Show Jhe Trouble With Our Life In this country the great cry seems continually to be overwork overwork and no class of people utter the cry so much as 4ne brain worker all over the land although the complaint Is not confined to such persons alone I was only the I other night In a theatre that I overheard over-heard a man sitting directly back of I me bewailing the condition of one of his children who was threatened with some nervous malady His friend observed that one of fl t own I daughter hid been suderiiig for come time wit nervous prostration Xervous prostration In a Sir of 17 What irony And yet this casually overheard remark as to tlie condition of tat young girl is but an Instance of hundreds of similar cases Where dou > tlie fault lie CcrUinly tills was not the experience undergone by our mothers and grandmothers Where to1 tho fault He In the present mode of existence JJax Elts Letter |