Show i T The Gloved Gi ved Thumb L dont don't believe in advertising says the conservative st store stoic e We ye We d dont don't nt WE vv handle ad advertised ver goods we we we still follow tl the e good old fashioned old ned methods methods could and goods The rile good old fashioned methods any any any price they get any that would get the price Every store that doesn't advertise isn't tricky but a merchant chant is Tess less likely to t l protect his good n name mine when he lie ha hasn't nt invested a fortune in promoting it ita You Yon can believe in the character r of any establishment that regularly spends money r to create confidence Advertising doesn't p pay a y if it isn't honest lionet and audits audit's its it's cheaper to be honest than to pay for unprofitable advertising Advertising is protection id identification warranty va lanty of qua quality ity and of value value- No merchant calls caUs attention to himself if he isn't prepared to profit by examination examination examination exam exam- exam exam- of his wares and his ways J Conservatism in this day of modern methods i is s frequently a cloak f for r cupidity cupidity-a a a protecting glove glov-e love against thumbprints thumb Reliability is ea eager er to tosh sh show w wIts its hand d I Colleges Cant Can't ant Teach T It t All i JATI N isn't the completion ion of a mans man's schooling but the equipment with uth l which ch to pro promote EDU EDUCATION E mote it Rules a are at their best but mental levers levels wrenches and handles Schools and colleges b are merely storage sta stations ions where recorded ideas of the universe have been assembled and or Org organized garb ze d for the student so o that th t he lie may learn the thoughts of and experiences of all the generations and compare them with his lus own The rhe two mam main purposes of education are arc to enable us to grasp truths more readily and to toJ J Team learn n how to learn leani from others from life No man can graduate l I r Where ere Are re the Roses o of Yesterday 1 y A lt It ago b go the young cuirassier was the strong man of Bergerac Berger c. c Now he he fumbled A CAR AY-CAR LX along ong on his new Dew leg nodding response to the commiserating salutes of the passers assers As ho lie reached Paillards an American woman emerged from the restaurant and impulsively to touched ched his folded sleeve then noting the ribbon of the Legion she said How splendid to be bea bea of France Prance a a hero Thank you madam accepting with a queer twisted smile a rose from her corsage You You all kind he paused now are very good they good they are very Today I have my hour I am as madam has so generously said a a hero of France But Butt t tomorrow f and through all the years I shall be ho pointed his stump at the emergency peg w with th which the thc Republic equips her mangled sons simply one of Europe's million crippled men Madam I wonder Iwonder how many passing ladies will then pause to pin pm flowers on my coat coatY Copyright 1916 by Herbert Kaufman Great Britain and All Other RIghts nights Reserved r a |