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Show Thirteen Mistakes of life. Judge Detoul of a London court has discovered thirteen mistakes of life. There may be more, the ones he enumerates enu-merates follow: To attempt to set up your own standard stan-dard of right and wrong and expect everybody to conform to it. To try to measure the enjoyment of others by your own. To expect the uniformity of opinion opini-on in this world. To look for judgment and experience experi-ence in youth. ' To endeavor to mould all dispositions disposi-tions alike. Not to yield to unimportant trifles. To look for perfection in your own actions. To worry yourselves and others about what cannot be remedied. Not to help everybody, wherever, however and wherever you can. To consider anything impossible that we cannot ourselves perform. To believe only what our finite minds can grasp. Not to make allowances for the weakness of others. To estimate people by some outside quality, for it is that within which makes the man. Judge Thomas C. Tr?in of New York gives thirteen rules to offset the "thirteen rules" given above. He says: Keep your head at all times. Trust yourself before everyone else. Do not deal in lies. Do not give way to hating, even though you are hated. Do not look too good. Do not look too wise. Talk with the crowds, but keep your virtue. Walk with kings if you will, but do not lose sight of the common people. peo-ple. Live every day so that neither your friends nor your foes can hurt you. Let all men count with you, but none too much. Make allowances for. all doubts. Fill every minute with sixty seconds se-conds of work. s BE A MAN! ' |