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Show IJOI.VO THE SHOFl'IXG If human nature were not what it Is, the Christinas season sea-son might not be one of rush and worry over what to buy, and sales forces would not be rushed to exhaustion in the two or three weeks before the event. If people did their shopping shop-ping when it could be done under un-der the least congested conditions, condi-tions, it might extend ovei months instead of weeks, and it would not be less seasonable. However, none but the exceptional excep-tional person thinks of doing shopping until it cannot be put off longer. Then it becomes an ordeal and is so strenuous that It tends to rob the season of tht "cheer and goodwill" that attach at-tach to it sentimentally. The "good will" might actually pervade per-vade the shoppers were they not overworked trying to find whal they want and struggling to gel It. Yet It would not be Christmas Christ-mas for a lot of people were 11 otherwise. They have beconu so accustommed to waiting anc then making a hurrry up job ol It, that they would not feel righi were it done betimes. Human nature is a peculiai thing despite the fact that we all have it. It wouldn't be human hu-man nature if it wasn't odd. II we did everything in a reasonable reason-able and sane way, we would nol be human beings. We would be super-human, and that is toe much to expect. It is the prerogative pre-rogative of human beings to dc as they please and of course most of us please to delay as long as ye can, the doing ol what we cannot avoid. There handed in Christmas shopping but they are rare and so different differ-ent from the mass that thej , are odd, , too t There is more parking space around a library than around a movie theatre. It is easy to figure out what you should have said after it is too late to say it. Character is made by the things you stand for; reputation reputa-tion is made by the things you fall for. |