Show howe flowe about making a fortune problem for stenographers reading by ED HOWE OW la Is a fortune made in seven H HOW on out t of ten tea this Is the process A young man finds himself with a wife on his hands and a family of children coming on bow how universally children keep keel coming on 1 he works and saves with a view of providing for them from an expert workman he becomes foreman superintendent proprietor in a small way and works long iong hours he discovers that the more reliable he Is the more he be helps in community affairs the more his business prospers in course of time his little business becomes a big business it if he continues to manage tt it well finally along toward W ard old age he becomes well to do occasionally rich and at forty fifty or sixty he be Is more reliable than he was at twenty or at thirty when a small business man foreman or superintendent in lit there is nothing in the general belief that as soon as a good workman Is advanced he becomes more careless in his morals A man in florida separated from his wife employed a woman S as his secretary one day when the secretary came out of her office she was shot and killed by the wife five balls were fired bred and although women are supposed to be poor pistol shots every one was deadly was the trouble between the husband and wife due to the bad acts of the secretary if the secretary was actually an honest woman seven newspaper readers out of ten and the twelve jurymen juryman to be called later to decide the case will believe she was not it Is an exhibition of human unfairness that the millions of good girls who study stenography at business colleges must consider to 0 0 books newspapers magazines and pamphlets have become so numerous many say they are a pest still in the stream of print Is all the wisdom the race has accumulated and all the good writing the problem Is to find it in the pile of rubbish I 1 have a friend of reasonable taste who Is an enormous reader he gets his bis start in selecting books of possible value by belonging to book clubs in new york and has accumulated a great number of such selections I 1 lately visited him and came away w with ith ten he specially recommended only three of them actually interested me although I 1 looked over the others and found some curious things in the process books are like men so many of them do not amount to anything I 1 know an old fellow who walks occasionally sio nally for the of the exercise and fresh air and during these walks lie he looks straight ahead that he may see as few men as possible 0 0 the english says a canadian writer seem to have a world perspective a world outlook and world philosophy unequaled by any other people on earth I 1 neither deny nor accept the statement but it causes me to wonder just how much truth there is in it I 1 should say france and germany are close rivals of england as possessing on an average the wisest and most efficient inhabitants up to the time of the war germany was crowding england for first place since the war france has shown itself smarter than either of its rivals the united states is entirely out of the competition not because of lack of efficiency but be cause lack of common sense has become our national misfortune some say the island of java is the garden of eden so tar far as ease of making a living Is concerned and that the rule of the hollanders comes near being tile wisest and best denmark sweden norway should be considered in picking out the country best managed switzerland although it has far better scenery than soil has long attracted attention as specially well mana managed ged so far car as public affairs are concerned as la in reading sea stories I 1 have observed that when there Is a strong wind a good captain drives his ship and takes risks occasionally he meets disaster from driving too hard in a roaring gale at best the decks the cook house and life boats are afloat and the sailors get little rest the best captains take chances in ID everything to get along still a man mail who drives ills his ship in a hurricane to make up for the days he Is be calmed must have sound judgment sound knowledge as to the strength of ropes masts and sails 0 0 0 in my home in the country I 1 have heard no show commended as much as of thee I 1 sing the show has not come within two or three hundred miles of me but travelers to the big towns have seen it and told me of its unusual cleverness the writers of the play have made a great fortune soon we will be hearing of their yachts their strings of race horses of their being sued for alimony cot con anyone doubt they have won their dl distinction and money honest honestly lyl any poor man who abuses them because they do not divide with him or 01 charges we need a new form of gov because these men have sue ceedee Is unfair and mean these men spent many a day ant an dollar in drilling try dry holes now that they hake haie struck oil they are fairia entitled to all a gusher may bring lu in D 1933 gurll or ic |