OCR Text |
Show Strong arm tactics seldom win out in the end. They may triumph tor a time, but sooner or later the one who uses them comes to grief and is promptly kicked to the rear. You have noticed, of course, that in an argument the strong arm advocate ad-vocate in his own estimation is always al-ways right and the other fellow is completely wrong. There is no debateable ground for him. You, perhaps, have also noticed l hat it is generally the other fellow w ho is in the right, because "other fellows" are invariably men who reason things out before they begin to make a noise. ' The strong arm man depends upon ids tongue work and his bull dog I enaeity. The other fellow depends upon his brain work and upon the ability of he public to understand calm and i amnion sense reasoning. 'These are things it might be well lo remember in the training of children. child-ren. As the child is trained in youth, o will it be when it arrives at the ige of maturity. |