Walter Clyde Jones, 

 Director 



^%^H-. 



this world where the possession of mere weakh does not 

 necessarily assure its possessor of the occupancy of the 

 heights. 



The owning of the best horse is not always, nor neces- 

 sarily, a question of merely having money enough. Some 

 poor devil that we might be able to buy, or sell, may own 

 a horse immeasurably better than all others are, and have 

 for that horse a feehng that would compel him to decline 

 to part with him, for all the wealth that could be show- 

 ered upon him and for which no simi of money would be 

 any temptation as an exchange. 



From a day far beyond the dawn of time, the horse 

 has been man's inseparable companion; has accompanied 

 him through all the stages of his progress down the cen- 

 turies and the dawn of the twentieth century shows no 

 indication that the long term of his dominion approaches, 

 nor that his sovereign reign is about to be abdicated, 

 before the inroads of any self-propelled vehicle, nor that 

 the touching caress of his soft muzzle is to disappear in 

 an atmosphere tainted in the fiunes of dividolized gasoline. 

 Horses have been and will continue to be man's insepar- 

 able companion, just as long as the human heart responds 

 to sympathy and the lnunan eye is subject to the appeal 

 of beautv. 



Doctor Grayson Tells How to Keep Well 



"Horseback Riding the Best of All Exercise" 

 for Business and Professional Men, He Says 



F the present universal use of automobiles and elevators 

 is continued we may expect our great grandchildren 

 to be born without legs," is the rather startling declara- 

 lion recently made by Dr. Gary T. Grayson, in writing 

 about the importance of exercise and the way in which 

 modern mechanical conveniences are leading so many per- 



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