THIS PAGE IS DEDICATED 
to the pseudo political leaders, who have sponsored new deal 
delusions. 
The solution to present economic chaos can be found in history, 
based on wisdom and experi^ce of past generations. 
TO WIT: 
“A vacant mind is open to ail suc:x:estions as a hollow buildine echoes 
all sounds.” —Chinese proverb. 
P n aciical Adaice. 
Written by Lord Macauley, more than .100 years ago. 
“Our rulers will best promote the improvement of the people by strictly 
confining themselves to their own legitimate duties—by leaving Capital to 
find its most lucrative course, commodities their fair price, industry and 
intelligence their natural reward, idleness and folly their natural punishment 
—by maintaining peace, by defending property, by diminishing the price 
of law and by observing strict economy in every department of the state. 
Let the government do this; the people will assuredly do the rest.” 
A ^e44A WoaJU jCUiColtt 
In view of the current loose 
thinking on thrift and honest wealth, 
it might be well to recall these words 
of Abraham Lincoln, spoken on March 
21, 1864: 
“Property is the fruit of labor; 
property is desirable; it is a positive 
good in the world. That some should 
be rich shows that others may become 
rich, and hence is just encouragement 
to industry and enterprise. Let not 
him who is homeless pull down the 
house of another, but let him work 
diligently and build one for himself, 
thus by example assuring that his 
own shall be safe from violence 
when built.” 
*JodG4f> 
“It is a gloomy moment in history. Not for many years—not in the 
lifetime of most who read this—has there been so much grave and deep 
apprehension; never has the future seemed so incalculable as at this time. 
In our own country there is universal commercial prostration and panic and 
thousands of our poorest fellow citizens are turned out against the 
approaching winter without employment and without the prospect of it. 
“In France the political caldron seethes and bubbles with uncertainty; 
Russia hangs as usual, like a cloud dark and silent upon the horizon of 
Europe; while all the energies, resources and influences of the British Empire 
are sorely tried, and are yet to be tried more sorely, in coping with the vast 
and disturbed relations in China. 
“It is a solemn moment, and no man can feel an indifference—which 
happily no man pretends to feel—in the issue of events. 
“Of our own troubles (in the U. S. A.) no man can see the end. They 
are, fortunately, as yet mainly commercial; and if we are only to lose money, 
and by painful poverty to be taught wisdom—the wisdom of honor, of faith, 
of sympathy and of charity—no man need seriously to despair. And yet the 
very haste to be rich, which is the occasion of this widespread calamity, has 
also tended to destroy the moral forces with which we are to resist and 
subdue the calamity.” 
When worrying too much about today, remember that the above 
article is reprinted from Harper’s Weekly, Vol. 1, page 642, of the 
issue dated October 10, 1857, 81 YEARS AGO!—Quitman, Ga., 
Free Press, April 7, 1938. 
2783 YEARS AGO 
A Chinese thought from the wisdom of the 
Far East, as set into English by Upton Close, from 
the BOOK OF RITES: “An emperor knows how 
to govern when poets are free to make verses, people 
to act plays, historians to tell the truth, ministers 
to give advice, the poor to grumble at taxes, students 
to learn lessons aloud, workmen to praise their 
skill and seek work, people to speak of anything, 
and old men to find fault with everything.”—From 
an address of the Duke of Shao to King Li-Wang, 
circa 845 B. C. E. 
Bellevue, Wash.—"Camellias came in 
tine shape, must of them are putting on 
new growth." 
Berkeley, Calif., Feb. 15, 1938 .—"The 
Camellias from your gardens which I 
bought several years ago have grown 
beautifully and are blooming gloriously 
now." A.F.B. 
