SHAKESPEARE ON MOTOR TRAFFIC
Traffic-strangled motorists who tend to long for the “good old days” might well face the fact that things were no better then. In witness whereof we give you this late report on early road conditions by that peerless commentator, William Shakespeare, late of Stratford-on-Avon, England, as recently recorded in the New York Times Magazine:
“The horn, the horn, the lusty horn
Is not a thing to laugh to scorn.”
—As You Like It.
“These high wild hills and rough uneven ways
Draw out our miles and make them wearisome.”
—Richard II.
“Give me that mattock and the wrenching iron.”
—Romeo and Juliet.
“Oh, let him pass.”
—King Lear.
“A very dangerous flat.”
—The Merchant of Venice.
“He must needs go that the devil drives.”
—All’s Well That Ends Well.
“What, will the line stretch out to the crack of doom?”
—Macbeth.
“Traffic confound thee.”
—Macbeth.
“Smile, once more: turn thy wheel.”
—King Lear.
“Is this a holiday?”
—Julius Caesar.
“I can no further crawl, no further go.”
—A Midsummer Night’s Dream.
“I must shift.”
—The Merry Wives of Windsor.
“With what strict patience have I sat.”
—Love’s Labour’s Lost.
Riders of the Andes At the Grand National
OCTOBER 28 TO NOVEMBER 6
Herdsman Arnold Leonard of Stockton Ranch, Morgan Hill, leads Hereford heifers to the judging ring at Grand National.
The famed “Riders of the Andes,” elite cavalry troop of the Army of Chile, will be featured at the Grand National Livestock Exposition, Horse Show and Rodeo to be held in the San Francisco Cow Palace October 28 to November 6. Termed the world’s most spectacular group of horsemen, the 32 riders and horses will come to the Cow Palace as the result of two years of negotiations and a special decree of the Chilean Congress.
The National Hereford Show and Sale and the Pacific Coast Aberdeen-Angus Association Show and Sale are part of the livestock exposition, one of the nation’s “big six” shows.
New classes have been added to the national full-division horse show.
Top-ranking contestants of the United States and Canada will ride in the championship rodeo.
Regular performances will be held each of the ten evenings, starting at 8 o’clock, with matinees on the Saturdays and Sundays of October 29 and 30 and November 5 and 6, starting at 2 o’clock. Prices will range from $1.25 to $3.50.
An added performance this year will be a children’s matinee Friday, November 4, with a universal admission price of 50 cents.