DICTIONARY OF AUSTRALIAN WORDS AND TERMS.pdf
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A Dictionary of Australian Words And Terms
Lawson, Gilbert H.
University of Sydney Library
Sydney
1997
http://setis.library.usyd.edu.au/ozlit
© University of Sydney Library.
The texts and Images are not to be used for commercial purposes without
permission
Source Text:
Prepared from the print edition published by Direct Hosiery Company,
Balmain, Sydney, 1924?
Compiled specially for the Direct Hosiery Company, Daily Telegraph
Building, King Street, Sydney, N.S.W., to aid those competing in its series
of Australian Picture Puzzles Contests.
Introduction by Reginald Lloyd.
All quotation marks retained as data
All unambiguous end-of-line hyphens have been removed, and the trailing
part of a word has been joined to the preceding line.
First Published: 1924
Australian Etexts
dictionaries
1910-1939
prose nonfiction
Dictionary of Australian Words and Terms
Balmain, Sydney
Direct Hosiery Company
1924?
CONTESTS OF SKILL
The Ease The Harness Where It Galls
(By REGINALD LLOYD)
Achievement — to attain our objective — is one of the things nearest and
dearest to the human heart. To ease the harness where it galls us, is probably the
next most coveted human aim.
So when these two things are found, hand in hand, as the couplet so frequently
are found in Contests of Skill, then human enthusiasm takes hold of us.
On such occasions, we who are practical are prone to play the searchlight around
ourselves in the hope of discovering the cause of our triumph If we have won, and
if we have lost, why our failures are so many and our successes so few. Some of
us, in the latter case, blame the judges, others blame ourselves. The result or such
personal analysis, when the situation is looked fairly and squarely in the face with
candour and without prejudice or favour, never fails to reveal the fact that it is the
person who has put his or her very last ounce of effort into the self- imposed task,
that comes out a prize- winner.
The successful entrants are always thorough in their methods, always look upon
their self- imposed task as something worth while, and treat it accordingly; never
do they view it as incidental, declining always to allow other subjects to share
their thoughts while engaged upon solving, what is to the serious- minded person,
a problem of consequence; and herein lie the reasons why their names figure in the
prize list “when the numbers go up.” This is really the whole secret of success
where cash prize contests of skill are concerned, and if the less painstaking would
only bear these facts in mind they could frequently score a victory, where now
they fail to succeed. It is quite a happy sensation that thrills one, one fine morning
when the early post brings a formal little business letter containing a cheque for
several hundred pounds, and conveying the news that as a result of our
concentration and thoroughness we are among the successful competitors. That is
the way to ease the harness where it previously galled us.
These successes come not, however, to the “fritterers.” To those whose lives
have just been a succession of fits and starts of darting forward and going back, of
hesitating until too late, or postponing the task to take up some trivial social
matter; to such temperaments my advice is: Shed those habits forthwith, if you
want to win a contest of skill.
In connection with contests a useful lesson may be learned by studying the
characters and methods of others who have excelled as competitors.
Never do I think of contests without thinking at the same time of that great
newspaper magnate. the late Sir Arthur Pearson, who, in the world of British
journalism, was second only to the late Lord Northcliffe.
When just a mere lad, and while looking about for a vocation, Pearson's eye was
caught by an advertisement in a popular weekly newspaper. It offered a situation
at a salary of £ 100 a year to the reader who secured the highest marks in
answering 10 questions each week for three months. Pearson entered this contest.
and with energy and thoroughness applied himself to the task of winning it. To
consult the necessary reference books in the nearest library he had to bicycle over
30 miles to Bedford and 30 miles back, and sometimes he covered the 60 miles
three times a week. He won the contest and got the job. In after years Pearson
seldom referred to his rapid progress in business without emphasising the
important part the winning of that contest had played in his career.
There are others, too, besides Pearson who possess a fervent love for the
memory of some past contest, the result of which they continue to enjoy. Mr.
Eugene Hartman, of this city, who, in 1921, won the Sunday Times £ 1 a week for
life contest, is one of them and Mr. G. J. McLeod, of Tasmania, who in March this
year won £ 151 in the Direct Hosiery Co.'s contest, is another, while Mrs. B. R.
Barron, of Watson's Bay (Sydney), Miss E. M Griffin, Armadale (Victoria), Mr.
D. A. McIntyre, Inverell (N.S.W.), Miss Constance J. Shannon, Meckering (W.A.)
and Miss M. Ingles, York Street, Launceston (Tas.), also won cash prizes varying
in value from £ 32 to £ 2 in the previous contest conducted by the Direct Hosiery
Co.
Elsewhere in this issue particulars are given of a contest now being conducted
by the Direct Hosiery Company, in which it is possible for any one person to win
£ 351, and many other prizes are also offered to those who would like to tread in
the footsteps of Sir Arthur Pearson Mr. Eugene Hartman, Mr. G. J. McLeod, and
others who make a hobby of winning these simple exercises in skill. — From
“Smith's Weekly.” April 12, 1924.
A Dictionary of Australian Words and
Terms
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