'7 PAGE noon» .>i|E EH lHlUTTFTflWN BUAHIIIAN I Illllll Dolly (founded I881) $.00 pa: your (lli advance) dollvontl- in you (In advance; mailed in Ouiodn and United Statue. Notes by the Way NOT infrequently the question is put: What influence has na- tionality on progress and to ‘which nation does the British Empire owe THE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN an“; ‘The Money That may]? I Makes Presidents- of» It is plain fact that not one elec- tion in ten swings on such thinss “GOLD EN RULE” NASH Condensed from Forbes Magazine, (June, ’28.) Charles W. Wood. When Arthur Nhsh died six AUGUST 1,1928 , RT. iioii- ii. ii. BEllllETT x most for its development? A Sum- mer School for American Teachers was held this month at Oxford, at which the inaugural address was delivered by Sir Michael Sadler, Master of University College, who chose for his subject, “England in the Nineteenth Century," in which he made a most interesting refer- ence to the personnel of the makers of the Empire, and we make no applogy in giving an extract from his illuminating address here. as issues, personalities. or DIBUOYIIIS-mionths ago, he had become the Nine times out of ten. when there ifljhead of the largest business o! its a real fight between the parties,;kind in America, and had done it success hinges almost wholly on'through deliberately planning w what have been called “current ex- ruin his business. He was. above pauses.” By that is meant sufllcieniheverything, a religious man who felt . I , , King s Bounty, Friday, llug. l0 imoney on glecflun day to m, least that being true to his beliefs was » t Prevent the opposition from corrall-‘mogflclééislgortant thflh Bfly 0th" kind GEORGETOWN. AT 3 p_ M_ l‘ 1 f m mm b r a enough to employ your share of the? It W95 in 1919» as the head of ‘l SOURIS AT 8 P. M. p ay or e c ecause or little tailoring establishment. that number of years I have been Privil-iwipmyable‘ .. ‘he suddenly found himself the pre- QUEEN'S COUNTY. SATURDAY. AUGUST llth. ‘ t ex enses are not the . lfrslird to see its effects ‘been youns gmfififgg“ legitfkam expenses flcjprietor of a sweatshop which he had. o ks l" . . u t‘ ‘counted for in the statements of po- "w" mduced m buy Mr ashwen the shock of. _ h as meetings. into the shop and got chest became wider, the body as a mica] treasurer“ sue ' d 8t the! . l ' h d w I his life. He was appalle whole IXIIOTG agile, and the mincwwolgigclpig Eggiggzglga pufigcflgarpagilxretchedgessbislspiacislly; lfiertpesiilgfliiytf PRINCE QQUNTY, MONDAY, AUGUST 13th more aert. _ " - ’ ' 0 all 0 W a - I have spoken also about its valuelqfglei igfi$pgéssartx$ngagna€$eghfoltliféi0V9!‘ her machine for the munificent TIGNISII AT 2 l‘. M. , Quilts MISS y MILIIIAINEII BENNETT l """""”w..§ °""“1'.a" 2'31"" s'fi’°'§'i"'““"5’ii“o”""'°"' in A o — t. D. . ac unoii. . . . ' Idltor and Hunger-J. ‘I. Burnett. Anoelan Editor-D. K. (link w w- M". #4; ARE PLAYGROUNDS ‘wolvrn wHlLE? I talk often about the - value of m3 the entire veml vote-money of WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 1, 1928 Up to July 15th, 78.000 United States cars were registered in New increase of from SIGNIFICANT. PICNIC EXHIBITION GROUNDS AT l P. M. BANQUET BEACH GROVE HOTEL 8 P, M, cordial, even affectionate, re- ception tendered the l-fon. R. B. Bennett during his tour of Canada wherever he goes is significant. Brunswick, an thirty-five to forty per cent. over the tourist business of last year. In this Province the falling off began As la physician I could see how the “The subject oi’ your course is enthralling; but to the writer of its . s, wq There is a cause. Canadians have been watching for several years past the doings of the Government at Ottawa. and it is not too much to say that a general opinion is grow- ing; that things are not all right at Ottawa. The fiscal policy upon which the trade of Canada mainly depends has been manipulated through hands other than those of the Government. Some time ago a Tariff Advisory Board was appointed to investigate the whole question of Customs du- ties, and to advise the Government. At the very outset the partisan nature and purpose of this Advisory Board was clearly shown. One of about the 15th of July. The execu- tive instance a case which occurred at Borden recently in which three respectable women returning to Charlottetown from a pilgrimage to St. Anne de Beaupre had their hand baggage confiscated, but which was returned several days afterward with or without apologies. The con- fiscation took place in the presence of scores of passengers en route to [the Island. The effect upon in- ‘tending visitors may well be imag- ined. New Brunswick papers chron- icled the incident along withyother ' restrictions to be met with here. I {Q}- 1 I ur T0 MR. KING. the members appointed had ex-l pressed some views which were con- trary to the line which the Govern- ment had purposed following. He was immediately displaced. The Tariff Advisory Board has been. functioning for some time, and it has become very evident that its purpose is to safeguard the Govern- ment rather than the country. The sessions of this Board have been at- tended by a so-called representative of a so-called Consumers‘ Leagues. league which never existed, and which was the product of a political move. The Consumers’ League gave very many reasons why certain du- ties should be imposed, and why certain other duties should be re- duced. The League represented no- body but the political manipulators who were behind it; its advice to the Government was therefore one- sided and partisan. In other lines the Government has shown its hand notably in the Immigration Depart- ment, which now it appears is domi'n- ‘ ated by a labor organization. The l OME of the smaller Liberal news- i papers. because they have no jother answer to give, profess to rc- lgard as “silly" the question asked ‘by the Hon. R. B. Bennett, “what iport is Mr. King steering for? If he imeans Canadian independence, let ihim say so." i The Toronto Globe, the leading Liberal newspaper in Canada, re- lgards the question as a very serious lone. This is the way The Globe puts it:- “The Prime Minister canot afford to ignore the direct challenge thrown down by Mr. Bennett at Oshawa on . Saturday." i, This question has gone ringing I l round the news cables of the world. To ignore it, or merely to accept lthc obvious opportunity of flinging ‘ back the demand for a similar state- ,mcnt by Mr. Bennett, would be to {add to the dangerous misconcep- ibl0llS b11111’; already exist abroad as to Canada's national aspirations. in creating unselfishness and self; inaugural address. baffling and for- midable. When I was in a mist of uncertainty as to how I should be- gin, it dccurred to me to take four columns of the index of Dr. Clap- ham's Economic History of Modem Britain, and to find the nationality of men and women whose names were mentioned; "The columns I chose at random. except that I felt it fair thatpne of them should consist of names be- ginning with ‘M’ and another of names beginning with ‘O.’ The re- sult was that I got the following totals of names arranged under the head of race:- Welsh Irish. 3 7 Scottish . 12 English. 2i “Curiosity led me to repeat the experiment. under the same condi- ticns, on the index of Mr. A. V. Dicey's ‘Lectures on the Relation between Law and Public Opinion in England during the Nineteenth Cen- tury.’ The result was:- Wclsh. Irish. Scottish. English. 1 1 11 25 “To check these tests I turned to Monsieur Eli Halevy's History of the English People. 1820-1841. The’ poll stood as follows:- Welsh. Irish. Scottish. 1 4 11 English. 27 "Finally. l made the same calcu- lzttion from the index to Mr. G». M. Trevelyans British History in the Nineteenth Century, 1782-1901, and got the following result:—- Welsh. Irish. Scottish. 0 10 9 English. 24 “Thus out of 167 names eminent enough to be mentioned by four different writers ill those sixteen pages of index (six of the names, I think, occurred in more than one list, but their nationalities were fairly distributed), five were Welsh, 22 Irish, 43 Scottish, and 9'7 Eng- lish. control" high moral qualities thatpgecre" deals which’ for example’ Se’ ' - <- t oi numerous for-i become part of the boy or girl forgwre the “uppor _ 3;; gggoggwcgjngeiggg; “gggmiyg; ‘szszs: ..‘L°.l?;’“§5f.'...°i.i.‘l- e u y» uh hlsryfil“‘.i.f.i‘f”°i.ii.. “Z..‘Z§..i“?.‘i.°;f.‘3l books —or perhaps only with his . .' _ thoughts. And as you know it is thisffnmlllnxfdmillzsg ffatjmflgufixfgfifilg; type of mm who as a man‘ one“! 91111515’? ‘is the term for money spent finds it hard m adjust himself w!“ 1 u- d and is entire, dip otgeolglgggkj‘ 211:}, tong? igsliférounds zgeilgcfrglm giflfyllplilgn money-y have found a champion from a pro-' It “vllu t.” cogrie Seem 502d‘? £111: fesslon other than medicine. ‘certain y 15 5a o 53y‘ 5%,‘ u Bishop Janjes E Freeman says none the less true B . 1 e an ar- “Hitherio we have recognized amy. W"! the heavlcsyamnery‘ m trinity of agencies namely u": politics where there ls no normal church, the home, and the school, numerwal supremacy one way or as fundamental and essential to life. ‘he “he;- ‘he Slide w“? ‘l: Ems‘ Added to these to-day. and next inlmoney amost aways w n5‘ m a ' order are the playgrounds and the 1y were. is a point beyoud which recreational centres,» imoney is not effective,—and a side |wage of $4 a week. "First we must raise the pay/We said. _ “But the business is notmaklng any profit now‘." he was told, “and any increase would kill it." "Any business that can't pay a decent wage shouldn't be a busi- ness." he replied. When he took steps toward liquidation, however, he was blocked in court by mlflofltl’ stockholders. went back to the sweatshop, his head in a whirl, wondering what Jesus would do if he were president and general manager of such a dump. He saw the old woman 8811111» laboring over her machine. ' “Mother," he said, “I don't lmOW what Christian wages are. but after this your wages will be $12 a week. Then he went up and down among Just mink o; than {or a moment with Just enough for “current ex- tlle 21 employees. tripling the pay of that the church, home, and schoobpenses" may b” “we to Wm W“ ‘he. most orl aid and doubling @118 p0 y p were essentials has been recognizedk-‘rganizatmn with greatly superior but the playground is certainly com- _ ing into its own when a clergyman|°_“ ‘me S“? the fig?“ gm” 13,1 p will give it such a standing in the Smgle, Wmdhq‘ cfung; t Wis bei life o; the people. |once in a w ile or t e vo ers o e A t t h h_ h I so aroused that the influence of‘ youngs er a c um Sc O0] or money will be obviated. But nevenand he was surprised to mid in the home is under instruction. and he must take the teachings of these three without perhaps having , much w say or do about m this country since the Civil War But on the athletic field. ab whose campaign was not sufficient- though subject to the rules, he letslly fimmed t‘) take “are M our" f 11th t, {rent expenses." The elections of hrigebiingeemo om and energies ° Woodrow Wilson in 1912 and 191s in the nation as a whole. No President has been chosen in He wins sometimes. at other “mes are included in that statement. Irifthe volume of the old days. he 105,5 both those campaigns, while the Re- file gets his innings and must miglf-‘gflliOcCafxgstlC rwzrseadequate and re urn give th th f ll hi i - ‘ nings_ e O er e ow S n ‘so the venal vote was split. l-lis emotions are really himself,’ N”? by venal “m? I d‘) m“ mean| and the big point .5 that he Smndsphat of the voters who can be bought, or falls on his own merits, and mlist directly Wm’ a ‘w? °r a fivedwa" in over}, game “do unto Others as hefbill. There was a time in many sec-i wculd llke to be done by -- tlons where the out-and-out pur- 1 believe you Wm agrée that for chasable vote was really large. Thef me training the playground is Onelchief reason for the decline inffapcn, of the es t" | h vote-buying is now fairly uni orm. schog] arfgnhlgniefve“ as are chum 'law under which any distinguishing mark upon a ballot invalidates it. so §+...,.,,..,.,.,, that it is generally . . check upon the delivery of the goods‘ Daily SBHQIIOHS by the seller. Inasmuch as it is un- FOR reasonable to place any colffidence, , in the word of a man who will sell, Guardian Readers o onoawwavw» o0 040-00- QAAA‘ x 4 his vote, the industry has tlius been‘ nearly killed. Tile vote seller can, take money from botll sides, and no one can tell whether he stayed bought like an honest mail or notl Cheating in the count has likewise; gone out of fashion. The best proof} August i, 192s l THE FAILURE—l-Ie that lmili no rule over his own spirit is like l1 funds. But when all the money isi impossible to, a that of all the others. With that yhe rushed out and retired to an iso- lated farmhouse, “to wait for the business to liquidate itself." He had 1a nervous breakdown. It was months before he returned to Cincinnati; the business still running. "Yes," said the office manager. “we made a nice profit last month. It was the first month we have shown a profit. but we seem to have turned the corner." _ The books showed several times Mr. ‘Nash gasped. Only one new om- llloney, the|ployee had been taken on. "You had barely left the office." he was told, “when Tony there made a strange speech. ‘That man cull US brudders,’ he blurted out, ‘and by Chris’! I think he mean it. IwOrk like hell now for him! Nash soon learned that Tony had expressed the sentiments of the whole crowd. Without any PFOmI-lt- lug. they did all they could.‘ and seemed to enJOY the 9X9“ mete‘ Business boomed. They mQVBd _° n old distillery. Then to a big empty brewery. In seven years. the former sWeatshOP became the l“? est wholesale toilorinc business l" the United States. As profits increased. Nash felt that the employees were cntitledto them since it was on their initiative that the business had become Dw- fitablc. Ills announcement that the profits were to be distributed among the emplnyees, pro rata according to wages. was met by f1 Drill-e“- A But he was still president. and he‘ moi? EDITORIAL NOTES. Government has had those side-l show organizations as ii means of self-defence. The people now know: the insincerity back of these collatJ A great deal "I ha!’ was saved eral government institutions. and during the Past Week» fllthmlgh the they have become weaned of yguiweather was a little catchy, but by This is one reason why tlle Hon. R. Wfltchillg the SIIOWBPS 0nd inking - 1B. Bennett is receiving the oordiolibdvbntnee of the weather Science welcome that is being tendered him‘ the CF00 Will b0 taken in with 11° wherever he goes. The people feel damage’ and 191115 15 n0 new thin? city that is broken down. and with- “Finnlly. as a control of this re- out walls? Pro“ 25:28‘ suit. I took sixteen columns of the index of Sir William Moleswortlrs HistoryofEngland from 1830-1874. and from 160 names got similar to- this: Five were Welsh, 28 Irish. 31 Scottish, and 92 English. PRAYER-Lord, be Thou our strength, and give us r-iasti-ry over our own souls. ' TO A FRIEND I who had only rambled with you O‘er heights of glilety all those YGHPS, Descended once through the gloom with you , And entered ilfto the ville cf fears. “I need riot labor the conclusions to which these figures point. 'Many national talents have enriched what of this is the rarity with which, inlsigned memoribl from the Bmlllilyfiea these days, the charges of vote buy- to the management said. Lhafd H: ing or cheating in the count, fre-ldividend should be distirlbutc orked quent enough in most States 20itiffily 0n m? “sis °f tmerxmtm? years ago, are made, and the furore! instead of wages draw" spew muré which is kicked up when they are. ‘he "wrest paid worhgrwerc ‘Sign. Yet the fact is that today moneylflmany with "nae w is more plentiful in our elections mg m“ memor 8'1 mint in the than ever before, and that the lack This was Phtumyqfih‘ Up to this of “current expenses" on electionicmlcer 0g] Znmgzen wiive mo (gold- dny is more fatal than ever. ‘Mani; gutbnow he saw that the To sec how the practice works is, Saw“; and Hanan workers who had a mere mater of applying matllc-lsicgnéd this document were living it. matics. Reduced to its simplest terms‘ ‘and ML the nun-um need of it, quitc The Golden R1110 that he is honest. that his purpose is the betterment of Canada, and that he may be depended upon. He‘ has a message and a purpose. message which he knows well how to deliver and a purpose which means such advancement and pro- gress as the material and natural resources of Canada entitle it to become. Mr. Bennett will be in this Province next week. It is hoped that everyone will make it a point to hear him, to hear his message, and to hear his diagnosis of Cana- da's trade and industrial problem. An opportunity will be given in each of the three counties to near him. i-O-éi-i HINDRANCE TO TOURISTS. IN Monday's Guardian we publish- ed an interview with the execu- tdlive of the Prince Edward Island Publicity Association. In this the Association expressed discourage- ment with their efforts so far this season. The beginning of the sea- son opened auspiciously. Towards the middle of July a distinct falling of! occurred, this the executive at- tribute to certain regulations and restrictions im i upon passen- Iorl curling to the Province. The ' executive is composed of leading cltllenl as follows: llr. Justice A. nault, President; fir. H. C. Brown. Mr. S. A. Mc- Leod, Mr. Jae. MacMillan, Mr. R. L. Ootton. The opinionimvere the un- animouc and considered opinionsof whole of the members mention- lfl; ’ “~10 their obnervatlons they are flied fault-finders and grumblen p; the Liberal Prue. for this country. We are always able to save our crops. i é The mote and the beam incident , is vividly recalled when the so-call- led prohibition provinces tell us of the drunkenness prevailing in the Government Control provinces. Crit- icism, like charity, should begin at home. The Government Control |provinces are quite satisfied with the law they have and none of them has yet given any indication of a desire to change. The question did not come up in the British Colum- bia election. Apparently the only department of the Provincial Government that is doing anything is that of the Public Works, and the less it does of the kind of work it is doing now, ‘especially on the roads, the better iit would be for the country. There has never before been so much complaint about the roads. and nev- er so much cause for complaint. The department should either function or get somebody who knows what the roads need. According to a bulletin issued by the Canadian Pacific Railway, P. E. Island controls only three per cent. of the proceeds from furs, New Brunswick two per cent, and Nova Scotia one per cent. The total value of furs produced in Canada for the year 1926-27 was $18,833,977 as compared with $15,072,244 in the previous year. These values com- prise the receipts from fur-bearing animals taken by trappers and those rolled on fur farms, the latter as yet representing but a small per- centage. but steadily increasing in proportion. we sometimes unguardedly call Eng- lish policy and English achievement. You cannot distinguish England in the nineteenth century from Britain in the nineteenth century. With the English gifts have been blended tile characteristics of the Scotch, the Irish and the Welsh. "Another point worth notice is that, when we take relative popula- tions in account, Wales about holds her own in eminence. She has roughly one-seventeenth of the population of England and about the same proportion of names signi- ficant in our history during the nineteenth century. Ireland, which roughly has a population equal to One-eishth of that of England, comes out in one of my lists with lier due share of eminence and in the other list with a much larger pro- portion. "But Scotland, the population of which is roughly one-eighth of that of England, does even better. Arith- 11195101111)’. 1H PTODOrtion to popula- tion, we should have expected her to produce about twenty eminent names in each of my lists. Actually, she gets 3i in one list and 43 in the other. There is no mistaking the significance of the Irish and Scot- tish contribution to the energy and distinction of British enterprise and culture during the nineteenth cen- tury." Some people seem greatly con- cerned over the fact that children who came here by the S. S. l-foche- laga the other Sunday got no ice- cream or milk because the stores were closed. To a considerable ex- tent their sympathy is thrown away, as the cAptain of the Hochelaga says there were no children among the excursionists in question, and consequently they could not have suffered for the lack of ice-cream. Should Charlottetown be wide open ‘ for refreshments, confectionery andand (my and“, \ I 1n the peace and pain of 91m, tyan-‘the facts are these: the country is quil place ylildivided into States, the States into There I met the soul of you face to districts, the districts into wards or m“; counties, and wards into precincts. The precinct is the smallest politi-i cal unit. There are between 150.000‘ and 160,000 precincts in the United States, and tile average number of qualified voters in one of them is 400. That means there are practic- ally 60,000,000 qualifled voters, white black, native, foreign-born, literate, illiterate, virtouous and venal—all kinds and classes. Of this great tot- al approximately 50 percent. go to the polls in a Presidential election. In every one of tllese 150,000 pre- cincts of approximately 400 voters each tliere are to be found on elec- tion day anywhere from 15 to 30 men-and now occasionally a woman or two——whose chief idea about the day is that it offers opportunity to make a little easy money. They are known as runners, or workers, or watchers. or mesengers, acording to sectional terminology. Many are im- pecunious Idlers; others are thrifty fellows who utilize their holiday to make a few dollars. Some have real party affiliations; others have not. But all are registered either as De- mocrats or Republicans, and natur- ally look to their own party for work on election day. Supplied by his superiors with money for "current expenses“ the Democratic executive. say, picks out ten of these workers in his precinct and employs them at from 85 to $10 each. These men are worth on an average ten votes each. l-low ls this possible? The answer is easy: their families. No bachelors are ‘ y- ed. Men of considerable families and wide connections are always given preference. Count the man himself as one vote, his wife as one, a couple of children, a iion-in-law, his brother's family, aunts, uncles. cousins-it is easy enough to add up ten votes. Says the precinct execut- ive making the deal: "All right. $10 for the day, Johnson. but you mlist be sure to get every one of them Johnsonsi in early." Occasionally he may be used to drag in some other backward voters. but if he delivers only the Johnsons he has made The trouble seems to be. some of good. Consider, now, what I00 such the City Councillors are too fond of votes mean in a precinct wgere the _ total vote is 400 and less t an two {gelrI2gpzrtzigzatgztwrrthtglgiynohle“thirds of that number really vote! least. embarrassinghto the Mayor I who had only noted in you Tile shallow Weeds of flivoloils fun. Found planted deep in til: heart in you A root to reign when its growth is done. Then. as firm and strong as the oak- eil tree Will that quality rise through years to be. I who had only given to you Credit for worthless surface display. Saw the drill of gi-ief approach to you As skies grew dark and your world turned gray. A shaft of remorse sank deep and revealed A sample of treasure your life will yield. I wlio had only thought of you As one to share gay lioirrs I'd spend, Found that the innermost depths of you Held that which merits the name of "friend." God, in his wisdom, has shown it to me. --~ ' - Ours is a secret the world cannot see. -—l'rene Schrodel. groceries on Sunday? it has been asked. As members of the Govem- ment say in the Legislaturez- The answer to the question is in the negative. Nobody wants seven-day storekeeping in Charlottetown, and so long as the City Council makes ample provision, as they have done, for eating houses to supply meals at regular meal hours, there should be no kick coining, except from professional kickers. At the sum time, regulations should be made on principle, and not simply becauiir one or more eating-houses are, or have been, centres of disorderliness. odd. votes ' himself ls worth through the Job- < h ‘l . lllldmggfifllg: tlelc main thing: that work should be done together in love, and that “the Kingdom of God" should become a reality in the factory whether it was a business success or not into the factory to study the "SYS- tem." But they could find no sys~ tem. All they could find was atlot lof workers who 809 51mg m?“ gr |5urprisingly well, and a boss W 0 loved all his workers, so that he found it difflcitigtbtéoitgigi; his mind on anything muc 5 - . But Nash had to get flCtlll. H: bankers demanded it of t ecmlz- who ran such a hill‘? busmes-‘L u holders whom he controls directly- Qf course, when both sides are gqulpped with “current bXpell-‘ies the Republican and Democrat“ workers offset each other. and the honest voters determine the result- But if one side has all the money. n, i5 easy to pick up these workers from the other party- Reminiscing about the i900 Bry- an-McKlnley campfllfln. B Demmra‘ tic p ecinct boss once said: "It was a ha d blow on the Saturday before election when, instead of gcttlh! $120 for my precinct, I 80f; Only $39- I knew then that things were not going to be so good. There were a dozen fellows in that precinct who in every election I put to work at from $2 to $10 each. Usually they showed up at the pollins 91MB hround 6 o'clock. This time it was nine o'clock before I could find any of them. Then I found one and he was good and drunk. He had 815 o! Republican in his pocket. Bo did every other of my dozen float- ers. They had never seenfiuch mon- by 187 votes that I had counted on carrying by 150. I could have car- ried it if I had had an even break. but nobody could buck the kind of money they had that day. ‘They could have put over a yellow dog against the Apostle Paul." That tells the story. It isn't a question of candidates. If both sides have sufficient money, the two mil- lion low grade fellows scattered through the 150.000 precincts who regularly sell themselves and their controllable families tend to cancel the precinct bXWfltli/mhaa the money and the other has t u Visitors from everywhere fimked. ey. Neither had I. I loot a precinct. SUMMERSIDE his brilliant sister. ATKEM. All cordially invited to come and meet the New Leader am] Ice Cream. It is pure-POSITIVELY! You can serve ALWAYS. Positively _ Food laws set certain standards in the making of Perfection Ice Cream has ALWAYS been superior to the most exactiig legal i-quirements. and flavorlngs. mixed and frozen by hygiene modern methods: packed and delivered with scrupulous care. PERFECTION ICE CREAM l" comlllefo assurance of purity and wholesomeness- Central C-reameries Ltil. Wholesale Distributors Phone 848 The finest dairy products Pic-ides and all pull- ‘ lie gatherings gener- ally serve Perfection. You can always tell by the taste—thc i smooth, velvety tex- ture and pleasing flavor ‘makes this tasty dish always , ulzitivc profits were necessary for financing. Another hard fact got in his way. Employing several thou- sand persons, he could not know them all ilersonally. Organized labor alleged that many things were wrong in the Nash factory. Nash refused to get into n controversy about it. He tried, in- stead, to smuggle agitators into the place on the theory that. if there ‘were anything wrong, these agitat- ors would be sure to make such a ilnoisc that he would be able to cor- rect it. But the employees threw the agitators out if they began com- plaining against Nash. This "sub- servieney" irritated the labor agit- ators, and two years ago the ultra- radical Amalgamated Clothing Workers marshalled their forces to “smash Nash." Then Sidney l-llllman, president of the Amalgamated. received a strange communication: Arthur Nash invit- ed him to bring his colleagues and organize the employees of the A. Nash Company lli the fizilalgamated Clothing Workers. To understand the resulting situation one must un- derstand that Hillman is the radi- cal leader who announced tlfat "la- bor can get ten times more out of industry that it could ever get out of its employees." l-low were they going to make good? when Hlllman arrived. Nash lab- ored hard with his employees toin- duce them to Join the union. It was 8n "ll-hill Job, despite his influ- ence. but it was finally done. Now the Amalgamated had somehow to run the factory better than Nash had done it, or register a great fail- ure. _'I'hey could not fight for high- er pay or better conditions, because Nash had given them the right to do what they pleased. And the Union did make good. Arthur Nash proclaimed that, (act in every subsequent address. First, it did not interfere with the Golden Rule. It perceived that this indus- try was built upon the Golden Rule and it cherished it. But that was not enough. The Amalgamated knew every trick of production in the clothing industry, and all their energies that might have been used to fight employers were turned to eliminating waste. Arthur Nash had finally achieved his goal. l-fe had not unionized the Nash shops in order to mails them better shops. l-ie had brought the union in so that it might be a bet. ter union, and do more than it hm Vim (101118 for the whole clothing industry. He believe the only way to enjoy peace and pmgpgflty w“ And lo these must be added the tlO-ieach others votes. But if onrsideigc gubgtuuw the y”, o; ‘Mn: m‘. the principle of taking, and mom]- not, there will be no reolirgiimcntly human relations f0!’ the old lys- i I tem of exploitation. Ho hoped the liow to apply the Kingdom of Heav- eil to the making of men's clothes, and lie thought the Amalgamated would see his point and work for it. "We thought we wen: only pllig- ging up tile leaks in the Nash flic- toryfl’ Jock Kroll, one of the Amal- gamated leaders told me recently. “It seems liow we were doing merc- We were learning what to do with other factories, and maybe it'll be up to us yet to stabilize the wllolt clothing industry.” ____<0&__i The driver of a French riiclns automobile designed to decrflfl-ie wind resistance sits so close w m“ dashboard that his legs are thrust through a large steering wlleel. ztMariy children die from the b5" saults of worms and the first cafe of mothers should be to see that their infants are free from the-la pests. A vermlfuge that can be de- pended on is Miller's Worm Pow- ders. They will not only flXpel Wm“ from the system. but act as B health-giving medicine and a rem- edy for many of the ailments that beset infants, enfeebllng thenl and endangering their lives. For Weak Stomachs For l lace of appdllfi- weak or disordered Mll- och you and Ivan’! Stomach Mixture. "nil! n a r1121? that Ih-Ingthonc m up the entire dllfllu" system strengthen 45° munch uia immm W’ oiimiu. n ha! work“! wonderful nnltc iii haml- redii of one: and ll Q1" dorsal by every 0M "l" has ever and It. ‘Pr! I l The 2 Mic‘ DRUGSTORE l0 ma: mom 8"“ / Ill! ‘Orion P51!“ p, Attlhlel. h Nash factory might show the linion .