‘m: roux __ THE GUARDIAN ‘ lea-ling mu; inns-s in um noun-es u leeerrd our. eon Office Department, Of-iolrn l Th Inland Guardian Publishing 0o. Illler and lilaalilg Director. I. l. Burial. Associate Idltor. IIIII Wallet. fThe Strongest Memory is Weaker Than the Weakest Ink.‘ WN, TUEDAY. APR-IL 26, 1M0 Elfltllfllllliiddrlallfy Elitlbil Prime Minister St. Laurenfs decision to have a prompt dissolution of Parliament recalls a similar tactic adopted by Mr. Mackenzie King when he appealed to the people in the Spring of 1940. in the present case, however, the Prime Minister's decision was not unexpected, as there was a very general ,.' ' at least in this part of Canada-in favor of an early contest. Long- draw-n out election campaigns are not desirable. in recent weeks there had developed a great deal of uncertainty and confusion, which if continued would be detrimental to both national and private business. Parliament will leave a considerable amount of unfinished business on ‘hond, but it seems unlikely that any definite is- sue would have emerged had the session been protracted. , The Prime Minister's move, no doubt, was 'dictated by political expediency, in the hope and expectation of spring-ing a surprise on the Opposition. But the Conservatives at least seem to have been pretty well prepared. Promptitude and energy are characteristics of their leader, Hon. George Drew, and these are qualities which count most in a whirlwind campaign. Cine senatorial Appointments Contrary to, prevailing popu-lor opinion, Senators outside of the Province of Quebec are not appointed for any designated electoral dr- visions. They represent their Province as a whole, and in this capacity m-ust continue to reside in the Province from which they were appointed. Their only other qualifications, as laid dawn in the B. N. A. Act, are that they be British sub- jects, thirty years of age, and possessed of real properly, free of all incumbran-ces, to the value of $4,000. They are appointed by the Governor General in Council and, subject to certain con- ditions, ‘hold their appointments for life. Queen's County supplied three of the first four Senators appointed when Prince Edward Island entered Confederation in 1873. They were Hons. Do-nald Montgomery, Pods Corner, Rob- ert Hoythorne, Charlottetown, and Thos. H. Haviiond, Charlottetown. The fourth was HM- G- W. Hovrlan, of Alberton. Senatorial appointments since then have been as followsrl879, Hon. Jebediah Carvel, Charlottctollrn‘; 1889, Hon. Samuel Prowse, Mur- ray Harbour; 1891, Hon. Andrew A. Macdonald, Charlottetown; 1893, Hon. Donald Ferguson, =Eost River; 1895, Hon. Jos. O. Arsenault, Abram’: Village; 1898, Hon. John Yeo, Bideford; 1902, Hon. James E. Robertson, New Perth; 1911, Hon. lienj. Prowse, Charlottetown; 1912, Hon. Patrick Charles Murphy, Tignish; 1915, Hon. John MacLeon, Souris East; 1925, Hon. J. J. Hughes, Souris and Hon. Creelmon McArthur, Sumrnerside; 1930, Hon. John E. Sinclair, Spring- field; 1935, Ham-John A. MacDonald, Cardigan; 1943, Hon. James P. McIntyre, French Village; 1945, Hon. Brewer Robinson, Sumnrerside. The line of succession from 1873 runs as followszav- Montgomery, Ferguson, Benj. Prawse, Sin- clair. (All from Queen's). Haythome, A. A. Macdonold, Murphy, Hughes, McIntyre. (3 from Queen's, 1 from Prince,‘ ,1 from King's.) _ Howlan, Arsen-oult, Yeo, McArthur, Robin- son. (All from Prince.) _ Havi-Iand, Carvel, Samuel Plovrse, Robert- son, MacLean, J. A. MacDonald. (2 from Queen's, 4 from King's.) l~t will thus be seen that of the twenty ls- land Senators appointed since Confederation, 9 were fro-m Queen's, 6 from Prince and 5 from King's. Responsible Minister For Defence Mr. George Drew, leader of the Opposition continues to'insist upon the all-importance of the defence of Canada by the Government. lt will be rcsnlled Mr. Drew complained that a member of Parliament who had sought informa- tion about the number of trained parachutists ‘ah chhhuh 110d been ma by Mr. Cloxton, the Minister of National Defence, that it was not in the publiif-‘interest to give the information. He claimed that only a very few defence mot- tars could beizirboterl as vitollt‘ “ever. and hr did not thin-I: the unanswered question was one el them. The committee Mr. Drew had_ln mind would _ fig" ti" riflrt to_ examine lervrdb _exp.erts to determine whether the defence organization was adequate or not, whether, sufficient emphasis was being being laid on the air arm in relation to other branches, and whether the fighter branch of the air service bore a proper relation to the 'arpr_ as a , e. He contended that any 4-”; gtggj-fii-"Ifiemien-‘Orihodo was pitifully made- ION. - q r. Oioxton then agreed that e commitllo Y defence force's hrnctionedln the United 3hr“, but sold that e different procedure was followodiir lrllaill liltlhdllldllll‘ other Commas: .~ ‘an A “ Y _A_ ‘U "m" '9" won iroehrCanadatlroninany _llrerl.r'rctedontlreadrice \ is appealing to the electorate lo have res n- sible ministers assume responsibility and not ve the Country dependent upon bureaucratic ex- perts who do not know their business or de- liberately ret themselves to mislead Parliament. ./, EDITORIAL NUI ES I. The tourist season has not yet begun but thg careful preparation of those interested in the industry will soon begimto bear fruit. Q Q I Youthful orators and perhaps our future leaders will compete tonight at Pawnol in the Queens County Junior Farmers’ Public Speaking Contest. ' I I I That was on unsavory municipal disclosure just concluded at Halifax. Those named as guilty by Commissioner Judge Pottier have reason to "hide their diminished heads" in civic ‘ics and public life generally as long as they live. C I I > The Ottawa Journal notes that Newfound- land‘s Eskimos will vote inthe Provincial elec- tion which will be held around the end oi May, but not in the Federal election. In effect, most Eskimos voted in the plebiscite to deprive them- selves of the vote. I O O i Are fire losses ever necessary? In introduc- ing legislation allowing incorporated communi- ties to enact fire prevention by laws, Premier McNair, of New Brunswick told the members of the Legislature that "fire losses in mosf of the comnfunities were far higher than necessary." Q' Q I The annual flood of college students seek- ing summer employment offers opportunity for employers to arrange holiday schedules for their regular staffs without over-expanding to great extent their year raund rolls. To the stu- dents, a good summer job may well be decisive in financing another year of college. . I O I King's County Liberals will have' a number of delegates to choose from for their next fed- eral representative. The following names are prominently mentioned: Messrs. Thomas Cul- len, ex-Speaker, ThomasJGclrhom, M.L.A., S.S. Hessian, KJL, ex-Speoker, Wade Huges, M.L.A., George E. Saville, M.L.A. and Eugene Dunn. flit "To be or not to be" a June or July elec- tion is seemingly not now the question, the ma- jority of the Liberal members, except those in Quebec, returning to Ottawa after their voca- tion reporting in favour of an early rather than a late appeal to the country. l't is said from 80 to 90 per cent of Liberals in this Province are opposed ~to delay. U I The West has won its battle to remove the “Mountain Differential" from the railway height rate structure. Perhaps the Maritimes will suc- ceed in getting rates that will let us compete in the markets of Quebec and Ontario. It is only such rates that can reconcile Maritime free traders to the protection needed by the industrial provinces. O W I Here is another tip for the Premier on lhow to cultivate friends and revenue among tox- payers and voters. "Quebec traffic police next week will remove I948 licence plates from auto- mobiles whose drivers ‘have failed to get 1949 licences. So for the traffic police have merely put notices on the wlndshields of cars still using old plates. The licence renewal date was March 1‘ _ i i i . It was gendraliy anticipated that both Dr. Grant and Mr. Lester Douglas would be first favourites at Ottawa for the vacant local sena- torships, judging by the length and success of their political service in the Liberal Payty. But apparently differences have arisen, and now it will not be known till the dissolution of Parlia- ment which of the candidates will be officially favoured. Meantimq Hon. Mr. Barbour sits an the side lines saying nothing, but thinking a lat. . . ' Albany Robichoud of Bathurst, N. 8., re- ports thot the New Brunswick Government soon is going to grant schools in the province the freedom of religious instruction. He spoke at the annual meeting of the French-Canadian Education Association of Ontario. He said the New Brunswick Government is studying an amendment to the Public Instruction Act which would grant freedom of religious instruction to schools. "I-t is a great victory for the Acadien Association of Education," said Mr. Rabichoud. "lt was as a resuit of steps taken by the as- sociation that the Government agreed to study an amendment to it: law". Jeremy Collier, Anglican eccleelactlc died this ‘date 1726; was a staunch Tory and sup- porter of the Stewart dynasty, for which he rgot into trouble during the reign of William ill, being obliged to go into exile for some years. i-le wrote numerous works, and attacked immorality and ‘profanity of the stage, in a:- ticrrlor censoring Dryden, Wycherley and - goreve. ilisworkdid muchtobringdroote re- rnrotlon of the stage. "Awmazw may mil ex- lllfit t0 It"! ‘WWW? Wt ‘ I wlseriryaiwayrroadingnflfltthoulrtorrd digestion which make oolu urvu e, and h 9h. health and vigour t: n» than. v “ ‘on M Inniness h whim-rah. m». ltive amigo out re tobeoonrerneroc after Jrronumberof alga dieeldon by correspondents of ‘questions of Int-erect. The Guardian daee not neee—r- lly endorse the opinion ur I eorreepolldflll. A OINEIAL ELECTION NEAR Sin-At. present It looks as if we will have rs general election by the end of June. Mr. Robert McEwen. n Montreal newspaper correspon- dent states that ..the rumours 1t Ottawa all favored an early piec- tion and that If dissolution took piece by the end of this week the earliest date at which an election could be held would be June 21th. It will eiPdepend upon the decision reached at a caucus of Liberals M. P.'s to be held on Wednesday of this week and It. is reported that the large majority of members fev- or en early election. That being the case it ls oppor- tune to ask whet are the prospects? Well the Prime Minister in his tour of Western Canada has stated repeatedly his belief that. the Lib- eral Government will be returned and due weight will be given to his prediction for Hon. Mr. St. Laurent is known es n men who does not make unwarranted state- ments. He is extremely cautious In that respect. Then Mr. McEwen above referred to In speaking of Quebec Province said that in re- cent months the Liberal prospects had brightened considerably. He said that after the Nicolai-Yam- askn by-election there were those who claimed that the Conservatives would carry from 15 to 20 seats but these some sources now admit that the utmost they can hope for ls n maximum of 10 seats. Now without going any further It is an actual fact that if the Con- servatives can only carry 10 seats in Quebec their chances of forming a Government are "nil". In another letter I will deal with the outlook In this Province; suffice It to any, for the moment, that it looks good. In Queen's County the Liberals have as candidates two men vflo cannot be equalled as or- ganizers In Canada and In Prince County Brig. Price will find that these "other things" which he has promised will not produce the de- sired result and that it is not ne- cessary to Import “a good fellow" from Quebec Into a County which can count l its "good fellows" by the hundreds. Prince County will never desert the Liberal cause. It has not done so in the part. It can- not be influenced to do so on this occasion. I am, Sir, etc. J. F. Charlottetown Old Charlolteidwn (AIM P. I'- I.) -_._ a FATHER KIRGABIOU Brave and deyoted were the Fren- clscrsn friars-earliest of mission- aries to Ile Stnlersn-aithough none of them was celled to suffer martyr- dom es were some of the Jesuits in other plsfll of Canada. Their very names are forgotten, but one figure among them stands out. cameo-like, from the shadows of two centuries. It Is that of Father Kergealau-anoe a man of high degree 1n 01d fianee-trudllllt on snowshoes over the tracklesl, snow- plled Ice of the northern coast. With the cowl of his scanty hrs- blt drawn tightly about. his heed to protect him from the bitter cold of mldwlnter, he traverses the weary stretch between St. Peter's and Malpeque. He ll on his way to this latter place to give Instruction to the Indians. He hemalns with them two months, "his only shelter the rude wigwem open to all kinds of weather, and often dirty to an In- tolerable degree. A few spruce troughs, which sewed for seats by day and for beds by night, con- stituted their entire stock of furni- ture. Fro the fire, placed in the middle, r se n thick smoke, which. carried about by currents of air, added greatly to the discomfort.’ Men, women and children were huddled together In the narrow space, while the dogs moved about at will, barking end snarling In perfect freedom. and sleeping some times on the ground and not In- frequently on the people. In such lodgings the missionary w“ 0511;. ed to live during hlrstay at Mel- peque. The records he kept. at the, time beer evidence of his destitute condition. The handwriting ls In marked contrast with that of for- mer entries. It is very Irregular in form, and almost illegible, showing that it wu done whilst the writer was in an uncomfortable and un- steady position. i-Ie did not even have Ink at. his disposal. Its piece had to be supplied by a dark liquid that seems to have been a mix- ture of water end soot." (Unclea- onde Audie, Conga-sin). -1'\rom an article by Ore lets Wl- M! Kiel-ood 1n the Dal- lWuIle- Harlow, April, mo. Fibber Kore’ nrious nurse uppers-s ll ‘lineal-low in Mrs. menu's article. but the spoiling above giv- en is authentic, ls appears from his sicneture in the, M Port Ls Jolt: "Libeplltooofureotrarobet Port l4 Joye bcretbls day r:ep-, 080d Oherles Beebe. sea of Obs-r- Iee metre one Berle Gsudet. horn on September ‘l, 1M, {t Post ll JWI. and baptised oondi Ionelly 131.31 filed“ , “i153: . ems (l ed) rpieere-Ineph-de I " Pref. J. 1!. llendutd. to when, um 69100111 u moms-roi- the Excision- ntfitpi, slyl: "laureate h: w ‘no? "“ Tm‘ 1:‘ it. , - a . .....-. ' Even the resemblance to the old‘ aosr trunk, who», ‘I'll! YEAR I99 SHOULD 8E DAV CANADA MAY IlAVi M008 00m Orr ‘trrc woof THAN rcorl-e I ilERbS--A CATTLE PoPuurlon m can r 140T 8E T00 LARGE A TAQGET ‘-- Industrial ucdulimmrvt Oumlld 30M! soon wool-om ‘ee ANY manicure Issue ,1 véh stunt nz-eor‘ or 15,000,000 srrouLp Meet Ruckus.»- ates The m: pest bogs of Seoflnnd may soon become a great new res- ervoir of power for industry and transport. Research new Indicates that peat may prove Ideal fuel for gas turbine engines. This discovery also brings other important develop- ments In Its train. The removal of large quantities of peat for fuel may enable wide stretches of hitherto unproductive ground to be trans- formed Into good farming lend. -—- Stratford Beacon-Herald. A news item ssyl that the bridge hostess of the future will serve her guests with salted peanuts and the like, that have no loose salt among them to accumulate In the bottom of the dish. Instead they will be sprayed with e thin coat of edible lacquer containing salt. With all due respect for the Inventor, we suggest that well enough could have been left alone. It looks like just one more step In the wrong direc- tion In an already aver-standardized world. From now on there will be no chance to scoop up a small hand- ful of salt and broken nutmeetsl fr0fn the bottom of the arm when‘ the party is aver. Each one will get just the proper modicum of salt on a little slippery shiny pilil Ia peanut will be lost, since the new ones are to be In various colors.- i natural that several of the higher officers of these enterprises should be English or American,‘ A few months ago the Canadian govern- ment offered the post of deputy- mlnlster to eight French-Canadians who declined It, one by one. There are British and Americans by origin who have played roles of the first Importance In Canadian politics. It was thanks to their work and to their talent that they come to hold commanding positions. 1 not perhaps descendants of a long line of French Canadians. Mr. Charles Dunning was boi-n in the United Kingdom. In the United States. two excellent Canadian citizens. R. B. wlck of a Canadian father. Was he more of a Canadian on that ac- count? Dld England ostraclze the Canadians who established themsel- ves In the United Kingdom. .. .. . Boner Law .. Le Cialron, St. I-lyncinthe. e ny They were Mr. C. D. Howe an American who was educated There are Bennett was born In New Bruns- .. .. Beeverbrook? — 74¢ Cornwall Standard-Freehloder. The St. Mary's Times-Journal re- marks sadly in a recent editorial that the old-time church supper is somewhat of a rarity. True enough, wartime rationing put a stop to functions of this kind. and no one would expect the ladies to attempt e church supper in the mldaf of the i Spring mud"or the long trial ofl Spring house-cleaning. But we have to take issue with the St. Mary’: editor, if he means that the church supper ls vanishing from the social life of the smaller villages. Suppers, or more accurately banquets, in the old tradition are still a feature of the Fall season in most, churches outside the larger towns. A church Q supper 1| about the lest stronghold i. of the real art of__homecook'ng, ex- (j cellt the home itself. J too bud If meals like that were re- served for the sole satisfaction of threshlnz crewl. those who attend “will! bees and such doings. — Cornwall St ’ d-Freeholder, Every day the Berlin airlift eon- tinues -— and continues particular-l Iy its remarkable expansion - lt| decreases Russian prestige. Every day it continues It gets the economy 0t "i9 SW18! who info dlrer straits, because the Western powers long 83o cut off the flow of goodn Into teller“ Germany In retaliation. This has imperiled the Russian- directed "two-year plan"; l: ha; brought some Important Industrial branches to virtual standstill. The Soviet; may well curse the day they thought of resorting to block. ade — a technique traditionally aa- societed with war, not peace, The“- urgent Interest now is to get rid 0f it. Tampering this anxiety, how- ever. Is the desire still to make some clhitel of It. What can the Rus-| "l"! "l" 0015c to xnln from the blockadef Presumably whatever’, Drapnsande value may be left In‘ 1min: it "for the sake of German "filly" or “the German economy." T at won't be mucIh-Welfstreet Jo rnai. - It would be l l The British and Amarfeunfpqg. sess considerable commerclei. 5mg Industrial interests In Canada. It ls Na-Ieneed oopytst. a the Ink spots m eujgvmorfi: $1 Qwilruceee the signature mmmmr! D n and cannot. be Ill TIIE IIIIIST Alilr bymealreoflnllnnee. Anne} “u rntaateaflhyieh The‘ A Supplemental Owen. Occult ‘omens; The ge-Olll Story . Yiili rrnv sirrren a nrsrsrcn eagbyeneoaneistopthosrlndsierrmerilrellgirialngeeilre eeribqnkqorelrreysthefire-yoaeeaereessnsoenoasiewell gathering and saving may linypeer In’: fen . "its" only sure safeguard h educate Inlraaoe, including earAcInil-orrrriteereeilon: rlrllorrnrr a; _oo. iurrnco . £6? fiefidme/r Qi Time takes them home that. we loved, fair names and famous, To the soft long sleep, to the broad sweet bosom of death; But the flower of their souls ‘he shall not takeaway to shame us Nor the lips lack song forever that now lack breath! For with us shall the rmuia and e that die not dwell. Though the dead ta our dead bid eleome and we farewell. —-A. O Swllnbous-rse. IX XI! IXIXIXIXIXIIIZ shill not God avenge nu awn eieot. which ory day and nrghg unto Him, with them? I tell you that He will avenge them speedily. f-hnurzir Ila bear long a. . ‘if 8r Son OPTDMETIUST! ‘Specialist “In the fitting al glasses for the correction er ocular defects." Bl GBAITON QTBFM !."Q1FQ'.i-O O0"IIFUi>Q O QC 1>O3 - iChls-opodist :- For Foot Ailments oorlslltf ii. r. i. llllovrll. o. r. drtlollliio til Brent Gears! It?!" OIABIAITTITDWN. Ill-l " x ‘ALA; O4 .or suootss lionssaas. 5 firm has money to burn. The truth Survey shows How much profit does the aver- age big business firm make? A recent survey by Elliot Haynes Ltd. showed that the public thinks that the manufacturer is making 32 cents on the sales dollar. For every three dollars of goods that the manu- fecturer sells he is able, so the pub- llc mistakenly believes, to put one in hlr pocket. The cost of living, plus the published profits of big corporations,‘ has left the wrong Impression with the consumer that big firms are living the life of Reilly, free from all worries and cares. The public obviously thinks that this ls too much: because the next question the survey asked wee, what profit the public thought the manufacturer should make on the sales dollar, and the answer we: 16 cents. Or, exectLy half of what they thought was made, It was granted that n manufacturer should be allowed to make a profit, but it was felt that he should make about hslf of what people thought he was making etthe moment. Now, if the take-home pay of the average firm was sixteen cents on the dollar, the board of directors ‘ Pr0fits----i\re'tr"l1 , ' ‘Bigger, Than That‘? cents on ill? be only 18 errata. What do y (John Home Monthly) g l Ev They .; “rations make 82 '1 they should they make?- plsns, group insurance and ma“, ‘ things that enable n man to p hi; life with a feeling of ocean's: If his sickness and old age i" looked after than he can have m time to worry about the rnortgl Over 4% millions of dollars werd lnent on employee benefltkq, 8.5i% of the total sales dollar, So If w. ldd the cont of the ‘mi. teriais bought, and the wages bill we can see that this adds lip go 93.75%. The money Is running out felt, and Pete Profit Is certainly getting smaller. The next Items on the budget h", rent to various landlords to keep q roof over their heads, city m“ which a corporation pays with m, more cheers than Joe Voter, Insur- ance In case the building catches fire some night, and the inevitable light and heat bills that bother n1; ordinary citizen. These Items have to be paid by any prudent, l"; abiding man, but tn this case they come to flflfILNS or 2.19% of tin gran. That brings us to 95.9493, ' Then in addition, we have a m, tie item of just under three-quart- ers-of-n-mlllion ($769,000) which has to be paid to dominion and provln. ciargovernmenta for Income and would certainly get a gold watch, PROFITS‘ OF 20 CANADIAN CANADIAN Aluminum Ltd. ........................ .. Canadian Breweries Limited Canadian Pacific Railway Co Canada Packers Ltd. Dominion Stores Ltd. .. . Ford Motor Company of Canada Ltd. Imperial Oil Limited . Massey-Harris Compen . McCall-Frontenac _Oll Co. Ltd. ........ Moore Corporation Ltd. .............. ..._._... U S Chrysler Corporation .................. ........ Distillers Corp. Seagrams Ltd. General Electric ................ .. General Motors Corporation Phllco Corporation .................. .. Standard Brands Incorporated Swift t Company .. Westinghouse .. H. J. Heinz Company ............. .. . 144, , Hirnm-Wnlker-Gooderhnm I! Warts Ltd. 294,517,000 Net Profit After Taxes: - ~NetProfIt Per Dollar Sales 1941 After Taxes of Sales 8 153,432,000 S 16,024,000 10 cerlti . 76,822,000 6.170.000 8 cents . 818,586,000 31,894,000 10 cents . ,069,000 2.060.000 1 cent 53,492.23 883,016 1 cent 149,304.00) 5.995.N0 4 cents 260,602,000 20.454900 8 cerlll 83,834,000 \ 4.084.000 5 cents 55.177000 2.781.000 5 cents 51,743,000 2,797,000 5 cenll 1,962,8M,751 07.181221 5 cents 618,135,000 43,113,000 7 cents 1,186,345,868 88,331,949 7 cents 8,815,159,163 $8,094,498 8 cenu M5 863 6.104.288 4 cents 181880.000 6 cents 28,507,592 9.630.699 4 cents 215.131.3222 8,119,349 a Cefifl 33481166334 .3348’?! 10 cents excess profit taxes, and we have AND U. 5. CORPORATIONS 6 cents and ringside seats at the hockey games. v . One of the main reasons for the pubiic's lack of information ll due to the way In which the annual statement of the firm is issued to the press. If the wage-earner ll drawing down $50 per week, any amount running Into five figures seems enormous. And yet, time after time, figures are released suggesting that the total sales vol- ume represents the actual Income of ‘the company. Headlines reed “Sales jump to 550.000.1100." and to the average reader this suggests that the firm made $50,000.03 last year. O O 0 Again, n new pension is plen- ned for a plant, suggesting that the often is that by efficiency and economy, and by ploughing beck Into the ‘uslness some of the herd-earned money, the firm Ia able to expand, earn more money and employ more labor. But the eight of n new planL-or rs new store window suggests that people are In the money. The actual fact is that this expense ‘is charged off over a number of years. A man may Impress his neighbors with the ex- pensive car which he has lust bought; but he has either saved his money over the years, or is spread- ing the payments over a year or two. A business firm acts In the same way. C O I "Another reason for the public‘: lack of kno ledge is old-fashioned thinking on he part of some boards ofdireetors. Good public relations Karts at home, and the wile men- egere make It their Idrsineu to let their employees know whet they are doing now, and are ,.l'0p0Illlfl tn do in‘ the future. Good manage s regard every employee u part of n team, and realize that everyone will pull his weight better if he knows something of the overall plan, and is not left In the dark to do en apparently unrelated Job. But some employers still believe that it ll belt to tell their staff nothlgrg. Out of this Ignorance is born all sorts of fantastic notions and prejudlcen. Creck-brnined theorist! find a ready soil to cultivate if the ground work has been well prepared by a fuddy-duddy board of Jllrectore. And, lines the vote of an Employee fa lust as ood u their-r at the ballot box, {hey ere effectively cat- tlng their own throats.’ If the big end little firms will tell their em- ployees tire facts as they are,‘ they will find their employees reason- able enough to understand them. Little in gained by hiding the facts, and our way of life can be preserved if everyone an the team knows that his welfare and the Gem's are in pnrebly linked. New let us look s some of the 1M1 fla- urssotsomeofthsblgflrmla Canada end In the ‘United Statues .'..'l'eke one of the Canadian grocery fines, Dominion soot-u, and 0nd out where nil'ttre millions of dol- lars went. In the first piece the directors didn't make the nvr meter-leis, end the wages and entities to the people who eers them. At first glance. Profit ln this oeu lookalike a big "If uumrleoavreu ltiii not come to the elusive little men Pete Profit yet. This fax Item represents 1.44% of the total sales. This, together with another half million ($520,000) paid for adver- tising to tell the folks about the sales, donations to charities, fees for lawyers and auditors or .977, brought the total cost: to 98.35% of the total sales Income. The rest irprofit. or 1.65% of the gross: less, than the average profit. of 5% cents. so, for ell the planning, work end eneréy that we’: put behind the sales effort by every man, woman and boy In that firm. from the presldentito the boy who wraps the parceisythnt profit was 1.65% or $883,015. Pete has dwindled from 32% to 16% to 1.65%. ‘ Then, whet did the ‘directors de- clde to do with the money‘! Well, in the first place they had to pay dividends tattle common stock- holders. Theae are the people who had faith In the enterprise and were willing to back It with their own money. There are millions of people like this In the United States and Canada who have been able ill lave a little money, and who wan; to make more money than they c: by eaving It In the bank. So, the loo around for some firm whlc_ promises them n good return on the Investment, but, they do not ex- pect 30% or 16%. {they would ill glad to ‘get It, although of course. they have to peylnoome tax on it again later on. So practically half of the from: are given back to the Investors-bl‘!- or $432,631. Thll leaves finally, 84% or ' $450M- which lr kepaby. ti: company- , Then what does the company 5° with that? They charge it c5010" the future, and put it In the bank l0 that they can add extensions to their plants (es we might Pl" ' sun porch), or decide to reillfi" P coal burner with all. Or Pefhll" ' business will not be lo 8°00 "m year, end provision has to be madli for a rainy day, just no any viral") householder he: to hedge again" the future. ' , Firms, like men, do not-succeed automation!‘ . They have to work herd and plan for the future. 50 that Intthe event of an unforeseen emergency they have e little cash to tide them over the, difficult times. And,‘ u anyone knowr. dll- fleuit times ere always with “'- ‘Phere are the accidents to 100K after, the furnace on the biillk- ""1 the roof that was blown off by 0" hurricane. ‘ ' Juices everyone likes keePln‘ up with thelonep, each bus- nm has to keep up date by in‘ stalling new lighting fixtures. n" machines, new methods. ' Otherwl" ‘the competition wln certainly M" ‘them’ to the drew. end then ti" business-will hoe losses or bani!- ruptcy. 14st you? was a good W" for most businesses, end more P"; pie bod jobs than aver‘ before. h" only s fool mdamlleve that thll unhelld at pp; syn?!“ mt for- ever-ms the smut-ta star w" ' gm leido ‘llhfeelu the n: a e oo err Well. m it worth the effort‘! Th‘: 1r yel- Ti" thousands ‘of 1°" may could l" _‘ ‘ In I fir-mo pravidgd- ferrfl .9010“ .r‘~ ,.