South Bend News-Times, Volume 39, Number 306, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 2 November 1922 — Page 6

THURSDAY MORNING. NOVIlMBfR 2. 192 2

the: south bend news-times

sou": ;; zwo news -times o 'r r-.i.i . j .vrnr. Sunday

M Pre- Unitrd FrrM International ' n h .t-rvi'-f Anrrican Newspaper Publishers -ti, n Auelit Bur" . u of Circulation

; r Lntrrprisc Association.

Mnr.Mx; rniTioN 1 rrM i ; lTy ftiMt'"1 to tb n tt f !! iw J .. 'teh rf-!'.tM f U or not r .':. in . , n ;:.-. ir .l'.tJoa of tb'.f rPr D3

rUMMi KrITIO ,..r! nrr,,. International News Service I. .: M. i . Tl"" 210?. (Branch Eehnt.)

7-'MI OF SlPsCRirTlO. ? '- ,.iy. pr w"k - - - .i - ,' . . . i i' ir rk . .

, - -

i j: .ii r h P.. rxl Pot O.T,-e 14 Scoad Cm Mali

30 Ont . 20 rnt

S10.00

NOVEMBER 2. 1922

;. ;7.S (;' COMTDEXCE. M' Imposed upon by twisted täte-

l.

'ftn', y unwarranted use of

1 mruag". hv tricky methods, are quite likely not to h .ruht attain. r. ',;'o who find tho?o ur.nn whom they deper. J !r. 'j " ' if v '. company, are. very likely to isrrutir. 7. the rn.-'irn for such associations. When it onifi to the matter of elections and v rr.nu n. the oM politicians, anxious only for rarti-an victory. ""' o excuse euch tactics and such coalitions on the ground that It Is all "politics." That i the reason they Are ro desperately fighting this yar to defeat Mla Esther O'Keefe, for they realize that If they fail In that result they are quite likely never a grain to he able to report to these old ruf ;ho(ls by which tho power of the people has Lc.n Holen and used for their privileged backers. It 1- not often that the exposure of tho trickery and tho misrepresentation ia made before elections and tho men and organs which made them force! to admissions of their own endeavor to 6ecur vote3 by falo pretense. For Instance, tho unmasking? of the claim for Congressman Iflckey that he had been endorsed by tho American Farm Iiureau Federation In an effort to obtain farmer votes has now forced a Fart of I II -upporter3 to modify their statement and they are now only claiming: that he has been "thanked" by thl-i organization. That mh done after the Hickey committee had fpent hundreds of dollars in brazenly advertising: in every newspaper In the district the bold claim that ho had been endorsed. In addition to the direct repudiation of this statement by tho national secretary of the organization, the friends of Ihckey now confess that the statement was false, fi trick by which the farmer waa to be cheated of hla judgment and his vote. What would you ay of a man who tried to steal your money by a confidence game and then had the temerity of try in? to get you to give it to him after h" h id been caught In the act? The vote, a priceless right, I3 quite as Important ;..- your money, especially when the man who wants it so badly as to use such methods, has voted out of your pockets m.uiy of those dollars you worked for and tried to Kive. Were that Instance not enough to show the entire fabric of pretense upon which the Hickey campaign is based, recall the fact that in many papers, especially of homo states, Mr. Hickey la advertising thai he has tho endorsement of the American 1 -ion. Tiie anwer to that you can get from the first member of the legion you meet upon the etreet. He v:il tell you that It is false, that he has not been -0 endorsed, that euch a claim is an unwarranted effort to delude the service man and his friends and to gain votes by a trick. if you were a business man would you buy goods from a man who had been attempting misrepresentation to make the ealo? If that bo net sufficient warning: for the independent voters of this district and especially the women of this district, those who put their predilection for the Republican party very high as a motive power should investigate the authorship and the purchaser of space of an advertisement published on Oct. 1, an unsigned advertisement which urged tho reelection of Mr. Hickey. These will discover, when they learn the truth, that it comes from the same source as the fraudulent letters mailed from an office building at 522 Fifth av.. New York, but written and printed In this city. Those Utters attempted to anger citizens of German descent n gainst Miss O'Keefe by falsely stating her ration in regard to cancellation of foreign debts. "Will tills man, now under sentence to a federal prison for violation of a law protecting morality, expect Iiis reward in lnfluenco for clemency if the good women of this city and of this district cast their votes as ho pleads and as he schemes? "Would tho vote lie asks for in an advertisement for which ho 1'oiys, be In reality a vote for a pardon for this man who does the trickery for some very ;r.fli;er.tl l backers of Congressman Hickey? If that were r.ot enough. Journey over to the city of Importe arxi Und there, working in the dist riots in viiich tho unfortunates live, those who uro derelict nr.d often in police circles, a man sent theo from Plymouth. IK boasts that for hi effort In rounding up the f-;.i:n voto be is to be rewarded with a Job on the -taf highway, to be 1 aid for with your money. T::o-o arc a fow things which womn might revr:r,!tr to a har.tuire when they are drawn between o. of i.tr: and thir deriro to purify politics and el, , t s. Toy sb.oaM .1 !c themselves whether the answer t-. :lo ir a;al iti-r: pnd their hopes does not lie in tho tr.urnt'h ir.t election of the courageous, able and 1 on" ieniio-as woman who is pleading only for de. era. ft r fwl.il j-isrtice, for fair play.

.1 TIM ULY PLEA. A r-ov lit arti.-lo in the Saturday Evening Tost by Ja h'- K M. War.amak r, a Jurist of outstanding i 1 1 i i , Ti-.iht will have teen written as a mes11.;,' 1. 1 tho voters of this county. In that article lie describes so well the needs of Ju !:, th- demands of the hour for a more comp; :- divorce 'otwfP!i party politics and the Juri., viry. t!i vt h,M m.ght well have spoken to every voter In this corning clctton. Let Judse W'ana-r:.-k r In this artich lireet your attention to J. Frrd r..!.!.a:n. of the Democratic ticket, and Judge I :i J Cue on the liepubhcan ticket, for the deri. t;o:i ar,.l th appeal fits them exactly when he w r ! e : 'Justice in practical effect ;s what the juiige fays ;t i?. !'y reason of the Judge's tremendous power r. America, great rr tiir.n In any other civilized t ;L:ntry In the world In Its governmental effect, the I ror.r,el of th- jud. clary, which is the greatest : 1 r in th)t power, should be highly Important. ' In four-liTJis of the states the people elect tho

TODAY'S TALK

! 'loT?f. Matth w A lan.s

Tili: OF AUW MX. Tio-rt is something beautiful about th" sleeping : : -i of everything in life ai 1 nature. li-jt In Ootober wo finl tho f-ettirg for them alL To me there has ahvaj ben a touch of divine pathos connected wrti, the falling of every l"af. One by one then in dozens, and hrndreda. and thou-tand-, they fall silently to th"? grounl. There th'-y nestle, their gorgeius coats giving way to a series of browji. until finally, tpssed about by the winds and washed by rains, they s-inlc Into the sleep of the earth to rise again In newness with successive sP rings. The wind is blowing as I write. Iteyond my window are winding hills. Tney arc robed in all fhe colors of the sunset blues, and browns and purples, and merles of golden tints. L:ke the mild. roll of a happy sea Is this vast line of color as the wind bathes It. I can see tho leaves fly like birds from their spring and summer nests in the trees and fall gently to the ground. 'Wh-'it a scone of beauty! Poon the twigs and branches will be bare ready for the blasts of winter. And then we will mis3 what we so much loved tor many months. Clear cut you will pee exposed the new homes of the squirrels. And later, in all the north countries, the white blankets of winter will come to bury the plays of autumn. All of which serves the more to emphasize tho eternal change of life. The sleeps of autumn are beautiful In the extreme. They whisper new words of cheer to our hearts, they renew our faith in the divinity of all things beautiful, and they teach us courage. Yes, I believe that trees ani flowers and leaves have souls for heaven would be bare Indeed without them! judges. Notwithstanding the power of the judge In government, having the last word, the people as a whole know less about the personal, professional and efficient qualifications of the candidates than of any others running for otfice. Indeed it very often happens that the mere favorable name of a candidate wholly unknown to tho voters, . furnishes the majority for his nom&nation and election. "What are the primary and paramount qualifications for the judge? Common sense; common conscience; uncommon backbone; humanitarian spirit of the twentieth century; a working knowledge of the fundamentals of the law. The first four come largely from birth, the last from books. "Such organizations as the Cleveland Association for Criminal Justice, or some other civic body, could furnish the voters much useful Information to guide them as to these qualifications of the various candidates for the bench: "There should be no partisanship in the choice of judres for the bench. There is no tmch thing as Republican Justice or Democratic justice. They are not distinguishable."

GL AND FAKERS. Beware of patent medicine fakers who, cashing in on the public's interest In monkey glands, are flooding the market with pills and liquid dopes heralded as marvelous glandular "cures." The arrival of these parasites was to be expected. Every new discovery is trailed by a mob of unscrupulous fakers who fatten on public credulity. Thirty-three years ago the originial gland doctor, Brown-Sequard, was ridiculed when he came forth with his theories about restoring lost youth and stimulating mentality through the use of endocrine lands. Today legitimate scientists admit that BrownSequard was on the right trail. Wonderful possibilities are opened up. 03ut the public should remember that tinkering with the body's endocrine glands is in its infancy, and that the treatment Is extremely dangerous unless administered by a medical man skilled in this line. A great deal is already definitely known about the thyroid gland in the neck its partial control of Intellect and its effect on the general health, particularly heart, nerves and hair. But thyroid treatment is dangerous except In the hands of a skilled physician. For instance, calming down an over-active thyroid Is apt to leave the heart weak. v Of the other glands, much less is known. Their general functions havo been defined. But there are feweven among experienced doctors who can stimulate or calm"thwe other glands without definite perils to the patient. In the hands cf a quack, the endocrine glands are apt to become doors leading to physical breakdown, nervous collapse or downright Insanity. o The man who merely blazes away seldom blazes the way. o OthQrSditqrsThanQuff , "GOLLLIV (Dallas Dispatch.) In business deals, golf is taking the place once held by liquor, saj-s Vincent L. Price, president of a candy company, in St. Louis. . "Where a salesman would entertain a customer with rounds of highballs In the days before prohibition, he now Is establishing friendly relations on the golf course." Deaths from heart failure, "due to over-exertion by m'ddle-aged men on the golf course, are increasing so rapidly that It may not be long until golf will be as deadly as J. Barleycorn In killing people who have developed a craving for It. Will golf, too. be prohibited by a future Volstead? o PAY. (Cleveland Press.) Wagea of male farm laborers average $28.97 and board a month, reports aepartment of agriculture, $41.58 without beard. City men can make interesting comparisons of their incomes with farm hands. Farm employers also have been In a bad way. Their promts in 1P20 averaged only $1S6 apiece, says Jamea R. Howard. preI1ent of American farm Bureau Federation. What they're making now will not be known for another year or po, the compiling of this kind of average statistics taking a long time. o - ARURSTHP. (Memphis 1'rf.ss.) The Association Against the Prohibition AmenJment difrs up this interesting information: In'- 56 cities. 1.464.296 arrests were made lat year. The population of these cities totaled 22,000,000. This means, one person In each 15 arrested In one year, or one for each throe families. ßuoh a condition cf lawlessness Is certainly a more important problem than alcoholic thirst. Arrest for drunkenness and disorderly conduct were 343.665, or nearly a fourth of the total of all arrests. The d sord-erly culprits, of courrv. wf re not .11 drunk.

TheTowjrM?! jöy Dill Armstrong,

1 1 a 1 -

v. r 1 1

iv.n-T - v. rnr. z J .n-.

e . 1 1 .n 1a : ; .t ; -a: v t re n:: n to .-.rr.' ie a m I norm tl ..v.: r

J' hitvrnal Kit Klux Row

Rrcaks Up Organization

'KAMr.XT.

fj!:e oi l fa hir.0 1. s'or.o rrrr,:r. I

i P.uckwh--it flour Puritani at .-.Jr j :-'if-n t' :rH ,:

' f co. r. S'.arr a v ; :h-- Ku K!a Klan.

";. : v.

r ; : 1

1 :

t 1 .

1 n e of w.ir- ' f t h.

A cording to a.l wh heard lo r. f to th1 uolf links .1 it rair. d all

, i.-.a'-r o ivi'c;f s auurc-s Was a whale. If Ksth'-r gets rj.cted. we j notify Lou Due k in plenty of tinv (that he better sweep out the padded cell for Jazzy Joe.

afternoon.

Adam ShMyr wop i ton of hard

al for h

- r 1 fe

1 II

notary

j The Republicans maybe weren't

so active providing f.r an adequate coal pile for th.s winter, but they

j.tt j'-t.-i Kepi us out or ine lquo j of Nations, so why sliou'd wo kick?

J Charles R. Six's one regret of the

present campaign is that he has no opportunity to vote for (Jen. Wood.

Father Long invited 11 to go with

ihim to Dowagiac last night on omfl J kind of chun-h affair. It certainly i would have given our reputation a

wonderful boost if we had been able to accompany him.

They called him Premium becaue he was such a Ham. ob.-erves the Notre Dame Juggler.

Re content with what you have never with what you are. carl hii;bi:ri.

Anly Weinberg showed he knew his stuff when he took Tüll but of Knute Rockne instead of A bust.

s . 1 r : r o

d

a ir'ie. Wt 11 be very r.:o ii :f A ! i:n !e.-n't rr.ae a

bun- h .f ew warm f i winter.

G

A m k.. tl LI t.

lf1 JTM

WYMAN &

KiR-y 1 1 ir-T ; h

r.s i,'.-

fayctte

iaf v

of b-.isir.es al

tricked uj like a .h :r h v rh Halloween pumpkins, e.-. We don t know wlotl- r tliis i a i-rr:il ;r another l-'crd pri' ' re.iu t am -r n -t. but it looks that way.

ovi:riii:ri at tin: ouvi i:. KD KLINK To Manag:- Wood. "Dal you say (,u war.lv 1 a window or a widow?" MANAC.RIl WOnn-' l wild window; they're both rr.Utii alike. When I .get mar either "f them I look coat."

AT Cll ARLF.V Rin.M I .'.CK'S. CFMVA11-:R "Mr. P.r. -.:!. ck. vcoa must he a 1 rv teiab-r h' t:t.l mm. for yti'i ur.d"iliedly w ai ! ye' r before yarn, killed t'::it loci. -i so'.d me la -t n uht." We see poy Fries and -' oatn,at r Barnes running ai oa.,, ;o.-.:!i"r yes! e.alay W e si:j': ee hy Tins iim Barnes i.is made a p.,.y S 00: "r

Jake Heckamaan will probably be Barnes hm nia.b' a V-y S 00: eir j nickin? the nresideot's cahir.ef nt-vt.a.f l'iev

John Ellsworth is due huck inj

town today. Boy, sweep off a s'oot i Fred Bryan will proha" dy 'o ''t-

Ion the stage of the Palace for J. C. the palace theater op-na..- toni-.Tlit .

tonight. to see that all tho l:n:i; a:o tariu l on. Nelson Jones is wearing, a new check suit, go loud he'll certainly Former Lt. Karl IlcL r poke to have to change it on his working the Lion's elu yesterd iv on th."1

days.

Yesterday was a busy day In loca

banks. Not a single banker w en? i p'eech.

subject cf advertising. Wo understand the Ree.ler inc-'iTi:,' did not draw seriously from 'al. CooÜtUte's

Cf!i: AND s' ! Store Hours: 8:30 to 5:30. Saturdays close at 9 P. M.

fy j? j? j? s j?

aO " rl v - t , if ' V Th

so it.

The Nevs-Times Bureau of Questions and Ansvers

i

S

Favorite Frocks VS inter, $25 to $59.50 erc's a wonderful nonchalance in frocks of woolen fabrics with low, loose girdles and

smartly draped skirts. Sleeves are flowing, neckhands loose and informally collared. And not more tlian one of a kind, even at these moderate prices. Or, if preferred, a frock of silk More formal, these, in spite of their simplicity. One notes a dainty bertha upon a frock of brown silk crepe and another of lace embellishes a frock of chiffon velvet. Dignified coat frocks of velvet, too. Here surely are frocks to become matron or maid. Every type considered! It's easy to choose frocks to suit the

most lasticiious, so many styles are assembled here. Priced from $25 to $59.50.

QUESTIONS ANSWERED You can get an answer to any question of 1 c-t or Infnrni.it Ion by writing to The News-Times Washington Uurtau, IZH N. Y. Ave. Washington. I. C.. enclosing 2 cents in stamps. Mediril, legal and love and marriage advice wil! Eot be given. Unsigned letter will not be answered, but ail letters are confidential, and receive personal reidies.

Q. How U parafline for use on commutators of motors prepared, and what ii the method of applying it? A. Ordinary cakes of parafiin waxcan bo ued directly as purchased for application to motor commutators, and are sometimes effective in reducing the chattering or squeaking. The cake of parafline can be held against the commutator while the(motor is running, and the small amount which hubs off is suflicient for the purpose. Q. HoN ehould one prepare corned beef for cooking so that the water in which it is boiled can be utilized for soup stock? A. Soak the beef all night in cold

water, pour off water and use frh

water for cooking. If the bc-.'f is

very salty, after soaking, it should be parboiled for about hair an n Mir, the water poured off and frosh water added. Q. How was multiplication effected with Roman numtr.i'i '.' A. On the following principle: Repeating a letter repeats its value; Thus I represents 1; II. 2; III, .1; X, IC; XX, 20. A bar placed over a letter Increases its value a thou.-and fold. Thus: V represents 5.000. L 50.000, etc. Q. Why doort not an iron ship shik? A. Thin is one of the most important principles In the science of hydrostatics, called the law of Archimedes. It may be stated thus: A body when entirely surrounded 1 y a fluid Is buoyed up by force eoual to the weight of the fluid it displaces. Bodies heavier than water.

dij-place when put inti) it, their own volume, and bodies lighter than vater displace when allowed to fl out on the surface their o.vn w eight of , the llu;d. : Q. Who were the Minutemen? A. In American hi. tory those' civilians in Mas-- ichu 'A? and s; -era I other colonies, wo . n ;iic- approach of the RevoiuriiMia ry wai. pledged thtmseive.s to tak"1 the held at a minute.- notiee. In Ma-sachu- , se tts they w-ro enro.l .-' in pursuance o." an act of the prov.u- ial coiv- ss : passed Nov. 2.1. 1774. i (. Wer- .f the president ; p.iCinberfS of the tili Old Ft 1 "lows' 1 order? 1 A. Ruthe r l B. Tlay.-s w as. 2. In p.ayi.i ;.'.; w .th i!:e j kfr ia a will ;a.-1. wh-i i- the h:gn--e;'t hand one Can lioid? A. Five of a kind. This beats a royal flu.-h. Q. What will :o novo t ie s'ain of 1 walnuts from tlie K.-ni.-i without in-1 jury to the skin? A. The juice of a rip-1 tomato.

Q. Wliat is t'le liuth'.d of cutt.r.? hol"s through glass tui.ir.,'? A. The U. S. bureau ot .-tarda r. Is sis that lit 'Ins of var o'- siz'-s ato clriiitd (by grindim;) Hunuh tlio

walls cf g'.as tubes ,y n.-ing hollow tube drills ar.d either :r.e' y or carborundum as an ubr ;.-:v.'. Th. drill is raise 1 and lowered under -'il.!ht pressure i.--lcm.:' te:.t .;-. to e;:-' able the a'ori-ivc to b cleared a . t and new lc . i;; '. 'n'c pia- e. To ;u"Vtnt fraelut itii; the :.,-:.i-. ,.,f the tube when til" .VU coraf t'trong!:, . a second tub-1 is r fren wax d into the hollow cf th? first sa that the spllntei -iiig is there'.;- .void. -I.

s . r )"

r i'v- . - - t""

Merur. rw.-

TT ß

O T

urn

T

Y

P-S!

mi: ri ft 14 ij

YOUR HEALTH- ByCoD;IaRnd s-

I 'Laymen are apt to get mixed up ' on medical terms and to form wrong j ideas of their meaning. I For Instance, "stomatitis" does j not mean Inflammation of the tom-

i ach, nor even simple stomachache.

The word Is from the Greek, "meaning lnfkimmatlon of the mouth. It Is a painful and decidedly uncomfortable thing to have a sore mouth. If the teeth, gums, tongue an-d inside! of the cheeks are nore and raw, it is Impossible to eat or even to talk without pain. There are various form3 and types of Stomatitis. The simplest is called catarrhal stomatitis. In this form there 13 no ulceration or broken surface. The mucous membrane is merely red. ore and swollen. There is soreness and increased flow of saliva. The symptoms are much the same as babies have when they ar teething. Simple stomatitis results from eatmc or drinking over-hot thing. Ex

cessive use of tobicco, uncleanlir.f-s

and diase of the teeth may produc ? it. Certain nervous diseases an 3 the abuse of some drugs may cause stomatitis. Cleanliness of the mouth, care of the teeth and correcting any habit which is causing Irritation are the things necer.iry to bring about a cure. Some simple alkaline solution used as a mouth wash will help. A very weak solution of permanganate of potash is: good. It is not unusual to have soreness or trnderness of the mouth in longcor.tlr.ua feer. One of the things the trained nurse does to avoid this trouble and to promote the comfort of the patient I to keep the mouth clean. Frequent washing of the tensrue ind gums with a solution cf b-oric acid or water and lemon juice will be appreciated by the sick person There is another form of tomatltii which is more serious. This Is c.il'.ed herpetic" or "aphthous" stomatitis. In this variety b'islers term on

I the mucous mombnr. At first I they are filled with water, but they

A 4 ' k

o r

due

; !

soon break dow n, formln ' ulcers or canker . res. Herpetic fdocatitis Is associated with intestinal or stomach disturbances. Almost always there is illhealth er some general disturbance. When thee ulcers appear they should be a warning to correct the habits of living. Plenty of slnep. frevh air and obervince of all the

ru.es of hygiene are essential

alone to the cure f.f the stomatit

but also to th prevention of o.m r and more, yrriou; complications. The ulcers themselves may be touched with alum or with a weak solution of silver nitrate. A third form of th disease i-

ea,i;ec! ' ulcerative stoeotiti "putrid s-ore mouth." This

to the action of seimj snec:c rrm

P :s associated with genera! d i.--ases and is really but one symptom of t h e m . 1 is not natural to ha-- sr. mouth. There may ho cTi.-ion.il turbancs !( these t.V-e.ies. loit if the trouble persists. r If it recurs fre

quently, there should be an Inquiry j to find out whv. Diabetes Ttrift-t' i

di.vse, tuherculcsi.s and other scr

ious aliments may lower 1 issue v ity so much ns to mak it ea-n

a trilling causo to pro. luce a ferlou

ieion. Normally-our ti.-u' are hard

firm. They rcs .-t tritllnr ancide and speedily recover from rn.r- i ;ous ones. It is net natural

them to get pore and to stv

When the powers of reenvrry are In- 1 te-rffrM with by f.n.p failure In the perfection of health which' sb.ould be posse v.l iy eve ry one. It i is titne to invent ia?n. I wish we c- uld rrt every one to ' consider life in t rm of health.

inere are -iznt wrr-s ana w

wavs of dmrr everv hire T'-.

tab

to;

- a

- r -for

Sore

r: -rl

Th

r.d ;

if we

a., p.i'.uuii ee i;.e i - ,vav, a

readilj- becomes the easy way-

practice i litto lf-cor.trol. Wh: we eat corrtctly. s!er'p fn'.urh, ex

f reise every day. drink of water, and breathe p-:rei!r dav night, wt shoul "I be in n-jrditio

the. time to rf-s (!! .so, and

live long in th: S-oriititi- is

t

-ure and

-.vor! I a svm

to

tom r 1 1

than a di'-e. It is a tymptcm cfi

IT ABOR controversies are productive of j J j needless loss to employe, employer, and to the public. This basic fact hes long been recognized by the Standard Oil Company (Indiana) and is one reason why the Company has stressed the necessity of . industrial harmony within the organization. It knows that through such harmony it can

render the public a better service, and that by rendering such service the Company, its employes, and the public wili profit. In the Standard Oil Company (Indiana) every man earns his job; none inherits it. Every man has confidence in the knowledge and experience of his superior. Every employe knows that when he has earned promotion he will be advanced, for this is the time-honored policy of the Company, and, naturally, creates a spirit highJy favorable to excellence of service. Every member of the Board of Directors of this Company holds his position because of his experience and because he possesses specialized knowledge of the oil industry. From the Chairman of the Boarc to the man who fills your tank at a Standard Oil Service Station, every employe is inspired by a real desire to make the Company of the utmost service to the community. Industrial harmony within the organization is the goal toward which the entire organization is striving. Every man and woman knows that such harmony works for happiness and contentment, promotes efficiency, and increases their power for service. Industrial harmony means industrial progress. Industrial prjogress is made through co-operation, not through antagonism; through peace, not through controversy; through conservation, not through dissipation of energy. Industrial harmony inevitably results in profit to the public by reducing the prices at which commodities may be sold. This is well exemplified in the Standard Oil Company (Indiana). The conditions obtaining in this organization are not accidental; they are largely the result of a sane, constructive program "which avoids the foolish waste of radical experiment, the costly breaches of economic law, the .unhappy consequences cf social injustice'

Standard Oil Comply j f Indiana) 910 S.Michigan Ave., Chicago, Hi.

29S'

! l

o I n

IM"