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Show O ' 'Asks Businessmen i To Aid With Stopping Of War Maintaining that "wars often find their beginnings in the business busi-ness relationships between nat-'ions", nat-'ions", Robert M. Gaylord, president presi-dent of the National Association of Manufacturers, recently called on businessmen in Canada and the United States to play "a more definite def-inite part"" in mapping a workable blueprint for permanent peace. ( "It is time we businessmen take issue with the dreamers," the Rockford, 111., manufacturer told the Canadian Manufacturers' Association. As-sociation. "Mechanized . marvels are an old story to us ... If we can do all these things why can't we discover a practical method of solving our economic and political po-litical problems without war?" Expressing hope for increased trade between the two countries, Mr. Gaylord said: "I hope there will be as few restrictions on that trade as our respective national interests make necessary, and that it will be a fully competitive trade so that men, wherever they live, will be constantly striving to do better work at lower prices." |