Show 1 I I I I 1 I I I I I I I I I I t tt t The ColumnS Column I Boy DO V S J x REFRAIN IX OLD niD IS ding coming dong bell SUMMER the trees and wish her well Shake ke out t the meadow with green young s sprinkle I scatter wheat from from the hedges blossoms for her I V feet I 1 I I birds and the bees In a winged Batt Battalions platoon of lowers flowers will be here soon I Open all the windows fling the doors I j wide wide wide- J I side I in on every is sra ara King Carleton I v v P v F WHY OT A NO WORK VORK WORKWEEK u WEEK EEK thought occurs that possibly a The The designated no work week week or or be fitted into the general fe S ot of things and made applicable all an employed persons-however persons essential essen- essen to their activities may appear to be mi accomplish this for tor some strikes workers workers-to to the detriment of others others- and Sd Iii in order that there be no partiality ft reasonable that some would appear n it time be designated for a general specific with shutdown temporary suspension nf ot course coWe of all professional services as aswell aswell aswell well as those associated with business transportation communication entertainment entertainment enter enter- and the like of organized IOU If If It is within the power minorities t to leave their Jobs on order of their leaders leaders leaders-as as Is being done so o frequently of f late why late why shouldn't a to period be designated for br everybody take Uke a week or a month off at the same time so that there would be no ne need need for picketing or violence violence just Just an entire en en- tire nation at leisure leisure and and with time to think Think for Instance of all of-all all all of a sudden sudden finding finding yourself and family without water gas and electricity in your home and without phone service service service ser ser- ser ser- vice of course as all of these require work by some people people and and remember theres there's to be no work Patients in hospitals would receive no attention from nurses or physicians and In the event of deaths there could be no burials during the no work per per- iod No lio mail deliveries no newspapers newspaper none of the so-called so conveniences or even eren essentials to which people have e become accustomed just accustomed just a stoppage of everything at the same same time Fantastic Yes perhaps but no more so 60 than some of the things this country has been undergoing undergoing and and possibly giving ing inga a hint at urgent need for correction of or quite obvious weak spots In the op operation op- op t of government under present auspices Mansfield Mansfield News Journal o o o oWE WE HAVE fallen before a mumbo Jumbo designed to lure us Into the false theory that the government can do for forus forus forus us better than we ourselves Senator John M. M Butler s ss s A OT or AN tN ACCIDENT I IA A LUCKY turn of fortunes fortune's wheel gave J I this this country coal reserves sufficient to last 1600 years yeath at current rates of con con- But resources are of n no value until they are made available for tor con I use No accident of nature was responsible for the immense productive capacity of the industry which gets our coal out of the ground as It Is needed As recently as 1930 90 per cent of Americas America's coal was loaded by hand Today nearly allot all of ot it is cut by machines and over 75 per cent is mechanically loaded The American miner averages a an output of I more than seven tons of coal a day In Europe where the mines are either state owned or controlled there Is nothing to compare The Polish miner comes closest with two tons a day The Japanese best of ot the Oriental miners can produce no nomore nomore nomore more in a full month than the American miner does in a single day A sense of accomplishment and progress pro pro- pro 1 gress gres is essential to the morale of any I working force Knowledge of the best ways to do a Job and machinery to do It with are of vital Importance Through educational programs the coal Industry assures itself that there will be men to carry on research and to efficiently use new techniques and machinery Boys tying hying in coal communities can start their minin mining educations In high school go on with mining courses through college college col Cal lege and Into post-graduate post work and do It all ll o on scholarships provided by the coal industry Itself There are now over of ot these scholarships ps and more are re being added every year This long range program Is another example of the coal Industry's progressive progressive sive aim spirit Free ee competitive enterprise seeking to produce the best possible Product at the least cost works to the V benefit of all V V vv V V v WALL STREET AND 1 MAIN LUN STREET LOOK MAGAZINE recently featured a 1 story on the New York Stock Exchange under the accurate and re revealing revealing re- re title Wall Street Works for re-I re Main Street In a a. brief Introductory Paragraph the magazine observed The i Stock Exchange has become the nations nation's V No ho o. o 1 i department store and the people V. V who opera operate it are out to do io business With anybody who has some surplus cash and a faith In lathe inthe the future of American American Ameri Amen I Ca can Industry A customer with or doesn't even have to go to New NewYork York to Invest It the it-the the Stock Exchange comes to to him Look then then devoted devoted several pages to a seque sequence of photos and captions showing how now a California rancher living three thousand miles from Wall Street visited a Pasadena broker placed a modest order for some stocks he liked and how I the uie broker sent the order on to the exchange where the transaction was qUickly if 7 comPleted Its final paragraph Said aid The Exchange neither owns buys V nor ce tens sells fl securities but the free and t V fair jair market It provides makes possible the now flow o of needed capital to American 01 l indu industry I It is ls significant that zin a general magano maga maga- sine Zino no of at very large circulation should V fea feature ure a a. story such Buch as this We nav nava have V come a 0 long way from the time when V V security exchanges changes were regarded as r something close to rich mens men's clubs where nere insiders made millions through l Continued on Page Two I The Boys Column II I I Continued from Page One deals The exist to J mysterious exchanges serve everyone who WAO wants to use them thern- and th the majority of present-day present buyers of stocks are people with ordinary kinds of Jobs and average Incomes These people peo peo- pie are buying shares in America and America ana thus making m more mole re secure their own i future and the future of the nation Itself |