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Show THfC LIHF.ltTY LOAN AM) HL'KIXKSS. "What has the Liberty Loan to do with the refrigej-ation business?" was asked by a subscriber in the fastnesses fast-nesses of the Rocky Mountains of the editor of the Refrigeration World. The answer was sound and patriotic: patrio-tic: "At tliiH critical time the success or failure of the impending loan have more to do with refrigeration than even the machinery and chemicals used in producing refrigeration. If the loan fails1, everything else will fail with it. All business will eventually even-tually be prostrated; nothing could thrive." It is the business of every business and business man in the United States to see that the liberty Loan does not fail. They should buy Liberty Lib-erty Bonds; they should encourage and assist others to Duy them. No businesB in the United States is going go-ing to succeed if the Liberty Loan fails if the Nation fails. it Is better business to buy Liberty Bonds than to pay indemnities to a victorious Germany; it is better business busi-ness to win this war than to have our foreign commerce subject to the dic tation of the Potsdam government. The welfare, the success, the prosperity, pros-perity, the liberty, and the happiness of every true American is bound up in the Nation's success. We are not fighting alone for material interest, for annexations or indemnities. We are fighting for freedom and justice and humanity and civilization. But we are also fighting for the maintenance mainte-nance of our commercial rights, for the rights of our citizens to pursue their lawful journeys on the seas and transport their commerce to foreign markets. It is patriotic, and a duty, to buy Liberty Bonds. It is also good business busi-ness to do it. |