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EUBANK IRONING BOARIDS

All have our own pctented swivel brccket. This gives trdded strength cs indiccrted in picture, which shows cr severe test ol crn ironing bocrrd.

Bocrrd shown is No. 2-B Jr., c short bocrd, ccrsed crnd door hung crt the fcctory.

Ccrn be instclled crlter crll plcstering is done.

and responsible labor unions and large and powerful industrial and employer unions make all agreements, and settle their affairs between themselves. Compulsory arbitration was tried, and was a complete failure.

Undoubtedly the Britis; t;"r:.,", situation has much to recommend it. That it makes for peaceful settlement of labor disputes is proof of its worth. But to my mind, even in such a condition, something of inestimable value has been lost to the average working man. The greatness of the United States for .the last hundred odd years has been built upon the fact that no boy was so poor in the beginning that he might not some day becorne Governor, Senator, President, a Henry Ford, a Benjamin Franklin, a Steinmetz, a Burbank, an Edison, a Marshall Field. In England, also, opportunity has knocked at every man's door, whether he be born in palace or hovel. But what chance has the boy of the future, under these English conditions, to roll away the rocks that bar his upward pathway? What room, what opportunity has the boy who can think better, work harder and longer, produce more, DO more than the other fellow? Is there room for ambition, for efficiency, for virility, for the gegetter-in such a national program? Will a national goose-step make for future greatness?

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