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people in our civilisation whe now sre unable to find & particular niche in which they can function effectively. Thus' we see that the machine has for mem gfldy increased the number of. groups e are told that education is stand- which an individual workman may ardized. To a certain extent this is cer- | find himself, which is a tendency away and deplorably so. On the sesrch his yown soul. he still has far toigo in the , but the important flact is that he has begun. We canriot have anything this world withomt wee&unx all of the lia- bilities that go with it as well as the assets, Wey cannot have automobiles not all, of ' our gohom if gnwisely 5 as unleashed tremendous forces in na- ture that mjay be used for good or ill. Feat Repetition of War. We have just witnessed their destruc- tive use in the World War, and it is but natural that we should fear a repe- tition of this disaster. But the counter force is at work. We hear today infl- nitely more of peace treaties, of ways to prevent the' horrors and stupidities of war than wej ever heard before, and we can see thati there is slowly being built up & public intelligence which demands that scientific forces should be guided into construetive rather than destruc- tive channela. It may be, as Spengler thinks, that each nation, each civilization, has its youth, its maturity, its age and its de- cadence, just as an individual does, and 5o it may be that the present civ- ilization will perish from the earth as completely as have others before it. On the other hand, there are reasons to think that it may not. It may be saved from destruction because it has in it at least two elements enjoyed by no one of the vanished civilizations of ‘the world. ‘These are the general literacy of the people, and hence the easy communica- tion of ideas, and the fact that no civ- ilized nation can now be isolated. We are ali, 80 to speak, holding hands, and N0 one group can sink, as past civiliza- tions have done, without the knowledge of the others. Even if it does sink the additions which it has made to the sum of human understanding cannot be lost, use they have been so widely dis- seminated. Somewhere they will flower and frult again. day is in constant flux, thanks to the machine, and flux means change, chance leave husband and child to the care of (Continued From Third Page.) (Continued From First Page. 3 i Seause 3 1s more thielicotiat. Pem: jected into the age of jazz and air- ause more ] mi- i’;llnn and labor fl‘wvmi“,;, nists like Vi tess Rhondda, head of She owes more to industry and amlt!h m us’fn P:‘(lnt group, ::l;. 1%!. %}mfld than to subtlety or cleverness, and she DEiate with T Silitants: s 35" 10 prison, and who advocates theories ex- cties—a character] e, s which has got her into hot Water more | ACtly ‘contrary to those of Margaret than once. Bondfield in regard to the place of paid | is more firmly intrenched than canni- Her politics are simply explained. |labor in the modern civilized home, are | balism, but nevertheless it also is being They are also her religion. She regards | distinctly cool in reference to the doyen | slowly subordinated. Records show that socialism as the exemplification of | Of the woman's trade union movement. | even savage tribes have ma Christianity. Useless to argue with her [ Tact is not and never has been MIsS | against it and frequently pus it with about the weak poimts of the Socialist | Bondfield's forte. She is forthright, be- | death. In' higher states of civilization creed applied to industriel and business | lieves in saying what she thinks, and | everywhere it is regarded with horror. cares little whether she pleases or A grieves. For she is always convinced Mankind’s Chief Fight. rinciple at the bottom of all things ‘Therefore, the chief fight which man- | 1ving, & law, if you will, whereby every life. As well try to start a debate with | " pm"‘o'b"""h; o o of the’ tundamental truth and fustice living, a1 whereby every ne of Eleven ren. of her statements, and regards those | i o v i he crime | harm: lorce that may I One of the 11 children of & Somer.| who differ from her & unfortunately | of e oty loanieg 1oward mar. |into & situation is immediately met by setehire lacemaker, she was born into a| Wrong-headed. For her there is no |der is much more common than is real- |8 oounter force of equal strength world where the right of every man to | other side to a question. ized by decent, gentle-mannered people, | Which is corrective in its tendencles, do what he liked with his own was| Speaking the slowness of the | Byery one of iis has in his make-up & |just 88 en electric current moving asserted to the hilt and beyond it. Con- | 8rowth of the spirit, for instance, i yjttle of the sadist. This is why a|through a conductor excites a counter Qitions for the factory hand and hired |she announced that the vitallty of the | moying picture audience is immediately | Current. It is, therefore, necessary when Telp generally were flerce. The work-| WAr spirit was due to the persistence | aroused to interest when the great fight | We are looking at any situation which with which the leaders of governments, | soene is flashed on the screen and men | 8] rs to be productive of evil to see struggle primitively in an effort to kil | ifi there is not also something in it pro- each other. The sadistic instinct is also | ductive of good. at the base of a number of strenuous estion dardization. sports, through which it finds a mild o - Similarly they would like to say, “We hvewlpeduutthcmmmnfdmgi: Neither of these goals seems '&uss of attainment, but humanity grow taller in reaching for them. Sermon on the Mount is perhaps the greatest evidence of man's abilit: 2o _set for himself a lodl&g ideal. P! other fi':tl:l. instead of toward standardiza- ve our corrective | tion. 2 before in recorded| It has’ been frequently argued that history has education also, been so in- | Our conquest of nature has proceeded dividualized nor have there been so|much more rapidly than our conquest many educational experiments in prog- | Of ourselves. re would seem to be HIS | ress, nor has so much effort been made Tules | to fit education to personal needs, Has Time to Develop, ' ‘The most important corrective force, however, that has besn brought in by the machine age is the opportunity which it has given to labor to enjoy a few leisure hours every day, hours free from the crushing pressure of poverty and overwork. In this country today we have the highest wages and the short- est hours of labor ever developed any- where, and we are going in direc tion of still higher wages and still shorter hours, poor man is no longer poor. In ever greater numbers he has time for self-improvement and gecreation. Not only has the machine given more leisure to labor, but it has in a sense given more opportunity for individual expression. Specialization and differen- arouse among normal people are proof that mankind hes e & lory way to- ward wiping out the cannibalistic in- stinct and will bly succeed in completely eliminating it. Incest, which cannot be fully in & lay publication such as this, | substitution of ts as his of conduct is a distinct moral advance fram the prehistoric code based on the rightness of might. Only now and then are isolated men able to put into prac- tice the precepts of the Great Teacher, but that they should want to do so0 is an_upward step. I believe that there is a fundamental history of the world has there been such a widespread interest taken by man in himself as has grown up during the present century. The Greek philosopher zaid “Know thyself,” but probably very few of the men in the street paid any attention this precept. However, hundreds of thousands people in the United Btates are now reading the books and the stories, the periodicals and the newspaper articles which help man to THE WRIGHT COMPANY ers were rather worze off under the new wi Tule of the industrial magnates than |Teligion snd soclety glorify war. The they had been under the paternalistic :;lnen of religion rfll&hmly resented rule of the old feudal lords. Shop assistants were especially help- Ridicules Russian Customs. Bona-fide Savings in the WRIGHT CO.S less. They were inadequately protected by law, and as rost of them were boarded like domestic servants they were cut off from the benefits of the work- men's compensation law. Members of the ruling class would rt up periodi- cally in Parliament and solemnly de- clare that if the workers were not kept at it for 12 hours at least a day they would become debauched and take the | road to ruin, Margaret Bondfield served her ap- prenticeship in a little dry goods store | and was graduated to a large store| where the help became “numbers” and | “hands.” She was 14. The working hours of this growing girl were from 7:30 a.m. to 8 pm. Once a week she got a half | day off. Once or twice a week there| wouild be a late night, and then every one worked till 10 or 11 o'clock. On Saturday shops stayed open till midnight. The one Margaret Bondfield worked in was owned by a prominent church member. He was very stern about the sanctity of the Sabbath, and | holidays! She went to Russia with a British labor delegation to get at the truth about conditions in that nightmarish land. She came back and roused loud laughter among a sympathetic audience when she described how in the land of Lenin, Trotsky, Stalin and company people are compulsorily bathed if the; do not have a bath of their own accord, and how the superintendent and chief engineer of a railway were sent to prison for not finding out the source of unrest which had led to a strike and prevent- e the old xpression and a rules, for instance, foot ball re-, leased much of the deeply hidden desire | to injure which lurks in many men. ‘The gentlest souls in the world may | be surprised to find brutal instincts in| them coming to the surface under the | ressure of circumstances. ow, who is tender-hearted persons of my acquaint- ance, went one night to a prize fight. Tt would have been my guess that she | would either have fainted or would gafe outlet. Under A woman I one of the finest, most ing the sald strike—and had had the | have rebelled at remaining at the fight prison term deducted She found in Rus:ia can materiaily help u: from nothing that still support the government as the only possible government, This pleased the labor crowd, who thought it a skillful presentation of the case. But it infuriated the enemies of Communism and especially the pillars of a church at which she had been invited to preach. Said the churchmen, case. their | when it became bloody and brutal. But such did not turn out to be the The combat was between a big, but_declared |strong man and a smaller, that if she lived in Russia she would |weaker one. The smaller man made a | science is also brave fight and took his punishment |in the mass greater opportunities for de- heroically. When his face was cut, one | Velopment than it has ever known be- eye closed, a tooth knocked out and one | fore. I think that the danger of stand- ear lacerated, he was still gamely stick-, ardization, which has been much writ- ing on. At this point the woman jumped | ten about of late, has been greatly ex- to her feet and cheered him. She was| completely lifted out of herself. was urging him to stand up and receive younger, She { M. Caillaux and other alarmists see i the forward march of science and the development of machinery only what they feel are the evil results of standard- ization and the crushing of jndividual- ity. They deplore the fact that most civilized peoples today wear the same kind of clothes made by the same ma- chines, see the same motion pictures, read the same books and absorb the same ideas, thus losing the apportunity for individual expression. In the in- terest which sclence takes in the ali- mentary canal-—that is, the material betterment of man--they see the ne- glect, and hence the destruction of the human soul. What they overlook is the fact that giving the human soul aggerated. Let us look at the facts. We say, for instance, that our clothes are standardized, that there is no individ- tiation may have made individual jobs monotonous, but they have also created satisfactory opportunities for self-sup- port and independence for thousands of people who before the machine age would have been forced to be common laborers because they could not develop the all-around skill of the artisans. In the old days if a man could not learn all there was to know about & trade he was relegated to a very in- ferior position, but today the industrial world is so divided subdivided in its needs that People of all kinds, even | those with abilities in only one or two ! directions, can find a place therein. | The defective boy with a low intelli- gence who a hundred years ago would | undoubtedly have been a criminal, or | at least a total economic liabllity, today |can find a simple occupation and be a good, self-supporting citizen. As we become more and more intelli- | gent_we will learn ho: still more JULY CLEARANCE of GOOD FURNITURE even more brutal blows than he had | uality in them. Yet every woman on a UL woman vasit to o our it | et S et it o | U s . n el W, oing or | ; in order to disseminate her socialistic | why she :,r.. diong i;,lh&:;‘ md)‘grgmf;o! possible combinations of costume doctrines. Mark, also, that although |ture was a fear born of her own physical | from which to choose. she has fulminated against capitalisis, | weakness, and her encouragement to| On the contrary, i an unmachinized she has never said a word the weaker man to go on, not to accept | rural European community, we find that condemn the scoundrels who rule in|defeat, was actuated by the fact that|the peasant women are not only wear- | insisted on the shutters going up at|strong supporters of God, king and 11:50 sharp on Saturday night to avold the accusation of Sunday labor. Gir¥s Average Income. The girl's average working week was %4 hours, and her pay was $125 a year, Even this meager wage was cut into by the living-in system, by which an employer provided board and lodging as part payment. Overcrowded, insanitary Russia and who have suppressed re- ligion, defiled and robbed the churches and slaughtered and imprisoned priests she had mentally put herself in his place. She was !{xh 0 the wall. ting with her back ing costumes almost exactly alike, but that often the patterns have not chang- ed for centuries. They have become so standardized that sometimes, as in Brit- tany, the very town from which a woman comes may be determined from the trimming on her bonnet. What ‘bedrooms and poor and insufficient food d lates and openly propagated were the main characteristics of the | atheism. system, Margaret Bondfield did not enter into Conditions like this—worse in the|argument with these critics. When it is factories—were fertilizing the trade | advisable to avoid battle or definite union soil. The shop assistants’ union | declarations she is a past mistress of ; came late upon the scene, shop assist- | the art of talking without saying any- ants not being of the stuff of which | thing and evading the dangerous point labor pioneers are made. Margaret | at issue. Bondfield no sooner heard about the union than she joined it and started to form a woman's branch. She was educated, quick, hard work- ing and an organizer. She became prominent in the union very rapidly. At 23 she was on the district council of its London branch and writing in its little journal, “The Shop Assistant.”| She had a happy journalistic touch in those days. Later, her style became more dry, more concerned with figures and statistics. She was not con- cerned with appeals to the heart. Her job was to marshal the facts of indus- trial life, conduct patient researches, evolve concrete arguments backed by mathematically precise statements. Called to Another Field. She was kept busy collecting informa- tion about housing conditions and com- But though the instinct to injure is present in almost every one and is 50| jstrong in some atavistic types that they actually or the ure 3 e T e Dleasure O th | chance of individual expression have most stubborn of all bestial instincts— | Such women? 1f we go still further is gradually being weakened by the afield to the savage man, who has forces W] Y liva: | never seen a machine of any- kind, forces which are bullding up civiliza-| SCFq the possible styles of breech- cloths and beads limited to perhaps a dozen. Dry up TORNS new way avoids cutting VER 3,000,000 people have | cured painful corns and cal- ‘Though retarded in his upward climb, | The game analogy mav be carrid out S and s,,;eum,s’ u"xgde? me“fix; nf ‘\I“:r‘ in the §mnner of reading. Before the | luses by this amazing method. One wul%ncemg; l{-mlfi(ne. actually losing | "‘x"h;‘*{", i to make books ;::‘;-P and | drop of new scientific liquid deadens . ound w] takes him several cen- | plentiful average man never | s | International Labor Office at Geneva. | Fiiitd A Co i s B Y peing is | Tead_even one. Even if he belonged | Pain in 3 seconds — then dries up corn. You peel it off with fingers. at Great Reductions Reg. $18 Double Day Beds, valanced pads........... $ 1 3_75 Reg. $22.50 One-motion Couch Beds. . o $1 5.75 Reg. $29.00 Windsor End Double Day Beds. ......... $271.00 Reg. $39.00 Englander Double Day Bed. ........... $25.00 Reg. $49 Fibre End Double Day Bed ! Her Views Cause Clash. ‘There was another storm when she addressed a church gathering and ad- vised her hearers to study the literature | on industrial conditions issued by the Progress Through Years. Her view was that in trial conditions » . | lowly crawling toward the light. He |to that small group who could read are a matter of religlous moment, but | § A * 3 has evolved to his present state from | there were perhaps not more than a P e e o I T ewis | lowly beginnings, and the very power | dozen books within his reach, each one | Doctors use it widely. Beware of | business. And so there was a clash. | O Frowth :-mrhlrm« implies is s guar- :nbf‘l’rla:llly mre by ha{x};‘l. r;fir the | imitations. Get the real “Gets-It"— .4 e i anty that he will grow to even larger | lowliest man is given e al ty to - ol » dayromemaking,” she announced one | spiritual stature, even though it ymay | read and has plentiful opportunity to| for sale everywhere, “GETS-IT, That brought the feminists down on | N0t be poesible for us to observe any stimulate his mind end broaden his| Inc., Chicago, U. S. A, her like a load of bricke falling from a appreciable biological or psythological | view by knowledge of what is going| height. “What is this back-to-the. | CANEe in one century or even 10. We | on all over the world and what other | | home shriek?" demanded one promi. (Much remember that a hundred thou- | people are thinking. His mental horiz- ] omt woman leaderMargaret Bond. | sand vears are almost nothing in the |on is widsned as greatly as was® the Reld cooms 5o have gone 16 Sieep asound | ANty of time. Purthermore, We| horizen of the known heavens by Co- | = 1900 and only just.awakened." must remember that this tendency to | pernicus. How has his soul or hlsl There was ‘aiso & hot period when | injure and to destroy is capable of | individuality been stifled by this fling- | Bumstead w she got wrought up about stenographers | STVINE_ Eoclally velusble ends when it | ing open of the prison of ignorance? ® Blling fgures and measurements. Then | andSaid hat she had come across giri (15, directed ~ageinet gtructures and | Again, take the automoblle, & typical | R e ular $ 2 2 5 M ohm!r l T h Olster e d -operative movement en- & usages which are evil, nda: machine. Before its com- < Trhare who, “because they can wear pneumonia | “5g0 "ot foree in the world—we |ing many & man lived and died with- | SXTEAC™p, 20 olfowsd. alT GJEVER g p 1 : | . gaged her in another field of inquiry. Y. | blouses and high heels think they have So she laid'the foundation for her|jsined a noble profession. But offen future campaigns for shorter shop hours, 'S, [ they are inefficient and responsible for ::;u boards and national health serv- | m;!hg %rl()fnmg than any other class. 3 = e Clara Bows of England voted this WH:r‘gor:‘l’!é dmin};xmehfisum. perched | g bit thick and sald so in no uncertain ; n kitchen chair, would pop | {ones. But Margaret didn't argue. up at street corners. The earnest face, | What she had said, she had said. She its bright eves glowing, its long, thin | just let the clamor wear itself out. mouth precisely articulating, became a|” In the Summer of 1918 the British i;'a‘x_::l':ar s&fi:t on platforms and in main | rrade Unfon Congress sent her to repre- FotREREY ll moment's notice the |sent them at the annual convention of oke S rainion leader was brepared to|the American Federation of Labor. That e akin or bus o & meeting and get | was, in a sense, poetic justice. She had 2gnn:0rd: u‘e:n. l:rmre at the rate of | been scheduled &oego in the second war inute. year, but couldn’t get a visa, She extended the field of her activ- ities. She raised funds to get decent Visitor at Buckingham Palace. lodging houses established in various| Not that she was a e pacifist or a de- ::‘r;;sz !l;lr ‘working 'fl”fl. An_experi- | featist. Indeed, she ranged herself with e roher own gave added ginger to | the school of 'Arthur Henderson, the o orts and she used to relate it|new foreign secretary (who wés taken Y zr;m effect at appeal meetings. into the Lloyd George war cabinet as late,had gone up to a big steel city | Labor's representative), and against the Iate one night, and, having nowhere 1o | school of MacDonald’ (which, blindly b FL; e asked a policeman if he could | pacifist, advocated defeatist policies), l‘i: ’er to a cheap lodging or a clean | and during the war was a regular visitor ]p’ n hfl some sfort. He sent her to a|to Buckingham Palace to assist Queen Sc;‘.l knml for girls. It was 11:30 p.m. | Mary in her schemes of relief. o te ki ocked, explained her plight—that| In 1523 there was some dispute in the o—““ a stranger and had nowhere to | inner circles of the Trades Union Con- B “C“d asked umlhe could have a bed. |gress as to whether she ought to be Al ertainly not!” snapped the matron | elected president for the year. As senior n“l lllmh med the door in her face. member of the general council it was - uhfll never forget the feeling of | her turn; but there were some who ar- e}r elplessness which possesséd me,” | gued that it was not right to put a ;"g? esses Miss Bondfleld when she tells | woman, however distinguished, however o story of the bad old days of yes- | long associated with the trade union erday. {noven;e'nt,ll'f. tlhe head of the world's 0 argest proletarian movement. sm';:"zsl:::. :;vs""hry‘ 60 MO T s oy S L was appo argaret Bondfield was duly elected— | not achieve it, in the effort to do so :-‘:s'éft‘.m‘ secretary of the union of shop | the first woman president of the Trades | they take a long step forward. Pro- anid 2;‘ !-thlPrks and warehousemen, | Union Congress. She managed that un- | hibjtion is an example of this straining B “ len she attended her first | ruly body very ably. Scarcely was that | toward an ideal. Men and women would o 'sdun on congress—the first wom- | job over than she was involved in her| jike to feel that they could say to them- ol Ay official capacity in a great boilermakers’ | selves, “We shall never again have bod"t‘;\n lon wasn't exactly a powerful | dispute, involving 70,000 men, which | drunkards; we shall eliminate all mm_}; men, In fact, it numbered no|had defied settlement for six months. [ temptation to _excessive drinki fnore than 2,000 members. In 10 years, ( &he promptly interviewed the fountain- = unw.eom. the membership was driven | heads in the dispute and got under way )vP 20,000 the united efforts of | negotiations which ended six weeks later | government business, asking an audi- argaret Bandfield and her associate, |in an amicable settlement. Her pres- |ence at Edmonton, Alberta, if over- the evangelist of the movement, the | tige was notched up quite a bit after | worked farmers would or would not that. welcome woman immigrants from Brit- ain to help them in the house, when hf;_h‘!"ln{! Ml:Anhur, ounded the National - ation of Women Workers, and whea j¢| _Friends Slated Her for Cabinet. |70 st political crists which had merged with the General Workers'| When the first Labor government | arisen over MacDonold's attitude to- Union (of which Clynes, swung into office in 1024 over the pros- | ward Russia and the Zinoviev letter home secretary, was the architect and, trate corpse of Baldwin's sudden pro- |reached her. She left that night and president) it ‘added 50,000 women to]tection program, there was a general | raced across Canada, caught a liner two the union’s membership roll of 500,000,) expectation among the leaders of the | hours before it sailed, and back in Margaret Bondfield has been secretary | woman movement that Margaret Bond- | ker constituency in time to ”fl"‘ of the woman's section of that union!field would be taken into the cabinet.|welcomed her with atorchlight proces- since then, varying her office job with | They were animated less by love for 50 men drew her miles lectures and aitendance as labor rep-|this trenchant Iittle woman—whom Tesentative at various _international|some of them privately regard as a bit labor conferences in Paris, Berlin, ()f & wasp—than by the notion that they ‘Washington and Geneva. must unite the common enemy, Her outlook on life and the woman's | man. movement blends old and new ideas.| But Ramsey MacDonald went only half way and gave Margaret Bondfield ‘The . mixture at times has proved explosive. ‘lhfi‘ :hlul—lnd—'zom office rfia: V{lhluhlll which belongs e pa entary sec- Modern Woman Not a Model. | retary of the ministry of heaith, In the . She depiores the modern woman's at- | subsequent uproar in feminist and equal ’{ude toward mating and homemaking. rights and woman's circles generally, Fhey simply want to express them-|Lady Astor, Miss Bondfield’s political “selves, she says, and have a good time, | opposite, got up at & mass meeting of ‘They don't regard it as a vocation—and | the National Union of Societies for Equal Cit! and excitedly declared and motherhood as a cannot exactly’ define it—makes for progress. This force is represented in religion, law, education, science, busi- ness and’ many other institutions. One of its manifestations is the power of physical growth. The mere instinct to grow all inherent in even the lowest forms of life is amazing. A striking example of this lies in a recent state- ment of Prof. Carrel, who has devoted many years of research to experiments in keeping animal cells alive. He says that if the small group of cells which he has kept alive in his laboratory during the last 16 years had been allowed to grow and reproduce without hindrance they would in that short time have be- come a _mass as large as our universe itself. This gives us & vivid indication of the vast energy back of all life. Has Spiritual Side. Nor is that energy all physical; it also has its spiritual side. Even in the comparatively short period of recorded history we can observe groups of le here ‘and there yearning for better things, for a higher plane of living, but unable to pull themselves up to this plane until some great spiritual leader rises to show them the way. When such a leader does appear many of them fol- Jow him eagerly. The Oriental religious leaders, Confusius and Buddha, per- formed this service. Christ is the com- paratively modern outstanding example. 1t is noticeable in all upward move- ments that men set for themselves an unattainable goal. They strive for something for which they have a need within themselves, and though they may out ever having ventured a hundred | miles from the spot where he was| born. Now, with its help, people in every walk of life go from one end | "PREPARENOW For Year Round Co-mfort YEARS TO PAY AT SLIGHT COST SaveMoney On Heating Plant Your home deserves the comfort of a mod- ern heating plant and right now is the best time to order and in- stall. You get prompt service, careful, con- scientious work and a tremendous advantage in price. Be wise! Be thrifty! Investigate this years' fest. or by mal, 50c a botile. Mat. C. A, Voorhees, M. Bed Davenport Suite reduced to 169 $ Upholstered in mohair with the same material: on the sides and back as on the front. 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Immediate Clearance tions prove worthy general the Tory enemy had put Asset to Party in Campaign. ! = : She was a considerable asset to her ; Porch Rockers, Now, 3347-Off again revived suspicion and fear among the nations” was effective. “Labor Reduced to CHAIR Extension of all up against her, and as a_consequence the merits hever fatled to Assist every attempt, to Fiber Suites, Now, 25% Off e o 3 - that it was & scandal and a shame, and unfit, sa race Bondfield ys Margaret G “It s the mind that the woman brings to bear on the child, on concep- tion, on the making of the little life all due to “subconscious prejudice be- ginning with Adam and coming down to_our time.” The new parliamentary secretary did well, but the House was critical about improve the position of women, to im-| prove social life, to create a healthy environment,” came her thin, precise voice thre DRAWERS Walnut or Mahogany Finish $25 Chests, Lawn Benches, Now, 25} Off h the ether and spilled into geveat miffn Bomer ’ THIS INCLUDES N e ear 6 RADIATORS FREE HOT WATER A e 17-IN. BOILER PRESSURE CONTROL ends; 300 FEET RADIATION ; Socialism organizes material re- sources for human ends.” Summer Plumbing Specials It ma: l.nv:tt be_good economics, but Pay $1 Weekly it is an effective line—and she believes in the abi of men and women to LET US KNOW YOUR NEEDS IN THE WAY OF FIXTURES! . $18.75 ... $22.50 within her own, on the influences with | her because she was too confident. The whieh she surrounds her boys and girls, | British Parliament closely resembles a that has the most profound influence (public school. It doesn't the new on the trend of the civilized world.” boy (or girl) to be too cocky. It appre- She believes that the race jclates a show of difidence so that it more on women than on men. Thecan have the generous glow of giving bfl-;llnhh u{:edwlth he;." ihdn w"}:n an encouraging cheer. ol o evelop lea e S ooy Gavelop Ber Iden piDeY| Excels as Dispateh Box Thumper. her as react] and Victorian. Yet here was this bit of ‘woman, now . $49 Chests, now Refrigerators, Now, 257 Off f a put it through as & practical program. starts for example, by as-|the first woman 60 be intrusted with | She won't le to make much serting that there is no past, even that!replying for a government upon & |progress with that Socialist program in of an army commander, which wme]menure of importance (It was an un-|this Parliament, anyway; but as min- ‘woman cannot fill efficiently; but when ; employment_insurance bill, a subject| ister of -labor she has to she goes on to qualify that by saying|which Margaret Bon'fleld has at her|familiar problems which have always that architects and doctors and such (fingers' end), as good as laying duwn|interested her, and at any rate she can are entirely inferior to homemakers | the law to the assembled and|go ahead with for her pet there is trouble. with a gold-mounted m&.mmmmlm Ta .LOW TERMS conveniently arranged ‘Women, she insists, must Mfl]l the | ously ”fil’l the dispatch 2': which the countryside and ru- function belonging to her sex. She|stands on the table in front of the|ralizsing the The WY RHGH £ towns. must build up the life of the family|government benches and has been bat- | That is a practical ideal which sounds around her. She must secure for the |tered and banged by so eminent { more like Henry Ford than Margaret 2 ) : it yet the| Bondfield, but she has guite a few 4 ideas and ideals in ith 2 ‘ RIS vidualist Henry, alf $ & . L4 o L B oiicatians. as st Drimte 2668 ot J " Soctalistic phrases. . better running of the home every device of science. Her influence in the hon.l’!‘ civilization to a higher plane. » her best and biggest work in the She denounces tite woman who