rt i ' , .. 1 . i _ < 1 l, 1 L ' ` 'I I L N 20-1927 . - 'rua cnlnrofrrsrowu GUARDIAN \ - gg PAGE NINE; _ - AUGUST ///_ E Rcga-rd For 1. llceds ill lndustry F' "lf-. _ Having Spent His Life Among the Workers find in i tricts of En land,-the Prime-Minister llioRur_a|P,S. _E._ _ _ .,,_ _ 'of Britain H38 3. FIl’S‘l-hand ',Kl‘\9W\€`dg6 Of' the Covenant was the relations be l ` k tween employers and employed. lt| Sccrci _cf Pr-elllicr Baldwin’el _ Success _ls a Sincere V - llllmali » ‘opponents are led by a practical in- dustrialist. ‘- mate contact, the interior of a. great metal foundry. He knows the joys of hard toil. HF knows the joys oi the toiler.- He knows .his sorrows.- Aild. knowing. he understands; un- d”l`5UUldiI\8. he sympathlzes; sym- Brelll speecll oi\."Gcodwill in Indus- Stanley Baldwin knows, from inti- pathizillg, he helps. I was in the Press Gallery wlleii he made his i»l'y." and shall never forget the deep impression lie made on us blase fect that for his alty, the Aik of 1°YOU_CAN 'l' l Qi; _...__ .__ ._....... Those Important Factors th-at go to e is now being carried shoulder high l _ _ l . l F -» l 3 . I- journalists. He tllen declared,iiief- ' llllllllll _ ._ l ' Of' 110 _fl ~ and workers who follow High-Priest --__-5 M I' th9 SW6Btl'\98S Of |Y\dUSfl'l3.| by li priestly throng of capitalists ~_ ' . no-nv 1 l l . l - - Relations Between Worker and Ernpwyer' ' Baldwin. while a few miscellaneous censors are swung by landowners andl . i ~ k f ' I' _ _ ,___ . ` ` tri , . _ ft. walks with a quick. lem! s de. sill- ' h PLULI s the best! _ ‘ l l ‘ ;` Y ~ 7 '°““’° °'”‘“°*‘ "'““‘P‘“' °"°' °°““' Of all _forms of Chewing Tobacco t e 1 try moore with a gun under his arm. when posterity comes to erect a _“_ l \ l V ._ oql',ll\_ @ ! statue to him it will not look an im V Y _ _ § £ 44 any good at trousers which left their _ creases behind. not only on the ploy- ing fields of Eton, but on the pl0\i8h- ed fields of Worcestershire. and it is not easy to put a foundry owner iii lar disadvantage. Bsanley Baldwin will cut a graphic ii ure in history. because he is a thinker. He think! as should the' head of an old-estalr lished firm of ironmasiers whose ‘ mentality has been colored by Wee- leyaliisin und eneljgised by the reli- ance on the “inner iight" which he owes to his Quaker training and tra- ditions. I ‘ ‘ill _ _ il _ i ' ” A" Vi presalve monument. No sculptor is - ll _ _‘ _ \ ~. ew.; I A RY A. “_ _‘Will - g, _ y §Q`v, l_._- \. 4 ,0`q §\‘e‘*‘l. l ».h,g=`l2_-'-.'_.;» ,.,»~.~sc` ego ,Z f,§;.\"‘ .124 5 --I .i.‘\, ~:_§ \,. . '.<\-ll \~ -_si \ -4- _~ ~. - _...vw 5'* -;j_;\\~ ---~- ~~~- »-- ' -rise. ._ . -: . - 'U "b*¢" -="-.1.o..*-\;:iv\\\,\tl`~ _ > J; _ \`» rv ,/_ 3',” ‘ *-4 -- ,tg/if , _ swam -l~\‘_l;,`.( ,.1-l/{,,., _ ,»,~ i 4/2/ ’e¢e &o*,¢Z'1‘ - \__ 1,- M5, \` :A < .$.14 ' ‘4¢ f ._\. - ’0’»‘¢ ;§Q`o ` / ‘afo .-`..`_ 3 -,ii \\‘\§%" ~ -. ' _ oe* \- \;">;- "ffl »‘*\,‘~\’ ~\lll<»~ (cl. /l-l -'_ ' i‘:,¢,9,; \ *>»__'.'f.». .-_; 3\`g§. -_§: 1-_ U3; ' 1 '_ ~ .l , ¢¢ f_\,_ _ l ,» .; §_:}%\. ~5.\\-mllilr, do _ _ ,_-_ff._j'L'_/.r » lf . _ gov! ~ -r .- ..»:~:»: In his mental methods there isnotl- e e nimble-wittedness of Lloyd, George, e. fact that gives no cause B - b cause all the greatest- . O I. \ if \ _ , .\ \ `\ 5:00, ri’/f . if 1 .is ~'-“"» n ’-,Jil ff* \"\`)A <3* ` . 7-?,~-o EN years ago very few outside, oil T me inner political world oflllon- doll would have been ablelto ide tify ly','¢ mime "Stanley Baldwin" as be-l lllz me designation of a notable. Tell Y ago Stanley Bllldwinwas riot o. mio. Who then, _can explain the lllwntrovertible fact that Stanley ' pgldwlli is now the greatest states- “ian in the world with the liigliestl ll¢l-sollal and political prestige of all. living stotesmen? _ _ During the period of his partys defect, and the ill-starred' reign of tile Socialists (unsatisfactory £0 S0- clgillsi and non-Socialist alike.) when‘ the Conservatives were wandering iii the wilderness for ten mouths, more than one eminent Conservative were adding doubt to their perplexity. One rlsy during that time, after tea with liord and Lady Askwith in their gumiuer home at Sunnlngdale, we were strolling over the golf* course, discussing the situation and politic- Thomas as being “no more a Social- ist than you or I," Lord Askwith, in gplgwig igya qlif:£;)'my:r‘g'ai1ai}?nowN§;\o §i'1i§i.(l;hdtli‘is¥13elii}tvi:a;l:i‘iio1ii?(i.i;i;e be MV B*11d“’m» and Wh° Can |007* “ale or mm shut ll' ls lmposslble to llelds and l.lop_glll.llens of l{elll_ »~A at that inscrutable face and hope for timate by his ast record his - great soldier in death said he would fi WPWT Ai “D195 he 5”/95 his f°l‘ xl es ' P ' p° mlllel. have wl.ll_lell llle Elegy of all lowers the impression that he is the English countryside than take agleag, Prophet coming down from out the _ cl’ly_»- llllld Mr__Blllllwlll’ levellllllll thunders of Sinai with the stone- the mirid of a Premier whose hdbby talxlets g “ ‘gina 305961 fvhllc? ‘$111 __ _ - ' gu e e osen eop e n o e "' pig breedmg m W°rcesteTshh°e` .Promised Land. At others he is so ____ Gimcarul. l>Lulmi.lsM. Simple' 5-° “““’°l 5° "‘3“““°“S_ ‘lm French Ambassador oulobiogrcpn the seasoned and cynical politician ally Sald ol lll.l0_ “ln me front r ‘This stale of lnilid lsneither mis- begins “regard mm "5 nqthmg mme of an immense and painful natio understood nor niis`_iudged by the mm a “°“'f“b“‘°“S Mme' 'mmd' catastrophe,” and seen against t Britlsh peo le. Few gamblts are more eyed *Wm* mnmfem' questioning' vivid background, Stanley Bald he ms me llgwer io ¢li1e¢¢,_ ln view successful §itli them than a graceful ‘vanderinf in th? w°-Xlderland M derived an effective impressiven of the fact that; as Assistant Editor pluralism. _They have always pre- W°Sm"““"e" which has been developed to su ferred Someone who is Something to DEUBERATE DECISION degree by his wise statesm tential future. But the Party is with him." . ' l _ BACK T0 POWER. Since that day Stanley"Baldwin has "returned _to power" in every . sense of that term. And still he is an almost unknown quantity to mil- lions in i.his'Dominion whose destiny of a big national newspaper in the Old Country, it was my duty to make regular cal1s_at lo Downing Street to learn the Prime Ministers mind tional affairs. it may bg permissible for me to endeav r to ,in- wln to the Canadian public. These personal contacts with him are the ideal media for discdv‘erlng'the Man behind the Politician. Now, there is no coincidence inthe fact that Mr. Baldwin has a strong affection for pipes and a real inter- est in pigs. Those two 'facts consti- tute an index to the mind o! the man. In thefsame way that Mr. Baldwin breeds pigs, Disl-aell raised peacocks and Joe hmnberlaln 'grew orchids. ' - ` mrs AND- Pics _ It is a symbol. The trailing feath-, ers on Lord Beaconsfleld's terrace at Hughenden colored his foreign policy with a rare beauty, and Chain-_ berlain's sound Imperialism was gloriously permeated with the exotic splendors of his conservatory. f Similarly are Mr. Baldwiirs pipe and pigs the symbol of his character as, also, of the characteristics of his policy. As one strolls round his pig- geries at Bewdley the contented con- tents seem to point. with undisturbed and undisturbable minds. to the humble 'and more natural ideals o I statesmanshi And so it was modern p. quite to lie expected that Mr. Bald win's first words on Canadian sol were, “True greatness emanates froml the simple things of life." “Meeting him and conversing with' that _iudicious man selected his fav- o ursuit as si. vivid, an unmis= rite p takeable, image of the simple appe tites which he believes should govern Wlitlcs. Pigs and a brisk, determin Gd zeniality. were the strange twin eminent Liberal writer-Phillip Gucdalla-says: “Our masters' _ duty, whether they "are framing ncrlli~'lnl,_ ~_ err ng o rem er adwln BROKEN SUJENCE. Stanley Baldwin has broken thc n ellen of the industrlalisis- ~a| a trade policy for Europe or priming the honors list, Is to feed the multitude. Economics. party discipline and public ln- tercst, all point in the same dir- ection; and as a hungry nation gathered expectantiy round the pig-tub, Mr. Baldwin needed all - his experiences of feeding time. . . . It might be unfortunate in a time of debate between La- bdi' and Capital, that an obvious protagonist ol one of the dis- putants should preside over the state jwhlch may be called upon to arbitrate between them. Mr. BaIdwln.(one can hardly doubt lt), would be fair. to the verge of 'partlali|.ll. to Labor.” Bl P0|'5°n”'“a' An” dlsnusnng ""°"‘i'_"' _"""'1’“’_*__* llls the l-esllll of ll (ol-llllllollsi aCcl_ ral head. `Fl'o}n the ranks of the 'previous statesman. Cobderi printed lo g _ ~ - great cmpigyer is the ilai.ion's; politi- lCaptallis of liidustry have _emerged lcalico, Chamberlain made screws, lflondr Law was a shlpbuilder, Stan- lcy Baldwin stepped straight from lthe foundry into Downing Street, bringing with him ‘an intimate per- .sonal, first-hand knowledge of those "` `”" ismb all-'o. y er lea er i ‘_ testha .H ' FREE wi each tube of Willie Shaving Cream. T f amoua Shaving Cre In (l) softens the bca quickly, (2 eliminate the _ _ ER known to impart or import personall gd, animus into any controversy. °°' nooau-; counaon irritation, ( leaves face feeling BETT than when. you et RFK Luge tube, 35a. Double aiu. 5 l . / 'things which make. and those things 'which mar, tile sweetness of ilidlls- ltrlal relations To this day, the contemporary ob accident or an ur emerge from obscurity to proniinelicc dent, or was he the architect of the event? No one can say-unless ii. Q l O _ l. ',;,;`\ ‘.\\‘ \ll\L clllir lo S .\:~~ TN! CAP to allow fear of consequences to div- §g_\_;l\l.'.‘. - ‘ 2 om "y lf iserver, as the historian of the future V ` d€CiSi0_l'1~ TNS HCCOUUY-5 f°\' that be' lwlll bc, is not surc wnclncr stanley - ' l wilderins artlessness with Whleh he lBoldwin_ as Prime Minister, was ou l . , _, _ ll » handles serious subiects as il “MOH- = ` chlteot. Did he M/ wc" \\ eir ravi The IROC 1-S Z _ ~& - @ /'*-Z mental attitude when as news editor .llll9¢f°=_. 2-’ ‘time by many to be an indlscretlon. 3 _ n ty have had nimble wits. a __ does he arrive at his conclusions inheé A intimate Chlracter Study of Our Eminent Visitor. t ` ' _.__ _ “ Br r. mr ~.o<»~ litres: z;.l;rsr..r‘lr;..ll;sf.i - _ l 9.2.. ‘.’,"..’.:'.‘,‘ ..- ..7 ' . 5 lfiy me Gospel lr Goodwill prcacnca Millet, bonleol-Aqll for crmclbm’ e __, ____{__ rom the High Altar oi COK\servat- i velva’ exhl1,_ crooks ln me catalogue of crlminpli-'l R. ther. if . / after shaving rustic-minded manner. With asliE h all: of detachment he comes to his \ subject as one who has been for B` I long walk along the rain-bedewed. lanes of his native shire, turning the l and approaching it d -subject wel over d ‘e mme: from the self convince ang is ° than as a debating point to be d -_ cussed And never has he been ' He has the dual courage of » the Big man; courage to come to a deci- sion and courage to implement that scious of tli g ty. that he sincerely believes that he I would be false to himself if he were ert him from the channels of truth . » I am convinced that this was hi- of the "People" I secured and pub- lished his 'private opinions of Lord Beaverbrook, Winston Churchill ani. Lord Birkenhead, considered at tha' but which were the free convictions, of a guileless mind. World’s o _ Headquarters Prince Edward Island is famous everywhere as the world’s headquarters for silver fox breeding. your dealer 1 _ A., _ , r 'r ‘f ~~~f-=.-is-=-'°t“ Silver F ox jfif-3; \ .L `,_ -/' -1/'ff sells BIG BIG BEN is famous among the Prince Edward island fox breeders as the world‘s best chewing tobacco. BEN by 'he ' plug and by Because BIG ,BEN comes in plug form, it always keeps me Vacuum fresh and moist-does not chip or crumble ----rnay he con- (_u,',-,,'gh,») veniently carried in any pocket-does away with waste. Tl" Enjo your tobacco to the fullest. Chew fresh, rich, full-gavoured BIG BEN. BIG “W unt.o you when all men speak . ic- oe ow well of you," says the Book. ang nalithercfore it is to be reckoned his Stanley Baldwin for righteousness Win that he has a few political enemies ess both in and outside his own Party. per- And yet it is equally true that few _, an- `men are better liked. The reason is ` none oi’ the attributes PLUG Chewing Tobacco vuramrllunsarlnuaanvn 'e ...mums-1-rwnuulvir-" _ .__,._. __ _ _ ___, _ _ ._.._, _ 4,.__?____._-» ....1 l-- -~- ---- ---1- -----f _ __ _ _ be really Something-else. This is the banners behllid which Mr. Baldwin fi‘\\8lc eclipse of Mi'. Bonur Law: and. ' \ . P be. generously genial, we must mnk the most oi thepigs. There is another sense in which they conform to the orthodoxy of h British public life. The great Brltls Public likes its statesman i/o be rack- an indll: : . ol ble ranks ed by a distinguished craving to li something else. Some of them hav scientific lennings; others are incliri- ed towards literature, yet others to- e over tlic\crried. v u _Wards mechanics. Mr. Baldwin sits among the red dlspat¢-gi) boxes rl Westminster and sighs r the Eng- lish countryside. Speaking at Que Dec a. Week ago he stated that th old-fashioned pleasures of the ceu tryside built up the greatness 1 n 9 skinned "iiitellcctuals,' its anii-Socialist Government should b strililist If one rilns an ey il British pilhlic num. onc discerns incredible few who have ‘ally diff* rclation to the industriallsm wliic L ence. 'And while the nlisllolgled Lab _ io solve the industrial problem i e lives, say its enemies, by leaving it _ unsolvezll, is infilic hands of soft-` l. , ' ~ politicrll amateur tradition. a sure safeguard _ ---cc---l will-ll ..£:‘..ll;S-..?.;‘.;‘l§: sslsslc rs; vo--H 011 imP0\'i-911* D9-i`\°““\'°nd \“i'e\`“9-' prffesséogglgiflsnl' crlléllxé gvslllnggl :£6 see the Machinery of the li'/lan ot ll tl ls T" es ° 1 ' - - A li. other lim a ons crl1teGthe.i11°1“§1°“°f “ Pm”-"“‘“°“3 gvigdkoli lxigltiiilifdiisgiitf lroctlliitixliiig tn; Prime Minister °f 0 t q, d 1 Mp, B lg- the entlcmen. V »_ ~ ` - 3-l ‘ l t- orator. It is un-l erpre an revea B Havingseen Mi-_ Baldwin in almost gmllognglllilg li;llll)teulll,llnrlEglll>e dllntizllle Snllgt 2;* has glven publlc poirlsrrlnld izlaillgi oefs ati;ib'll.li;1n(.:ll'li;{lrll:l'/..§ every conceivable attitude-top-hllb wllll such powers llllll olllf umm- utterance to some of the most. nobly- lm’ f rl Sl has *Ewa S been Bald lrll ted along Whitehall, st.li'f-uniformedl lllhlng October nftemooh me ears pllmsed mouglllsl sawmled_wllll the nmlllcax clubs that yt ls Mrs Bakk- ” f*tf““}l_°e ‘°V°°: ;"’l‘,`¢'l“?“‘l"“lS-°‘"l‘l’l' ago he went to mc ciirlrori club philosophy of the country m=11\.SWe°l§.f,’,‘lll who glves hlm me lmpellls alongi U18 le “mee 3 al' mme" W ‘ and sprung a mine 'which blew to ‘with thu sympathy Of 11 \3l‘°U““‘ 'W ‘llls ollllclll career Modesty Wm-l hands 0\\1SlWd behmd b“°k'”I d°“°" x:)i;iltlll`ereeiis the lliost powerful com- l~icllln;vitliBt.l\i€\l~;la;Sl;1'll1;l\‘;n0E“i;`\:':¥)ri»l;fI‘;'; lllmpls almost ll llel°l.mlly_ _ _ f til . _ sci l", ~ _ l.‘lrl.l‘“r.l.l‘§ :i°l:::l:.l“:f.: ~`43_,=‘f~’2 é’»-if--il-‘l` -fi-l‘fl1f-2”. --,.g,\»-»»<-- ,,,,,,,,,,_, ..._ °° °" 9* e “ 4 Inst ument of cowardly compromise Th”-i is 0”” ° ‘e gre” ~ l all occasion when I liiterviewedhiln and dastardly lllll,lll,ll,y__fell mm 3 of Mr. Baldwin; he just opens his Even ms enemles are ummlmous .°‘. C“"°“°-"" '""’ °°“““’ ’°“d°“°° mound of fragmentary filaments. *lem ‘lime ““‘“e “"“’ “S “e °"°“s‘wltn his frlcnrls in me conviction 01 Premiers- 0" ill.” °“°“.““°“ hewburviiig in its catustrooilic 'Collapse his l“°“°“- He 5“"*§ “lf;‘s°‘f:“l‘l‘§§lr*;l that nc ls concerned not with his ` ’ h ublic wel- ""°'* d“’55°d‘ m mugh. h°me'5p““ some of the most formidable clllef- his S0\ll UIOUENS- 9 ll l lm l el tweed - capacity for easy speech but none ‘l?;'r'; caglelfrong ger expeecpts that he tweeds, on his head li. shap ess l, - l - llll hat, in his hands an untrilnmed MM 0_ po cs` of thc technique of the rhetorlcian. wlll_'__as others ln me same 'pomlon hickory stick, ill his mouth' the in- NOT Lpoyp GEORGE in fact he louthes rhetoric as any before mm Such as mo d George evimble pipe' He longed ‘A typicm ~ 7 "W" Of 5i‘“p““m' dwg' “umm M have done-'-risk reat thinss from farmer-suliire. And he looked con- alle ls ll pllule_.. snld llle noble -lille llorlot. of the arts-" paltry motives 0% political strategy tenmd' _ l0f‘d, echoed by tl`l0liSi1ll(]B Of 0tll!‘l'S. D QPEECHES or personal satigfagtion, The fact is that Mr Baldwin is uii-- LU" ‘ To me lmnlgal observer (and in lltics and politicians QUITE “UMAN V ~lnicillglslc` to inc political mica oe- » _ . . ~ _ _ tn tim f lmlllll llllded ills language. like himself, is loose on; zoony sgelaorefuge from despalr Freniiers are, after all, quite lili- ggi: l\.l1§l :€l.,I,;Tl"ll£‘l;ll all gl-nlle ls liiubetl. No matter how dramatic l ln mm ) Brmsh pomlcs have always men- SL‘\'“f°h 1* Pfinllf M‘“§l‘l°‘m‘l;‘d statesman. Politicians only. know may be the situation oil, wlilclu :lie pmemléd a restful almnalllm ln you iliid a mail. ' rime rl rs pany' lllll sllllesmell only know :~\lrt.ain is' rung up at \ es inns er, tl one Could aptly say thatthe may have to be more or less mould- ¢ouml.y_ lie has never, as Lloyd George wonldl; 5133; of me State are elmer Dorlc ed to thfnolsetlomciiiirpumiiiisq‘iris vm' °"°“ 1" E“8‘“““ “ '°“‘“° "°’°d“l”d "Q “`°'“'-“me fl“"”°"'f`~"flll'or Corinthian-either rl rectilinear "5 me” “ ‘ey ‘ er" u 1' Minister IS Selefffed f0l‘ the S016 9-nf* “ “hes Tn” e cpemng ‘qu “Pcs lc ireserve and a severe simplicity or a Llo d George, ‘Boiiar Layv, Ranlsay compelling l.ell50n that he -is not the pei-oyatloli. btuiileyhllirllililllviélostlllalfliislmore merllrlclous medley ol. lollatelll thus leaves Y . Mf*CD°m\ld ‘Wd smmey Baldwm last Priine Minister. To the public me Stage Wm‘°“t “ “ ln l ll alum” with “can themi lM _ (-lad, ing or make-up. And the speech.l: as ‘lull Thls contrast ls best xylirtiuss lx’Yi"tc3ani'ii>`l?s,h;:§ilfblre:ii3l(i\g with‘ Lxltglli’ ,bug glitz Lilrtwflsollct tlllsftllell takes on thc conversational tone of ulseen ln E com arlson ol, me meow - id€l‘l¢iC£t\ \'€Kl1\B\.\‘llY t0 NIB Umcial and Lord Szlllsbllyy-5 pl-alll-ms; boast' stage-manager explaining that the cdlwolullons oliilloyd George and me | conventions. Occasionally it was pos- lloll-llcllllls ls lllal they ale ,lol Lloyd scenery has had to he slightly alter-Islncere slmpllclly ol, Stanley Ball sible in get' under the oilicllall skin as Ge0l.ge_ when me conselvllllvel ed because of a mishap to the elec-l Wm' who ls B perfect example ol me with Lloyd George travcllilg to Lu- plllly was; .lll lglll sgunglll sllgm tric switches. There is neither un-lDm_lc style_ Tllls slylevol stmlslll ‘ um oi ‘mx Ramsay Mncoonigli on was-that he was nm' Mr' Gladsmhe dmmfmc mnqequacy °r liminlilucllines and absence of ornamentation him one cannot fall to assume that‘i\\9~'~ 7"' Sundll’ “ight °f h fc' as, incidentally, the invaluable stock- 5“P°"“deq““'~Y V’ his 5990265- ‘leylis useless for building frame-houses, mlersl p, in his bed at 10 Down ililg lll_ll-llde of ,llllle ll llllmllel. ol llvlllg are made noteworthy by i. c onimil- bul ls perlect lm. llearlng up me Street, he proppedl liimserllelip ontl e lllsul.l.eclloll_ Bolllll- Law was made sion of oplilent metalllior :ind I 0_lml_denS ol slate . pillow to hand-wrte' a" ssage" onlelldel. mllllll 0 me m tell ll, presence o the decen nu ty 0 tt - ` I . me. I never knew of any man wiiolllegllllve llllx ll; was flgllleel. v?/xfllei bare statement. _l i NEVER lNDEFlNlTE Q _ really got to know the Man behlndlpong ml- Austen Cliambcrioln, _/it Dclinoi-ations and lucidity are twol , - Asflultii. but practically ¢v=ryb°dy.tlior time ir. was iheprlmlrry func- i-orc virtues in pollllcci speeches. one ls lol.ced_ Somellmesl ,D ,eel Wl10 C0m9S “H0 U01"-“Ci W1U_'\ Siam’-Y! tion of Conservative stlitesnleii notnnd Mr. Baldwin's milgniilvellt Ulllnlf llllll_ as ll lllslollcal _c\»lal-wllel-_ he is marched into oillce following the Bflldwm $095 ms h\l““1“lW mlm", lo be Mr. Asqllith. and as Bonar Law pillation of the idiopathic idiom s beluwlng abomlnably He glves no liiuitlns-ills officillll -ln. ‘could and to mor ncgoilvc nic cocci- occutlrully effortless. other siielllvlooliurtllnity to cllrwlmlstl dremetisl Since all ublic men are, or affect io ly-great fact that he was free from ers have tried for the some eiTect~l or sensllllonal blogmplmm But on cl SOLVF "“0“"EMS- l1lllP0S§I|b\e imnutlllilfions of be-his but llfm COT’ S;-1'* ;1;‘;’l‘:“f\'K2l“[l,¥l- inc modest organ of lus own person- eitlef \'- L0ne.0r r- Chamberlalii will re a‘i> we P - _ lity he lays like a virtuoso, the It is a strange comment. on politic- he was appolmed loader, ~ .lolinsonian polysyllables, butt tliliilllllilollch alwpgys fl,-lh_ me note usually al philosophies that the head of all ' diction always bears traces o - gcmle but llevel. lndellnllelalld wll_ll_ D J"-"“""m‘ g“"““e'p‘““ti "he style seems "ohne out that raucous resounding blare fr m a theatrical cos- ll bmm Blwmpls to dlsgulse 0, IDEAL LEADER 1' ' come-stralilht 0 wliic so 01 tunier. Whereas. the platform utter-'l dlscord ol- lhollshlh 8. p . . " “ In 1922 Stanley Baldwin leaped to nccs of Mr Baldwin with their deli some mlnds cannot keep __ lo use Ci heights, as Ella Wheeler Wilcox has cate balance of sy\1i»9~X. is classical--lmell. own words __ ..lllll.eul ol me h ,put lt, that were made to climb. His ri S0l€m1'\ “\€BS“1“3 Which hi? "ends times" wlthoug, B vas; deal of Splash- is the backbone of Brltain's exist-_wlls ll name Wim few ¢¢mlg¢ail0nS, with consummate grace. lllg lll the wlllel._ of sudden slde_ - His fellow-countrymen knew little of ‘ l _ or Party \V\\i<‘l\- NS ffifnds S ll- exists him; his fellow-partisans knew the SIMELE LIFE. But he is the more fortunate com- iiinnnle. But he was not Lord Blrken- ' petitor who, starting from further lhead and he was not Austen Cham- Plain and undepionstrativa Stan- , bcrlain and he was nothloyd George, ley Baldwin looks just what he isilallead, maintains the lead. with an and he was not Winston Churchill. the typical unpretentious country easy stroke. Of the latter type is Therefore. he wus thc' ideal clioice‘,inan‘_ prosperous and unambltious.'Mr. Baldwin; he must have learned lfor leadership. And then, gradually With a pleasant, humorous face., the style in the quiet waters oi’ some his slight reputation began to gatlierbright and almost bucollc in coloring Bewdley pond. on the political horizon into a more he has all the appearance oi a iuan -_-<°>--* th "What is the greatest water-power positive shape so that now he is no who findfs perfect contentment in e ° longer solely the negative to those simple life, in communium with him- known to man?" _ hiher names. I-le was caught, as the self and in the science of the soil. I-le "Woman's tears." "\ ' f Br ngllig Up Fuilicr I .l. lt; ‘ ill 4//II) . ~_-£4.-»fl(1/N4 \ l “m._m _ A \ 7 . C oria is es ecially pre- 1 ' ' arms and Children all :igesof Fevcrishnese arising there rom, an , }y i-ego sting ¢ ° llfld Boweia, 'aids the assimilation of Food; giving natural sleep. testis not conscious of the gnawlngl that he has usually possessed by politicians. From his personal character envy. arlimosity and jealousy are entirely l the absent; his good nature and imper- l turbable humor are invulnerable. He strokes and spectacular natation. down the course, draws level pulls r . _ W _ O r ' - -V. sv as ~ -/_ l -‘ 5; "">.-- ' thg _ " "Y ` /sf; \ ,E fl - _. -- K . ill -'1i‘fi*',"1/71.'-I it » .... \\" ‘lv Q' /f / H2? -‘w A :ii lll!m““ -`. g-:fl ”‘ _ _ ` ‘V 1;' _f_‘- / _ _ -"'1"l \ l ri' \y ' .si l. Q _ j- H .li ., _ J' ""', =_,>-,aff-ver _'_' ` _lf 'r=:5%'i*5-3 I "V _\/Q 'T ‘). '_' fi _ _s ~ i _'l... ll, _ `§\ W AI l’ y 1/hw' " ll ; . V. ' _ lllili -ll I.. MW. _ nl. .. 'cfs- lelld" ' A25, _ _ llr,v»cmorls~ l metal ,_ ‘ I l _ -*'~' 5* " ` 'Q _ov ‘l |31,” TJ du _ “ - \\. == 5:: if l<<\-g ./ K 1r‘?>~ l 'li'-5 ; ,F-\ __ _ cf \ lo ... ° I ._ ‘ P _ T / l`/"yy --1.. ';-1 ll l L: ij Z. 5 ‘_ " ' .ri 'fl 5 °Y"`. ' / "lg o _ if f Manufacturing Since man first chipped stone with stone anti fashioned his crude hatchet or arrow head, the science of manufacturing has been steadily developing. i To-day the modern metal- working plant is a maze of complicated machinery, belting, pulleys and ehaftiug, dljlvea, it may be by steam, electricity or crude oil. ‘ . ' From the laying of the foundation of the manufacturing plant to the supplying of the belt on the last machine we serve such industries in a multitude of ways. To the contractor we supply concrete mixers, hoists, shovels, etc. Into the equipment of the building go our pumps, valves, pipe, finings and. steam goods. And for the actual manufacturing equipment we supply wood and metal working machinery, transmission equipment, shop supplies, and the motors or oil engines io provide the motive power. On farm and in forest, on fishing vessel and in mine, al well as in every type of factory, warehouse and mil!- Fairbanks-Morse service and Fairbanks-Morse products known and appreciated. he CANADIAN FaiIllanl£S 'M0139 - COMPANY 'fimtlsed -T THE MAKERS OF FAIRBANKS SCALES AND VAWE9 7 1": _td--l\\\\ _-' ` ' :E-“ir 1' Tel.-*___ ~ -_._. -C. - --By George McManus _ ,_ _____.__ ___ _.. _.___ \-»-- ` -~w . S ¢,~< gg _~l." l _ Yee:-our ro ‘ ’ it ‘°' li' W _ \ c.l_\o tif QB; i_n_~;J ~ 'l , '-_~i;,,_ -Q( “"”""““””“"”" _ . ’° ' eeaw 1\u~v-\N‘ --’- :l e::::. A\,j,`~¢ ¢RQl~'l lf ’>\ 1? ~~ - ~ ~ ° ~ _ ‘_ ' \ I’ X (£3 ' 1:;-Z ' \` ` f>f“°’ ~ . _ \\ - Q, - _ -if \ 1 l 4 lg il-_" _ ._ ll! ._\\ -2 . 1 \ ' / I' H/ »' I \ .f ' 7* ' l \i, _ ' '/ im"§"... » WCTASFE N_`_ Aw: me Nice - .ll\\l_ ? :sau - wow was i~\u..l\¢.<,-,_ ' F ouEvER`(_ ~ ` DON' 'TAKE US THE. `¥Q`A\IiL\_\V`l(¢ F\¥"\Dl\‘a‘bAO¢)Q _“_“N