THE OREGON SUNDAY JOUrJJAIv PORTLAND, SUWD AY MORNING, NOVEMBER J2, 1903. V- 1 .'OS At n . ,., ,.JIA, umitlMW lHm,..JH mMUPWII PII.UWU,, aMpoOPCr - - -yWOBtjjlMM.OLCTXiaoJ-lj- -Oarr.oBMyMPOncTI. . ' r-rx-tA- t 7st'-:T If '. 1" I Y. HB clerk in1' th invoice department promptly concluded that Butn wu ft dub wtin be cam to work for Going Co. They probably war Juatlfied is thi, f justification la to bo found in external appearances. For to look at Hasan ho atood befor you the Brat thought that a to jrou waa. that h waa a ?dufe."' But probably you would not apeak your thouarhta until Haaea waa aoma dlaUnco away, for ho waa big fellow and determined ereo If be waa a dub. . . Hasen waa raw and bony.- Hla noae waa hoary and hla mouth big. Hla yea ahowed So ahrewdneaa and not too much Intelligence, ut he had a aquar Jaw-that kept hla fac from balna mediocre. He cam Into th In . Tole department dred Juat aa he had draaaad In hi lut Job, that of a packer In th i ahippln room of a btaoult factory, with th exoeptlon of th atlff collar. And th man ner In which he auffered from th collar waa - In Itaelf a confeaalon that th occaatona on '. which' ho had vr. been ao apparld bad ' been few and far between. Haaea'a elothe didn't air klm th look of clerk. It waa vldent that they were purcbaaednor with an ey to their durability than .for dry affeoL Hla Uouaora ware not craaed aa par 'Uoularly a thoa of th other clerk, but hla heavy boe showed that he had applied th nruah t them with rigor and affeet. - Hla nanda war built en th plan of hama, and th writing and figure that they pro-, duoed provoked merriment In th depart- - ment, whero moat of th clerk turned, out writing that waa Ilk copperplate. But Haaea had mad a good lmprloa on th manager, to whom he had applied for a poal tie a, m h cam t th tnrele department S v. - - .. 'V . Db Float Along la Warl. , ! rot th first mnth hla wrk la th depart- I BMnt waa a Joke. .Clerical work of any kind h never had don. , School was a long time back In hla career. Bo hla footing, hla ex tending, and hi checking were Just a liable . to be wrong as they were to be right Th brain that ha been unused for aeveral year do not begin t work readily even In a " young man, .: . Th ether lrka caught Hasan's mlatakea and decided that h waa a wora dub than he looked to be. ' Hasen paid no attention to th tber olerks. He plodded along by . Aimaelf. He waa trying to learn to do th work before him. and It did not matter to him whether th other men called him a dub or . a erackarjack. He had hi work to do. If h could do It h would hold his Job. If h couldn't he would b fired. That waa the ..way Hasa tookd at lfc.u... -. Th head of th department who waa look ing for good mea, irreepectlv of th cut of - a i i f hear a great deal muout mif llT' A within their Income and keeping V books of sxpens. Many bar tried a .. th keeping of books and hare. . 'stopped. A one said'tome, " Iflnd X haro to spend all t earn anyhow.. I simply oount tho money in my pocket and that Is my .. cash on band., Th diajerenoe between that ' and my ealary is what a coe tern to live. I got tired of keeping aooounU." . , I know many excellent people who bar tried time after time to keep th elaborately ruled " household xpna " book, but after -awhll gav It up. itr father rved many year aa chair man of th flnanalal committee la th city ottnoil of a small twa. I was a great chum with ray father and be took ma to . many meeting of th commute and many ' unofficial meetings war held In our home. Th word " appropriation" waa a common on and I early learned lta meaning. When, I left horn to k my' living in th big city : my father aaid laughingly, " Keep strictly within th appropriation, John." a V -'v ;v'.' . , DItMss laestas lats Faa!. IW three week I sought work. - Then X got a position at M a week. X want On th plan of - th financ commute and appor tioned my Inoom a follow! T tHX'ma't who will invent a broom corn harvesting machine .that will do th satisfactorily, will bar a fin ehano t taak a fortun. ' One or the meat productive broom dlatriot In Ililnoiar-ono that ha th nam of producing th flneat bruah In this ' country, haa aufrerd a reduction of nearly . TB per cent, because the work of cutting must b don by hand. Failur to control th nee ease ry labor ts tak ear of tho crp whea It la ready to be.cut ha caused hundred of UUnol grwr either to reduce their aoreag ar abandon th production of this rop, .- - ,: - . " Ther Is but on section of th sUt Is which broomoora I raised to any extent, and - that Is in Douglas. Cole, and Moultrie coun ties. It is said that during the laat year ap proximately 60,000 acres la these count! ' were given up to broomcorn raising, aad that th output for thla year will b cho to 10,000 tns. Th market price Is now rang ing between $M and $100 per ton. One ton la- gleaned from about three acres of land, and It costs about $40 to put on ton on th market On man In Douglas iounty mar keted lxty ton thla fall. -t;- " Broomoora la Judged as to lta quality by '"'It color, length and fiber. ' The brush must be long. acre, aad flexible to make brooms that will wear well. A good Judge of brush will tltnat th varus of bruah oa lta color. 7 Being of Off ahsde will mak a differ one Of from $10 to $l a ton, When lb growing crop shows the desired color, It must b cut aa quickly a possible, and her la where th trouble to of depending on th labor of men wh ut th oora by hand.' Army at Banrsst Baals Raalrs4. An army of men is dependeo; upoA to reach 1 - r-t'j.m a. a Ob. a Tj.wfiW4 tWiaar aa aha broomcorn. dlsff let at in Begmnmrox tb cutting season. Thsy are th crowds that start from southern points, picking berrlee aa th eropa la th rarleus secfione ripen, and keeping their way until they pass th broomoora field and wind up la th cranberry marsh at th far north. Aa-othr-oatingnt haiia from southern i dlana. who are accounted th bety rush cutter l thi country. , : Bometlmee th'es popl ar oa band when fh corn la ready to cut. and sorastlmea the.y are not. Wbeiw a grower haa larg crop and It I approaching th desired color, ther Is 1 grat scurrying areund to seour th heoeeeary help. It rulr a good eutur to sS a aro la a day. Ke Need By Allen Wilson their clothe or th fit of their collar, acted hla dotted, plodding and (ay bim aa much opportunity to learn aa waa posslbi. But Maiea waa alow la catchloa Ha wan , up atalnat a lone eolumn of ArurM with hla law aet and did hla beau but the column wngcua away irom mm and when h turned U In to b cheeked It aoldom waa right He 1 took tho aztenalona riven hira. remraberd W aohool artthaaUo, and wteled wrth th axtonalon valiantly. ,But th ztntoa yea. crujr ui m notn ana nunc nun inaTiorj oualy. Hi work waa tee poor to hold him th Job. Th head called hint to hi desk one day. ".Why. you're not lit to a a clerk." he aaid. angrily. - Tou'r fit to be Uuoklng barreU around down in th atock room, that" wher you belong.. Why. you can't d this work any batter than th office boy aould ' do It I can't keep you any longer." ' Wall, give m a Job there, than," said th Dub. , -A Job where r asked, the head. " Down ther In th atock room, trucking barrela. where I belong." Th head looked ' at the Dub'e bit arm a. Ton ought to make a peaoh of a. trucker." n aajd, aoftly, aa h wrote an order changing Clerk Haaea Into Trucker Hasen. "And then when I'm able to do this kind of work her I want yon to giro m my Job back.' he aaid. a be took th order. Th head laughed, " O, rery wall," ;"b ald. ';-.,. .-. -Tv:,,-' ;. , . j..- GU Ja m CUrl BmI. T At th end of six month Hasen waa back at th head' desk, a etlflt oollar again tortur ing hla neck, hi hat turning around and . around in his big, red fcanda.' " Can I bar my Job bak aowf" ho asked. He bore a lot- V ter from the aperlntendent of th stock . room., Th letter told the head that this man waa too " -'e a whn t wast at shoving a truck,'. v figure batter newT" asked th head. " I gufeaa ao," aaid the Dub. Th ctJ.f lrk turned hi work In to the .head at trie end f the week. It compared. ' favorably v. that f any of the clerka In the departrfeht. Th head called Hasen to him " Wer did you learn to figure sine you war h r laetT he quarried. " Night." said th Dub. . " I practiced nlghto and noone.' . The head' watched Hasan's broad - back aa ha- went back ta bis dk. " Wh t rotten aham it is that h'a such a dub," b said, sorrowfully, , Hasen stood still far a long tin. He was . a bill. clark for a year. . At th end of that' - time a checker lft suddenly. Not a man In the department with he exception if thf head olerk was familiar with his work. The head clerk waa nnabl to drt his tim to Within Your HnOTaTT. .11 M . 00 neaaiag. . . , . .is , ta 1.M wenerat run ...... Totl i . , i . .-. ; . . . . . . . . When I iefthome I had twooultaof olotheo, two pair of ahoe. two hats, and a good ' outfit of underclothing and lines. I was earning $10 a week beforo X had to got sew clothes. " : -V' ( I had four email tin boxea In my trunk, each. with a paper label on Indicating the fund. Tho roont rent, of course, needed so box, as It wsnt out the moment I got to th ; rooming heuss. Each morning I put In my ' pocket on-sventh of th appropriation for each Item and went through tji day oa It If ther waa anything left at night It went Into tho general fund box. X kept ho book except a email cash book for tho general fund alone. In this book X entered each week the amount paid Into th general fund -and each sight entered tho amount contrib uted to It from th thr funds, mentioning each. If by any mischance some fund ran short, X borrowed from -the general fund, and from that alon. Tbs loans X put down also. ... -j. '. ' - . On the first of each month X put bno-half . of th amount Is tho general fund Into th bank. It waa s aavlngs bank, and In thoa Broomcorn By J. 'L. Graff. Ther 1 another feature of th labor ques tion" that ha caused, th mea wh bar gon Into broomcorn mora xMnlrly t mak weeping cut In th acreage or abandoa It altogether. The cutter know exactly when, corn muar be eut quick to save tt, and thla I the opportunity they tak to demand higher wagea. The gang will pull tegethec and demand an tncreasa of 'J6 cents; when tt la granted It will be followed by another and atlll another, tho grower realising that he .must surrender or loo heavily oa njs crop. It I asserted that this ha caused mor growr to quit th business than any thing also, and they ars sow raising Indian corn and oat Instead. : ' ' : Tot some tim ther has been aa effort to make a machine that will reap Uroomoorn, but up to thla tim there has been only part success. - On of these machine I manu factured In Parla, another In Ohio. Tho chief rouble 1 that th machinea that hav beca tried do not bunch th brush evenly. Ex periment ar still being made. If a maohlne La perfected It will be of. incalculable vu t growers of on of th moat profitable crop that our soli aew produce. s ' . Grsat lotfnctloA la Acrsat. 7 Back la th DO It was aoaroely posslbi to- driv in any direction out of Tuacola or areola without encountering great field Of growing broomcorn. It wa a common thing to find a single man growing 20ti acres'. Today It Is said ona msy drive for ten mile without finding a' patoh. On broker ssyt that not one-quarter of th broomcorn that waa produced flv or eight years ago la sow Jr0wn. Another broker estimates th slump - - . w In acreage t be one-third.. They all agre that th labor question 1 mainly responsible for th big reduction. TO thaw hew th great tt of tlllnol ha lost from thi etateofaffalra.lt la only necee ary to stats that th central Illinois district ono produeed mor broomcorn than, any. three state of th union. In 110 Kansas. Il linois and Missouri produeed three-fourth of all the broomcorn ralaed la thi country. Oklahoma la nowahad of any other section In the, production of thla rop. Last year the territory produced 40,000 ton. Tor mile and mil rh right of way of th Rock Ialasd road lay through sees of waving broomcorn. Much of It waa freighted t th central Slit sols district, where It was re baled aad dls- It Th bead waa In a quandary vr how to get th work don. Then th Dub tint clum sily up to hi desk. " I can de It," he aatd.v The bead elerh and th head gasped. " Tou r they ald, la unlaon. " Surely," ald th Dub. " How th - did you learn itr Night," aaid the Dub. " I practice nlghte." The head looked him over. " Otv him th Job," baaald. Bo Hasen got hi first adraac. 1 . StrUtt Brlals Nsw Chases. - - A rear later Hasea waa sttn checker. Then, one Saturday afternoon, the loading gang at on of th train platform decided that, doing gj Cm. war grinding them into th ground with th iron heel f capitalistic op pression. Some labor leader had told them this, so they knew 'It waa so. They stopped work with th last aar la th train half load ed. There were forty barrela to be truokd in and checked. But th loading gang decided to walk out suddenly when it would count, aa their leader told them and what oould b of mor account than tying up a tralnload ship, meat suddenly? The thing happen every once In awhtl at th yard. Usually they mean only a call for th pelic and th ootrvertlng of offlc clerk Into laborer for the time being. But thi waa Saturday afternoon and the heads all had gon horn. Haaen waa checking th barrels into th car. He waa th aole repre sentative of doing V Co.' general oflVe on th platform. It waa for him to do some thing. It waa up to him to any whether th tralnload went eut on time. . Hasen asked th men to wheel in th last forty barrela before they aKruck. , They laughed at him. Haaen alowly laid down hla -checking board. - " Well, I gueee I'll have to do it myaelf," h aaid, foolishly. Hasen waa no strategist Ho was eeeetvtlaUy simpi. Th trainmen watched htm take a truck and go Into th cooler after a barrel and aaid: "The d n ub." Out along th tracks th loading gang scurried about and selected choice piece of coal and atone for th reception of Hasan whea he appeared with a' barrel, Then they poiaed themselves ready for th throw and watched th door of th cooler as terrier watch a rat hot. . A kind hearted brakemaa ahouted: "Stay la there or you'll get killed." The rest of th trainmen watched with short brsatba. . . .:' .! -r--' .-'-' ' Btrt BafJM at BU WerL . ,. Hasea cam out of th cooler calmly with a barrel oa hi truck and went into the car Th volley of mlaslle did aot kUl him. They did not eve a knock him out. H hM hi. head down" low behind thj barrel, and hla arm woro th only parta x posed. When b went back from' th ear Into th cooler Income By John days I received gu par cent Interest It la Interesting today to tak up the little book and see how each year the rat of Interest ' kept diminishing until sow It la only per cent v I learned a leaaon from thla also be-, for X atudicd political economy. .A th amount or loanable funds Increases th rati of interest tend to decrease,-and a th Interest rat get lower th aafty of th in vestment become greater. . ,. .. '-; VV'a ,....',' . ' lywcts Bsfa Is Brirttsa. . At th nd f th year I collected all th account Into a ledger and waa thus enabled to so bow well I had succeeded in keep ing within th appropriation. My clothe wr beginning to how sign of wear and It waa necessary' to get new one. My pay had been Increased to to, but I had not va ried my method of apportioning th fund preferring to let th Increased amount go Into the general fund. ' . Os th first of th aew year I put all th money In th general fund Into the bank, and waa delighted oa th earn day to reoelr -aetioo that aa application made to another house had succeeded and my new salary wa t be $10 a weak. tributed I every market In thla and some foreign eountrtee, for Illinois broker bar tho boat aytm sf buying, baling, and dis tributing to manufacturers of broom la th Unltad Stat. V Two r tar years ago tho brokers formed a synaieat t buy all of th bruah that could be bought. Th pool lasted about thrse year. Then It went t place, aad also has sot beea - re-fermed, ' . , .lHIaV7CkO Ca- Livespf Great Men Sho uld Be Studied. ; By T. P. O'Connor. HERB ar plenty of people who atlll Insist that th Intimat relations of men and woman should be kept sacred and unseen; that thsy thsmselre ar th only persons who know all th truth about these things, and that thsy never ' tell. Others rn go the length of arguing that ven If poopl did speak of thee sacred things thsir onfldence should b Shut out from th world; that these things are noae of th world's-busln, and that it la Im pertinence, morbidity, and a host of ether ' ' wrong tendencies which demand or permit the atudy of auch relations. ... -. I entirely dissent from these doctrine. Th ' proper study of mankind Is man, aad pe--clally la thla the case whea the maa atudled ' la on who atanda eut from hla fellows by aom great gift. What' la all literature but the atudy, tb revelation of the heart af man and woman, and of the inflnit varied f their relation to ch other. ' , . ;. . . , tlfjst ta Lay MatrsaUrs.7T No ona finds fault wltk Bhakapear because h has Studied man" and woman, and ofun tudled them la all the nudity of their aoula and bodies. Ho would not hav been Shah-' spear If, be had not bad this daring eourag and hi abaolut regard only for truth In his analysis of human character ana human re latione. Th coarseness of hla language sometimes I neceaaary to mak on under- stand those depth of human character which hla a-anlua nanatrated and waa able ta nr-' Mat , Indeed, sf all great masters of literal - mm rP$-r Y" 'F--w Mil fBL:' l:M hkmmK 1 Labi iM 4: -j" . - . : 7 7 - . -. . :. ' ..... "T , i -Or..:'. T a ran. On aton atruck him In th back, but h kept on aa if nothing had happened. Th loading gang growled and picked larger aiiaailea. Tare times they volleyed him and three times he went back and forth. Then ths ktndhearted brakeman ran In th near- Bhonernd atrmmoried th police, Under guard Haaen wheeled out the rest of the barrels, checked tBem up. and sealed th car. Then th police took him to a drug McBlain. X bought clotbe. a pair' of good working hoe for S3. A pair of enameled leather shoes for 3. ,0fl dark hat and a stiff black hat for $2 each. ; A suit of dark gray to wear every dayxor $l. -.Mr old clothe I 6termlned "to 'wear around tho tor aa long aa posslbi'. A black suit for $18, f Two fancy rests or $2 each. - A total of $48. and I was better dressed than srer before In my " . . ' After canvassing ths situation carefully I determined that It waa oa clothe my In creased alry should go. rather than on airy other luxuries. So I took up my appro priation liet aa before, but added to It $1.90 per week for a clothing account Of tbla I put BO cent eaoh week Into the box and $1 Into th bank to repay the loan from the aavlngs account that waa made to th cloth ing account It waa handy to bar a place to borrow. - ... . slightly exceeded om apportionment and" It waa hard. Thar were week whan I weeks whea llf looked dark. " .' ..'...'' ' '. Waal Was Paid fsr ClothlaftV "My clothing apportionment that year re paid th loan and kept m in ahlrta, under rtnthln et. The atlfr black hat laatad tm n. Tha black aalt and fane vesta 414 good aerrlc for flv year. Th gray it irooestirrattf onCyeaf" aa a aeoond .beat Th following year X bought on suit. Th next year I bought a medium wetgatt and a light wight My rer eoat from bom did not need replacing for two years. When I waa getting $13 wssk my budget was aa followat Been ...........-,... $ 100 Mais sa Car fare .......,,...,., .-5. Clothes lot Reading , .IS tur tt may with truth be aaid that their power to urrlv mainly depends on their fidelity to nature ; their power to describe life as it really la without fear or favor of affection.- , , ". If Jt bo anawered that Ibakspear deala with Imaginary characters and biography with real, my anawer la that Inatead of there (being less ther ought to be more fidelity when you deal with real than when you ar dissecting imaginary characters. What led sons life may hav to gtv It will glv with a hundredfold fore If It bo given by the tort of men and woman who hay actually lived. To mak biography en any other principle than that It ahould hav th freedom, hon sty, fearlaaa analysis of fiction, Is to reduce It to a court chronicle or to the region pf th lying epitaph. I look on biography aa I look oa literature., not merely aa an end, but a means, and th end and th meant ought to be the relief of man's eatate. s . ''''"'.. -'iJfroB ta Obacars Train. Mo one gets up In the world of science and demands that unpleasant truth ahall be ob - cured or denied. It I th first necessity T ( sclent I He advance that truth, and truth alone, ahould be the teet and the goal. The same anon, to my mind, should bs applied to lit ratur. and especially to that form of lit erature called biography. I would as loon conceal from the world the realities of a great man'a or great woman's life aa hide. If I had found, the nature and the1 else and the other peculiarities of th bacillus that stoats caa- r. and Your ator wher h had hla head wounds dpeeeed. , " Tou dub, you might hav been killed and ao good don by it," aaid th head th next Monday. But he offered to tak th Dub oat of the invoice department -and gtr him an assistant upnntendency in on part of th plantr" But I hain't had no ehance to learn. that work yet," aaid, th Dub. "I'd sooner stay her till I aa practloa some mor kind of work.' ' . Fortune J& Chun-h aad charity : .80 1 OO jixunea . ... Ovnerai fun f i -ISO Tetal ..ItJ.OO . Tou will notice I cut down my clothing al lowance, a i round thla amply aumcienu a was able to Increas my oontrlbutlona to good work. I was able to Induls In ajew luxu- rtea, for I wa human. My general fund had not-Increased much. I was spending a larger ahare of my income. By thla time, from aererat yeara of experience, I knew pretty accurately how to apportion th In come."" Hard times had atruck the country and I errd for $13 per week for three ear. My employer finally got back Into th tide gain, and my ris waa comparatively rapid. In two yeara I was getting $100 a month, and got married. ' i '; - I hsd money In th bank. Not much, but some, and my wife had a llttl. for ah had been working for a few yeara and had saved. Oa aur savings we furnished a llttl flat and , outfitted ourselves so far aa elothe went. Then w bought in a racket ator a llttl tin pic box set containing ten epic boxes and labeled each on for a fund. , . ApsrsariAtisn Af tar harriafs. " Thla la how It looked 1 - ' Kent ...,.""....$ U Table eapeases..... as VT f $!" r toss . a t YZjZi immm. "".r No Graft iii Ranlt By Fr o.nk LTHQUOK craft In lta rarlqua form A seems to bo flourishing la many parts of th United States, thr Is n clsss . s of buslasss msa which Insists that th standard sf indlrldual honesty araaag Americana la remarkably high. Thla class Is made up sf th hundred sf , mn who ar en gated la th mall rdr bust- -.ss.r 'i '-.--.--r "." - Many of them sand out raluabl goods t cltle. town, and farms throughout th country and rely upon th honesty of th ap plicants for th good for their protection. The man to Vhom th goods la sent slther accepta tham and aenda back tb money or he finds that hs does not care for the goods he ha ordered and aenda them back. . So ' thoroughly bare the mall order merohanta become convinced of the honesty of their , trade that they hav to a large extent oeaaed - to send out their produot collect on delivery. That method of mailing waa a aur check agalnat dlshoneaty. Tb customer could ' pot tak th good from hi poVfflc until h hsd paid for them. , . - , . - ' " ;.: Isly sa flonor sf Baysra.. .But a ths man order housed found that , moat msn are thoroughly "honest they plsced , more reliance upon the honor of their cus tomer. They began simply to send the good rmd to aak that If they wer aecepteh th cuatomer forward the price to" the house, One of th mall order merchant aaid th other day that lee than 1 per cent of hla . product waa loat or appropriated by .men who did not pay for It. Ha also threw light upon th method by mean of which he and othgr order people get a line on th hon sty or tneir patrons. , , y Of course, many of th men and women who writ to mall order houses and aak for good ar not rated in either Dun or Brad streets Only men who ar In bualnea ar ao rated. These smaller cuatomera' credit Is known by local mercantile agencies. " Msey agenclss of thla class rat mea In ether cltle aad tbr atatss, but even with their help Th head ao longer deemed it wis to order the Dub around. " Com to me whoa you're ready for In big Job," ho aaid. And th Dubr eventually got ready, and if you hap pen fo visit Oolng eV Co.'a nowadays yoa will find him walking around the plant, dressed - s roughly aa ever, and atlll looking much like a dub. But if rom wish to get a position - "In th plant nowaday a you muat go and ask .'-ta Dub- for ,.. ,, ..-r-v-t. Chm-oh aaa enarlty. Farnltare Ushtln Heatlas Mode aeosasoe'aa Iliilili j ) lxurMe Oeaerai tan ,- 9Mmt j........ ...aioo There , waa nothing for a aervant and it .11 meant the Dial neat kind of living. We did It easily without starving oursetve and-a I w alway looked well. It did call for econ- omy, but we learneo to say m, o without. On th first of January and on the first of July eaoh year w. solemnly took tha general fund from its box and divided It vnly. If It did Dot dlrld vnly by a fw cent w threw the odd cent back in th box. My wlf deposited hr half in her wn nam la a savings bank and X de posited my halt In my nam in th am bank. It waa agreed between ua that when aickness visited the house or any other thing called for large expenditures that our ached- Ul mad no provision for X wa to pay tho bills, leaving her account . untouched. Toe general fund paid for life inauraao and auch things. , Ws had no foolish sundry fund. '. ' , . , What X did ethers can do. Th keeping of accounts alon la of no value. Th idea I t find out how much on ordinarily pnd a rtaln item and then dlrld th Income proportJonatsly. Instead of trying in a gen-: ral way t keep within, th lncom try ts keep eaeh Item wlthla rials limit. One Trade File Honest; G. Landis. and with the help of Dua nd Bradstreet It I at alway poasibl to get accurate la formation about the financial atandlng and hesssty of customers who applied for goods. So th mall order house began to buy a ; leeted lists of same. These name ar olao- ' allied by regular agenciea Into the different " bualneeses and pursuits followed by ths msa , and woman whoa names appear upon th list. From the agenciea It I possible to curs th names of all the lawyers or doc- ' tors or hardware merehanta In any tows, ' No business Is neglected by the collector of name and the namea ar sold to. mer ehanta who aell goods in which tb owner of tho samea ar interested. Lists of name . that ar mora-than two irild.r not retarded aa highly a newer onee, aad namea ' which bar alrady yielded mofulrtea or or dera ar quoted higher than thoa which hav already been canvassed, but from which no satisfactory results bar beea obtained. KaaB aa FUs Mot Craftsrs. ' May order men ay that nien and women who are Important enough In their own lo calMlct to get their namea Into th telephone book, th aooia) register, the liat of peraona pgaoent at a ise4ty function, and even in ' .many case int th eity directory er the -tat gasetteer seldom take advantage of a -' mall order man's confidence la them, - ' Manufacturers whs send out agents" aroplea and outfits on request hav th sam tory to tU. -'.'', "It m,? said on f these maaufas turera th other day. " that what graft there . I I not to be found among the rank and fl'e. of th poopl. Certainly ur experience ' , shows us that the vaat majority of the peo ple ar honeat. They are honeat, too. In th fac at temptation. They know that It wouK put ua to a great deal of expense and one .. which we might not undertake to proceed . against them If they confiscated our goods and they'know that ws would lose 1 heir good will besides, but thsy either pay the price if end back th goods Just the earns," -.. 1) 1 V. 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