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Judge, 1922-10-07 · page 30 of 36

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Who Has Been Getting 8°.? Thousands of investors have found, through their own experience, that it is an casy matter to get 8% on an investment, with never the loss of a dollar of their money, pro- vided the investment and the investment banker are chosen with care. Wou!dn't you attach a great deal of importance towhat these people say? “Getting Acquainted with Your Investment Banker"’ is the title of a booklet which repro- duces numerous letters from men and women who have been getting 8°; on their money right along. The booklet also gives the history and record of this firm. Send for a free copy today and learn how to secure a liberal return on your money through Miller First Mortgage Real Estate Bonds, paying 8% 8°; Bonds of $100, $500, $1000 8°;, First Mortgages from $1000 up Partial payment accounts invited G.L.Miller BOND & MORTGAGE Company Florida Oldest First Mortgage Bond House Miller Bldg. Miami, Florida IF INTERESTED IN BUSINESS AND FINANCE, keep informed by reading the Bache Review, a ten- minute weekly summary of the business and finan- cial situation. It focuses and interprets currents of to-day and indicates their trend. Sent to business men for three months, without charge. J. S. BACHE & CO. 42 Broadway _ New York City ag School C Course h 2 Years Ra AMERICAN ‘SCHOOL Dept. H 754 Drexel Ave. & Sith St. CHICAGO SERVICE WE INVESTMENT BUREAU, years by Mr. Theodore Williams, sound, and advice helpful about financial crery week conservative, information matters. Why not consult it about your investments? SEND FOR THE INTERNATIONAL CATALOG INTERNATIONAL ‘soy, works 914 W. Ohio St. ent. 1. Chicaco. IN Cent: ral ‘Press Clipping Service 1108 °K. of P. BI Indianapolia, Ind eeseeeeeees «International He has picked up quite a little money and still he’s a golfer—which goes to prove the advisability of keeping “fit” for the battles of life ee Investment Bur Theodore Williams Conducted by “i fddrcee ‘and exact strect addreas. <4 4 full nam au cies to anaeer b { fien-eent postage New Adjustments of Wages AS the downward readjustment of wages in this country. reacl or nearly reached,” its end? While the coal miners and the railroad shopmen were still on strike against pro- posed reductions of pay, there were signif- icant, not to say surprising, occurrences: in other industrial fields touching the compensation of employees. The Penn- sylvania Railroad settled with its own workmen and granted them somewhat better terms than were decided on by the Railroad Labor Board. This was a straw showing a new direction of the wind, It indicated that the recessions in one large economic trough of industry might already have been touched and that a slight upward turn was in order, After that occurred the voluntary advance in s of twenty per cent. de- clared by United States Steel Cor- poration, example was quickly followed by other stecl companies. Re- ports had previously been current that there was a scarcity of labor in the mills and that a few Western plants were offering more than standard for certain classes of workmen. |The offi- cial action of the big steel establishments revealed beyond question that the law of supply and demand had begun to wage the whose 28 another grea ed. The cone to the miners for r was in point, after a long and bitter contest, of the textile strikers to their posts at former. or even higher, rates of pay, instead of at reductions, was further evidence along the same line. The National Industrial Con Board reports that in twenty-six major indus- tries wages have been either stabilized or incres operate in in favor of the emy of the old another yec and the return, coal ence THE number of men involved in these settlements runs into hundreds of thousands. They constitute a suffi- ciently large body to make their cases representative of the entire labor situa- tion, and to warrant the belief that the trend of wages in general has ceased to be toward lower levels. In fact, cost. of labor everywhere scems likely before long to be enhanced with the continuing recuperation of business, and the country may as well be prepared for what that means. With — increa: outh for production, commodities will necessarily be higher priced, for capital cannot bear the additional burden and live, and so will pass it on to the consuming public. ng