. . wage; that is true. Business men suffer financially; the workers suffer physically, andall suffer morally and spiritually, as each must and should while hesupports a plan of life wherein his dollar is worth a hundred cents to athief. To stand helpless before any business man requires the faith of aDaniel; he did not quarrel with the lions nor hold resentment for theconspirators (their business plans) which placed him in that ignoring evil he lived above it as we do who sign The We Can Act,page 65. But when that awful sadness comes upon the workers which follows
. . wage; that is true. Business men suffer financially; the workers suffer physically, andall suffer morally and spiritually, as each must and should while hesupports a plan of life wherein his dollar is worth a hundred cents to athief. To stand helpless before any business man requires the faith of aDaniel; he did not quarrel with the lions nor hold resentment for theconspirators (their business plans) which placed him in that ignoring evil he lived above it as we do who sign The We Can Act,page 65. But when that awful sadness comes upon the workers which followsthe discovery that business has failed, that we never did have a chancefor riches, and we shall develop hunger-phobia, then look out! Yes,have a care! If this thought brings goose-flesh to you where bristles would bemost befitting, you dare not bend your ear to the ground even that business has always been a skin game and when theworm does turn, yours is the kind of a hide that will be hung on For more than forty years the city of Ashland, Ore., has nestled atthe foot of the giant Siskiyou range of mountains, at the head of theRogue River Valley. She has long borne the reputation of being thepurest and coldest watered city in the west. Here a drowsy citizenshiphas slept contentedly for more than forty years, only dreaming of thetremendous assets nature has stored in these rugged hills to make hergreat. Mount Shasta, with its glaciers and eternal snows, lies but fiftymiles away, as the crow flies. They saw Mount Pitt, but sixty milesdistant by auto road. They had visited the Lake of the Woods andexperienced the enchantment of pebble beach. Many of them had journeyed to the tremendous marble caves—known to explorers as the Marble Halls of Oregon—but sixty milesfrom Ashland and easily accessible—one of the marvels of natureand scenic beauties of the world. They had somnambulated along shady mountain roads some eightymiles to marvelous Crater Lake, the
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, bookidbehoovefulne, bookyear1915