April 17, 1926 WINNETKA TALK 35 What is the future of America' = Is industrial America about to crumple, or is it headed forward to unprecedented prosperity? Are we 2o0ing at too fast a pace? Does the United States need a nw national business policy? Will the present per'od of high wages end shertly? Are the mergers now taking place in the major industries necessary? These are but a few of the questions statesmen, | Ss men and industrial leaders are concerning the : with today--questions that unthread the econo - ric of future existence--questions that personali every man, woman and child directly or indirect ) know the answers to these and other econom'« - tions is to open up a new vista of understanding o. t the future holds for America--Read The Great Todas ~ nad the, Greater Toi:c.. =u: HENRY FOR Giving for the rirst Time the Real Economic Philosophy cof This Great Man He declares that: "Dishonest men do sometimes suc- ceed; but only when they give service that exceeds their dishonesty. Honest men sometimes fail because they lack other essential qualities."--"High wages cannot be paid to any one just for the asking."--"If all profits were For the first time you have the opportunity of glimpsing into the workings of a mind possessed by the most suc- cessful captain of industry the world has ever known. Let Henry Ford tell you the magic formula by which he carries his gigantic burden--a business employing 260,000 workers, not one of whom receives less than $6.00 per day, which, including allied plants, provides a living for more than 3,000,000 people. His achievements are so unparalleled that this, his first given to workers, improvements would not be possible." Read Ford's thoughts on the new order of things; his views on efficiency; his ideas on finance, and you obtain a complete study of economics in a new understandable authoritative utterance in years, compels attention, form. Read This Wenderfu! Story of Life and Industry Every Day 3ecg.nning Monday, April 19, in the HERALDESEXAMINER Largest 3-Cent Mcerning Newspaper Circulation. in America