14 N ORT H 
S yHwOe RE 
BREEZE 
of great size and very well man- 
aged, shall aim not at their destruc- 
tion but at their regulation and su- 
pervision, so that the Government 
shall control them in such fashion 
as amply to safeguard the interests 
of the whole public, including 
producers, consumers, and wage- 
workers. This control should, if 
necessary, be pushed in extreme 
cases to the point of exercising con- 
trol over monopoly prices, as rates 
on railways are now controlled; al- 
though this is not a power that 
should be used when it is possible 
to avoid it. The law should be 
clear, unambiguous, certain, so that 
honest men may not find that unwit- 
tingly they have violated it. In 
short, our aim should not be to 
destroy, but effectively and in thor- 
oughgoing fashion to regulate and 
control, in the public interest, the 
great instrumentalities of modern 
business, which it is destructive of 
the eveneral welfare of the commun- 
ity to destroy, and which neverthe- 
less it is vitally necessary to that 
general welfare to regulate and con- 
trol. Competition will remain as a 
very important factor when once 
we have destroyed the unfair busi- 
ness methods, the criminal interfer- 
ence with the rights of others, which 
alone enabled certain swollen com- 
binations to crush out their competi- 
tors—and, incidentally, the ‘‘con- 
servatives’’ will do well to remem- 
ber that these unfair and iniquitous 
methods by ereat masters of corpo- 
rate capital have done more to cause 
popular discontent with the proper- 
tied classes than all the orations of 
all the Socialist orators in the 
country put together. 
I have spoken above of Senator 
Davis’ admirable address delivered 
a quarter of a century ago. Sen- 
ator Davis’ one-time partner, Frank 
B. Kellogg, the Government counsel 
who did so much to win success for 
the Government in its prosecutions 
of the trusts, has recently delivered 
before the Palimpsest Club of 
Omaha an excellent address on the 
subject; Mr. Prouty, of the Inter- 
State Commerce Commission, has re- 
cently, in his speech before the 
Congregational Club of Brooklyn, 
dealt with the subject from the con- 
structive side; and in the proceed- 
ings of the American Bar Associa- 
tion for 1904 there is an admirable 
paper on the need of thoroughgo- 
ing Federal control over corpora- 
tions doing an inter-State business, 
by Professor Horace L. Wilgus, of 
the University of Michigan. The 
National Government exercises con- 
trol over inter-State commerce rail- 
ways, and it can in similar fashion, 
Oo 8@ 0 @ 0 @ 
AMONG THE BOWLERS 
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MANCHESTER BOWLING LEAGUE—TEAM STANDING. 
REGALS 
CRICKETS 
WIZARDS 
1S paeih hd 2h 
SEASIDES 
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Ce 
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see ee eer weer eee eee eee eee eee ee 
ere eee eee eee eee eeee 
eee eer eee ees eee 
Players’ Averages 
©. Kelliher 98 2-3 
C. Bell 92 1-9 
F. Mosher 91 1-2 
G. Gray 90 7-9 
EK. Semons 90 1-2 
K. Lethbridge 89 5-6 
M. Revelas 89 2-3 
D. Riordan 89 1-2 
A. Jones 89 1-2 
J. Taylor 89 1-3 
W. Rust 89 1-3 
ee Cook 89 
1. Hutchinson 88 3-4 
; . Chadwick 88 2-9 
W. Bell 87 7-9 
E. Valentine 87 2-3 
G. Slade 87 2-3 
D. Healey 87 
through an appropriate governmen- 
tal body, exercise control over all 
industrial organizations engaged in 
inter-State commerce. This control 
should be exercised, not by the 
courts, but by an administrative bu- 
reau or board such as the Bureau of 
Corporations or the Inter-State 
Commerce Commission; for the 
courts cannot with advantage per- 
manently perform exectuive and 
administrative functions. 
There is nothing that gives a man 
such safe anchorage in life as a good 
wife. 
Judge not a hen by her beauty, 
but by the way she does her duty. 
The salt may be coarse without 
being the least bit objectionable. 
Most men find it easier to hold a 
runaway horse than to hold the 
tongue. 
The man who cheapens himself is 
pretty sure to be marked down by 
his neighbors. 
Won Lost P2Cr Pane 
Aa 3 875 8,140 
18 6 750 7,905 
12 12 500 7,817 
ie 16 ses 7,719 
7 17 300 7,604 
6 18 250 7,830 
A. Cool : : ‘ 87 
H. Bell 86 2-3 
B. Stanley : s : 86 2-3 
J. Morrison : ’ : 86 1-2 
G. Younger : : : 86 4-9 
O. Stanley : . : 86 
G. Rust ; : : 86 
C. Stanley : : : 86 
F. Bullock , : ; 85 5-6 
J. Nazzaro : A : 85 2-3 
C. Votteros : é ; 85 1-2 
J. Cool ; ; : 84 8-9 
J. Saulnier ‘ ; : 84 7-9 
S. Mason : : ; 84 4-5 
J. Burgess : : : 84 
M. Lodge : : : 83 1-2 
F. Ebberson % ; : 83 
W. Cool ; 4 3 13 2-3 
C. Young ; : : 69 1-3 
MANCHESTER 
George Rust. formerly clerk at 
Allen’s drug store, has secured a 
position with a wholesale grocery in 
Boston. 
Reed-Baker 
In the presence of only immediate 
relatives of contracting parties, a 
very pretty home wedding was sol- 
emnized Monday evening when Miss 
Katherine Baker and Arthur Dana 
Reed, both of Manchester, were 
united in marriage by the Rev. A. 
G. Warner of the Baptist church. 
The new home of the couple on 
Sehool street, was made most at- 
tractive for the occasion. Isaac 
Baker and family of Brookline, 
were present; also Mr. and Mrs. T. 
A. Baker, who sailed from New 
York the following day for St. 
Augustine, Fla. The popularity of 
the couple was well attested by the 
large number of pretty and useful 
presents they received. 
PRINTIN 
We are We are prepared to to handle any kind of a 
Job, quickly, at THE BREEZE OFFICE 
