ABSTRACT

I f the worker is to be able to buy what he makes — that is, if the wage motive is fully to be carried out — then the large corporation is inevitable. Putting the worker in a position to buy what he makes, of

course, has its exceptions, and the thought applies principally to commodities. One would not expect the worker to buy a pipe organ, or a steamship, or a skyscraper. As a worker, he would have no use for any of these things. But he has use for good food, good clothing, good housing, and a reasonable amount of pleas­ ure both for himself and for his family.