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Frances PerkinsFrances Perkins
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of a railroad, every activity of a warehouse and trucking company must pay for itself, instead of being regarded as a part of the whole business. If you lose money on a rest room in a department store for the service of ladies where they may leave their children for fifteen minutes, then you abolish it. But it was a part of the service which attracted people to the store and made them, I think, better customers. That was one of the recent things that has been abolished.

I have so often pointed out that when the railroads discovered that the provision for the ordinary human comfort necessities wasn't making any money for the railroad, then they began to put nickel in the slot machines on the doors and you had the ultimate in the abolishing of everything that doesn't pay for itself. May it pay for itself, no matter what it is that you do. Sooner or later we'll be buying tickets on the drop-a-nickel-in-the-slot arrangements so that the railroad won't have to pay for the cost of selling us tickets. We'll buy our own tickets, just as we now do all our own bookkeeping for every department store from which we have a bill. They don't do any bookkeeping any more. You do the bookkeeping. If you make a mistake, they tell you you've made a mistake and you correct it. That's taking accountancy to its absurd ends.

Well, there were times when one felt that these





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