Francis A. Adams
Capitolo 59
he starts. "It was from the exercise of coercion of which I was driven out
business. I conducted a shop of tobacco of retail sale in Harmony, in mine native
state. My business all it took is assuring me a living decent, and a
comfortable border to be husbanded as a safeguard for my decline
years. I had a wife and three children. My children were entirely minor and me
them kept to school to offer them with the good educations.
"There was competition in my business; so natural competition as it is
met with in all the searches. However it didn't prevent mine doing a,
the success of my business.
"Then it came to the Trust of Tobacco. It put out for checking the work of retail sale.
This would be effected by the inauguration of a system of "to deliver"
good to the retail sale store with severe conditions that the retailer is able
not the handle the product of some worry out of the League of Tobacco. In
orders to ingratiate with the shop-custodians the Trust,
managers offered terms that were before till now under the tide for
prices that a majority of the shops limited them to handle the
Good of trust exclusively.
"Three years passed in that the independent manufacturers of tobacco
him striven to hold out against the ring. Then it came to an accident.
"I had opposed the innovation to tie to buy me from a worry;
for me I intuitively felt that as soon as the Trust was all-powerful it
it would start to practice on the dictatorial hesitation the retailer.
"My fears were justified soon.
"The Trust advanced the price of its good to the retailer, and
forced the work to sell to the same figures of retail sale.
"When this system of the extortion was launched with success the Trust
determined to compensate his/her patrons as a mean for reconciling them for
you profit meeting places.
"The reward entered the form to discriminate against the
shop-custodians that it sticks dealt him with the good made the fast fade away
worries of opposition.
"I was informed that unless I signed an accord to only use the Trust