et AT BAY. This is the end, then, of striving; this is what comes of it all— Darkness and foes just behind one; ‘What does it matter how staunchly one before, an impassable wall. may have battled for truth, When with his weapons all broken he its by the grave of his youth? What did it profit in past years that one did the best that one knew When in the glopm of the present Virtue herself seems untrue? Why should one fighttany longer when nothing remains but defeat? Surely such labor were useless, and idle the stirring of feet. ‘Ah! but the soul that is faithful knows it is well to have fought, Knows it is good to have acted, whatever the doing has brought. This is the crown of the conflict, this the reward of the strife— Faith in one’s self and one’s motives, no matter how darkened the life. Flesh may be bruised and defeated, but spirit is never disgraced— Spirit is always triumphant, whatever sharp pain it has faced. Here, at ‘the end of my conflict, I counsel not yet with despair, Though to all seeming my struggles are his who but the air. Darkness and foes are about me, yet I stand with my back to the wall, Facing whatever Fate sends me, and facing Fate thus I shall fall. —Oscar Fay Adams. 668 3 IOCLES.” An Athenian Fable by Henryk Sienkiewitz, Translated From the French. By SIMEON aps ieieieiaial Sy vie} Divine sleep has brought peace to ‘Athens and a silence so profound that the ear might catch the faint drawn- out breath of the dreaming city. Hill, ‘Acropolis, and temple, the olive groves and the dark cypress masses are drenched in moonlight. The fountains have ceased to play; the Scythian watchmen are asleep at the house doors. The city, the entire countryside, is at rest. Young Diocles alone keeps vigil with the night. He has pressed his forehead against the feet of Pallas 'Athene where she rises, glorious, in the gardens of Academus; embraced her knees, crying, “Athena, 'Athena, who formerly appeared to men in visible form, hear me! Take pity! Give ear to my prayer!” He lifts his forehead from the base of the cold marble and raises his eyes to the face of the virgin, which is il- Jumined by a single beam. Only the silence answers him, and even the light breeze which blows from the sea at this hour of the night dies away. Among the trees not a leaf stirs. The heart of the young man is possessed with an infinite sadness and from his eyes, swollen with much _weeping, tears trace a way down his beautiful face. He continues his sup- plication: “You, and you alone, I adore and long to celebrate above all’ other di- vinities—you my protectress. But you, too, have lighted the fires of de- sire which consume me, and given me over to torture. -Extinguish the flame, Oh Divinity, or appease it! Grant me to know the Highest Truth, the Truth of Truths, the Soul of all things, that I may offer up life and its delights as a sacrifice before her! For her sake 1 will cast off riches, renounce youth, beauty, love, felicity, and even that glory which mortals hold as the highest good and the greatest gift in the bestowal of the gods.” Once more he laid his head against the marble and the prayer rose from his soul as perfumed clouds mount upward from holy censers. His en- tire being became passionate en- treaty. He lost all consciousness of space or time or earthly circum- stance. Swimming in estacy his soul harbored but one aspiration, but a single thought: that to so passionate an invocation a reply must surely come. And truly. enough the response came. The slender branches of the olive trees began to stir, and the cypress trees bent their heads, as though the night wind had sprung Into life again. Little by little, the rustling of the olive branches and the grating noise of cypress needles blended to form a human voice which Bwelled up, filling the air, filling the garden, as if a multitude, from all sides, and with one aceord were shouting, “Diocles! Dioeles!” Snatched from the depths of ecstasy the young man shivered, as if with eold. Thinking that his eom- panions were seeking him, he tooked around. “Who calls?” he demanded. A hand of marble weighed down kis shoulder. “You have summoned me,” spoke the goddess. prayer has been heard. Behold me ” A divine horror seized upon Dio- cles. His hair rose in fear as he fell upon his knees. For terror and de- light he could only repeat, * You are near me, you, the Incomprehensible, the Awful, the Inexpressible One!” The goddess, commanding him to rise, continued: “You would know the Highest, the Only Truth, which is the Soul of the Universe and the substance of all things. But I tell Fou that hitherto none of the seed of Deucalion has seen her without the veils that hide her and shall hide her eternally from human eyes. I fear you may pay dearly for your temerity, but since you have adjured me at the price of life, I am ready to aid you, if for the sake of this Truth, you will renounce riches, honors, Jove, and even that glory which, as you have said, is the highest gift of the Gods.” “I renounce the whole world and the very light of the sun,” eried Dio- eles, quite beside himself. The olive trees and cypresses stood with bowed head, like servitors, be- fore Jove’s omnipotent daughter, as she pondered over the youth's vow. “And you, too, shall not see her all at once. Every year, on a night dike this, I will bring her into your presence, and on each occasion you must tear off one of her veils and edst it behind you. My immortal Power shall ward off death from you | rapid as thought, he has | “Your: ‘a swan, STRUNSKY. €_¢ etait iS Cotte ey till you have withdrawn the last veil. Do you agree to the conditions, Dio- cles?” “This day and unto eternity thy will be done, Oh Lady of Knowledge,” replied the youth. As he spoke the goddess tore her- self free from her marble bonds, seized Diocles in her arms, and, launching into flight, sped through the divine ether like one of the stars which on summer nights furrow the celestial vault above the sleeping Archipelago. Cleaving the air as they came to an unknown land and a mountain that attained the sky, loftier than Olym- pus or Ida, loftier than Pelion and Ossa. On its bald summit Diocles perceived the vague outlines of a female form shrouded in numerous tightly drawn veils. A mystic efful- gence, different from any .terrestrial light, emanated from her, feebly. “Behold Truth,” said Athena. “Her rays, you see, intercepted by many wrappings, pierce through neverthe- less and give light. Their feeble radiance, gathered, on earth by the eyeball of the philosopher, is all that saves men from stumbling about blindly in the gloom of perpetual night, like those who dwell in the land of the Cimmerians.” “Celestial guide,” asked Diocles, “when I shall have torn off the first veil will not Truth appear dazzling to my eyes?” “Tear it off,” said the goddess. He caught at the border of the shroud and pulled it away sharply. The light burst forth with increased intensity. Half blinded, Diocles failed to perceive that the veil as it dropped from his hands had. changed into a white swan which winged its way into the distant twilight. For a long time he remained in the presence of Truth, ravished, raised out of life, transported into superterrestrial spaces, ‘emancipated from mortal thoughts, quaffing of unexperienced existence, of an unknown force, tast- ing the delights of inward peace. “Oh, Luminous One,” he breathed. “Oh, Eternal One! Oh, Soul of the Universe!” Diocles kept the vow he had made before the goddess. People knew that he was rich and as he strolled with his companions in the gardens of Academus, or in the road leading to the Acropolis, or in the olive groves that lie between the city and the port, they did not hesitate to ex- press their astonishment and dissat- isfaction. “Come now, Diocles, your father has amassed a vast fortune of which you have complete enjoyment. What keeps you from bringing off a mag- nificent feast like those our godlike Alcibiades has tendered to the youth of Athens? What makes you despise the pleasures of the banquet table, the dance, and the sweet sound ef the phorminx and the cithara? you cast your lot with the Cynics that you refuse to care for your mansion or adorn your chambers in a manner suitable to your work? Remember that wealth is a gift of the gods which one has not the right to a Hh But Diocles only replied with a question: “Tell me, with all the treasures of the Persian King, may one purchase truth?” And so he eontinued te live in pov- erty, while men began to say that some day he would surpass in wisdom the divine Plato, and honored him accordingly. In the meanwhile on another night of moonlight, a second | véil escaped from his hands and flew off into the darkness in the form of while more brilliant than ever the Truth of Truths shone upon him. Diocles was a very charming youth, and the greatest men of Athens, phil- osophers, rhetors and Dboets, sued for his friendship, hoping through the contemplation of his beauty to gain insight into the beauty of the Eternal idea; but he rejected their gifts and their offers of friendship. The young girls who gather at the fountains in the Stoa and the Ceramicus wrapped him in their tresses and enveloped him in the circle of their dance. The wondrously beautiful like so many nymphs, cast at his feet branches of fennel dedicated to Adonis, or whispered into his ear, over the drooping chalices of lilies, words as gentle and insinuating as the tones of the Arcadian flute. But all in vain. Like clouds shredded by Thracian mountain peaks wkich blustering Boreas drives each winter over Ath- ens out to the open sea, the years passed over Diocles. He attained ma- turity. And though he rarely min- ‘She laid her hand on the unhappy Have: Companions, | gled in the disputes of the phirbIRS phers cr the debates of the public assembly, his reputation for elo- quence and wisdom grew. More than once his fellow-citizens proffered him the highest political offices. Not only friends, but mere acquaintances, would beseech him to seize the helm of State and guide the ship out of the breakers and quicksands into calm waters, but he only saw the so- cial life, steeped in corruption, love of country stifled by personal hatreds and strife of parties, and his own ad- monitions falling like seed in sterile ground. The day finally came when the Athenians called upon him to place himself at their head. He re- plied: “Men of Athens, you have no enemies but yourselves. As a man, my tears flow for you; but were I a God, I could a0t govern you.” War having broken out, Diocles went to the front like every one else and re- turned covered with woumds. But when the crowns of valor were dis- tributed on the Acropolis he did not march with the procession of vet- erans and he would not consent to have his name engraved on the tablet of bronze suspended as a memorial in the temple. When old age came Diocles built himself a hut out of branches of wil- low near the quarries of Pentelicus. He left the city and lived far from men. Athenians are not slow at for- getting, and on the occasion when he came to market to purchase bread and olives his friends did not recog- nize him. Several Olympiads rolled by. His hair had turned white, his form was bent to the ground, his eyes were sunk deep in their sockets. Time had robbed him of his strength. But one hope upheld him, nevertheless, the hope that before leaving the light of the sun he might see Supreme Truth, the eternal mother of all uni- versal fact. And he cven allowed himself to hope that if, after the final revelation, Atropos should refrain from cuting the thread of his years, he would return to the city bringing men a greater gift than they had re- ceived at the hands of Prometheus: It came at length, the ultimate mystic night, when the goddess once more wrapped him in her arms and brought him to the heaven-piercing mountains, face to face with Truth. “Behold,” she said, “what glory! What splendor! But before you ex- tend your hand for the last time, listen to me. The veils which, year after year, through so many years, have fallen from your hands and es- caped in the form of swans, were your illusions. Will you spare the last one? Or does fear cramp your heart? Retreat before it is too late. From these heights I will carry you back to your native iand, where you may end your days like other men.” “To this single moment my whole life has been consecrated,” cried Dio- cles, and with beating heart he ap- proached the radiant form whose glory dazzled him. With trembling hands he seized the last veil, tore it off, and cast it behind him. In the very same instant the old man’s eyes were as if struck with a thunderbolt, and he was plunged into darkness, compared with which the densest night of Hades were brilliant day- light. In the midst of it the voice of Diocles, heavy with inexpressible terror and infinite grief, was heard, calling: “Athena! Oh, Athena! There is nothing behind the veil, and I cannot even see you.” To this cry of despair the goddess responded, severely: “The full light has blinded you, and your last illu- sion—the belief that a mortal might see Truth unveiled—has flown.” Then silence fell. Diocles sobbed: “Those who trust you, you ever deceive. Me, too, you have betrayed, cruel goddess of lies. But since I nevermore can hope to see Truth Supreme, send me at least the death which liberates.” There was more than human dolor in his words, and Athena was moved. head and said gently: “I will send it, Diocles, and with it a final hope. ‘When death shall have brought you peace, you shall see that Light which blinded yofir eyes wHen you were alive.” » - * * » - Ww The night grew pale and dawn rose cold and melancholy gray. Thin lines of cloud appeared in the sky, and heavy snowflakes began to fall, cover- ing the mortal remains of Diocles.— New York Evening Post. We Are All Lopsided. A person’s eyes are out of line in two cases out of five, and one eye is stronger than the other in seven per- sons out of ten. The right is also, as a rule, higher than the left. Only one person in fifteen has perfect eyes, the largest percentage of defects pre- vailing-among the fair-haired people. The smallest vibration of sound can be distinguished better with one ear than with both. The nails of twa fingers never grow with the same rap- idity, that of the middle finger grow- ing the fastest, while that of the thumb grows slowest. In fifty-four cases out of 100 the left leg is short- er than the right.—Philadelphia Led: ger. Horrors of Horrors! People have curious ideas as ta the treatment patients receive in asy- lums. A nurse who was on sitting- room duty recently heard a newcom- er asking people who had been visit- ors for some time as to the treat- ment of patients. ‘‘Oh,” was one reply, ‘‘they treats the poor things cruel here. They gives ’em a bath every week.” — American Home Monthly. Dissection of human bodies by medical students has been practised since B. C. 320. LONDON’S OUTCASTS. With the Men Who Have Touched Bottom in the Great Citys 313s AAA I spent two nights last week with the homeless and the outcast, one on the Embankment and the other in a County Council lodging house. At Charing Cross and Waterloo there were 1100 men snatching eag- . erly chunks of bread and the bowls of soup which the army officers kind- ly distributed. The police consta- bles were gentle and considerate, but it was a sad sight to see hungry men marshalled to receive a charity. understand them adequately and truly I ought to have been a tramp side by side with my fellow bank- rupts, and not a visitor looking on from without. Yet a number of men talked free- ly; one had tramped from Newcas- tle expecting to find in London a good job and a golden wage. In- stead he found a piece of bread and a sip of soup on the Embankment. Another had a good, strong, swarthy face, and I hazarded the remark that he was not a Londoner and discov- ered that he was an Australian. Un- fortunately he is not the only Colon- ial who has touched bottom in Lon- don. Over twenty-five per cent. were young men, many of them mere-lads; and the police officers confirmed the opinion of the social experts who maintain it is not misfortune that brings this class to the doss house and the Embankment. There was one face knotty as a stunted oak on some bleak hillside, which attracted me by its black despair. Not only did he sullenly refuse to reply, but snappishly bade his comrades not to answer our questions. He was per- fectly right, and I immediately recog- nized the higher voice, the voice of humanity, and maybe the voice of God, and at once desisted from feed- ing a curiosity, howsoever well mean- ing and innocent, upon the w retched- ness of my fellow men. One of the Bloomsbury Sisters who To: you what rn do. ‘T have got some stuff in my locker; I'll sell you a ha’porth of milk, and there is plenty of boiling water.” I expected him to be a long way below redemption point, but was touced by another instance of beauti- ful kindliness in the simple annals of the poor. The reading room suggested a fair workingmen’s institute; some ad- dresseed envelopes®two men dis- cussed the parsons, four others were talking about Evelyn Nesbit, a few read, and almost all smoked. There were two men sitting on each side of a bench, pictures of dejection and despair. It was when I sat down in silence between these two men and endeavored to look out at the world through their eyes that I knew that I had touched the ninth circle of our social Inferno, and felt strongly that if there had been no Incarnation there ought to have been one. There were a few workingmen, one of them toying with his spade, but most of the artisans who live here are said to be those whose wives are separated, whose homes are broken. No genuine man in work stops here, if he is in receipt of a decent wage. Some are suffering from physical disabilities and some are old, ‘‘the too old at fifty” class, eking out a sordid existence by a a little pension and an odd job. There were a few men who had the cut of journalists, and one lad of nineteen, who had been staying there for six months, was, I am almost sure, a student scorning delights and living labori- ous days, contenting himself with the bare necessities of existence in order to get through a curriculum or obtain a degree. There was the same proportion of young lads here as on the Embank- | ment. It is sad, in all conscience; to see a brother on the ground; but it comes nigh to an unspeakable trag- accompanied me called our attention |edy to see men touching the bottom | to an old man who had fainted at one end of the long, sad line. He lay full length on the steps of Water- loo Bridge, his head pillowed on a cruel ledge of stone. There was re- finement in his face, and his white beard was neatly trimmed. He was, we learned, a graduate of Cambridge, and had once been sent to the Uni- vesity as the pride and the hope of a cultured home. But forty years have passed since then, and for the past two nights he has been without sleep and food, and has fallen on the inhospitable stones without strength to care to open his eves any more. The sister speaks to him. He opens his eyes with languid indifference, but when he sees a kind, womanly, Christlike face bending over him, may=be he mistakes it for one of the faces of long ago; anyhow he is aroused, and comes back to tell his sorrowful tale. The case of these 1100 men sug- gests a rich study in contrasts. By our side is a dark river heaving its bosom like a living thing. with a light reflected here and there like a sinister gleam of a serpent’s eye. Close at hand is the Hotel Cecil, where rich men fare sumptuously every night, utterly regardless of Lazarus on the Embankment. Low- er down in Scotland Yard, where mil- lions are spent in tracking criminals, but not a penny in saving them. Be- yond that the War Office, red with gore and black with the waste of money enough to solve every social problem that troubles our land. Fur- ther still is the House of Commons, to which some of us look in great nope, but whose existence has been completely erased from the horizon of the men of the Embankment. The one bright spot of hope is the self-sacrifice of the Salvationists. For the soup is handed round by volun- tary workers, workingmen who have come all the way froma Bermondsey and give their night's rest and their kind labor in order to feed the hun- gry and relieve the hapless. They, too, were once, An the gutter, but they saw something; and that vision is the secret of their ‘sacrifice. One~of them told me how he had become a eynic and a ‘‘moucher.” He met a clergyman when he was famishing for food, who, instead of a loaf, gave him a tract—''Thou shalt not live by bread alone.” He cursed the clergy from that hour, and in the light of his experience his cursing was as holy as a paternostre. Not long- after- ward he stood outside a ring of open air temperance workers he signed the pledge, obtained a shilling, and be- came a cadger. But he has now been on his feet for fifteen years and is doing magnificent work. If all the Christians in London had the devo- tion and the sacrifice of these hum- ble Salvationists the New Jerusalem would ere now have come down on Holborn and the Strand ‘‘prepared as a bride adorned for her husband.” The second night I dispensed with tie and collar and overcoat and cuffs, and greatly enjoyed my emancipa- tion, as I dived down into one of the narrow streets of central London and asked a bewildered and suspecting constable for a doss house. I went in and ‘‘took my kip,” and had bed No. 88 allotted to me. I had left all the necessaries of life behind except a few pennies and a packet of “tabs.” My first task was to get a light, which a gruff neighbor kindly gave me by holding the end of his pipe close to my face. My second difficul- ty was to get food, for unfortunately the bar was closed. I told my plight to a little red faced man, and in tell- ing it I am afraid I stuttered rather badiy. He replied: ‘‘Mate, I'll tell | worker in the heart the ledge before they are and old in misfortune young in years. I am haunted by lad holding a conversation with a villainous looking senior on the hearth side in front of a biazing fire. It was the face of a boy who knew too much and had lived too rashly. The place had an air of comfort, but it utterly lacked hope. Literally the men are without God and with- out hope in the world. For most of them there nothing better and there can be nothing worse. Suffi- cient for the day is the evil thereof. It is embarrassing to think of the morrow. There is the comfort that you are buried in Central London. You are lost to friends and acquaint- ances. Nobody knows and nobody cares. There is the lodging house for to-day and the workhouse or the Thames for to-morrow. An Oxford graduate who has touched the depths and found his feet in our men’s meeting at Blooms- bury says that the words of Kipling came to him again and again as he has tramped the corridors of the doss house or the sireets of the city: twenty-five, while only the figure of a is We have done with hope and honor; we are lost to love and truth; We are dropping down the ladder rung by rung. Gentleman rankers out on the spree, Damned from here io fternicy, God have mercy on sucl h as we, Bah, Yah, Bah! But it is some hing to have them sheiter ard comfort; and here, as in the case of! the trams, and slums and parks. the London County Council has beer inspired hy a com- passion and huma ’ which is rare in ecclesiasticala ible: 3, leave alone large public bod By providing homes that are clean, and cheap, and wholesome they have fed the hungry, clothed the naked and taken in the homeless. But why cast the women into the outermost darkness? For on Wednesday night there were Sisters, too, on the Embank- ment. My wife spoke to a number of broken down women all over fifty. These are the despair of.every social of L.ordon. The men we can send to the Council lodg- ing houses, but for the women, there is—nowhere! Ob, it is I itaful. Near a whale eity=-fall, Home they have none: : —London Daily News. given How Water Water contracts as it falls tom normal boiling point, 212 ded grees, until it reaches thirty-nine de- grees. Below that degree it expands, and at thirty-two degrees, the freez- ing point, it will expand enough to burst pipes and vessels holding it. When the pressure of the air is below normal, water boils at a lower temperature than 212 degrees. Thid is noticed before a rain, when the ba- rometer shows by a falling mercury a decreased air pressure. This also explains why water boils away more rapidly, quickly or at a lower temper- ature in the mountains, where the pressure of the air is less than on the seacoast or in the valleys. If sugar or salt is added to water the temper- ature of the boiling point is raised a few degrees. As a rule, as water Is heated it will hold a greater amount of substance in solution. A familiar exception is the fact that ice water will dissolve twice as much lime as boiling water. At the othed extreme boiling water will dissolve Seventeen times as much saltpetre as will eold watet, But water varies in its solv= ent powers regardless of heat. Ons pound of water will hold two pounds of sugar in solution, but only twa Acts. | ounces of common salt . HK is well, The Submerged Individual By JUSTICE JOHN WOODARD, of the Appellate Division of the Su-- préeme Court of New York. It is undeniable that the despot, if: he be benevolent, can accomplish more good than the divided and myriad minded many. An unwise and precipitate democracy can, on the other hand, degenerate into that worst of despotisms, an irresponsible and selfish oligarchy which appro- priates all of the benefits and denies every burden. And such, it must be confessed, is the present attitude of many of our overgrown corporations. They have been intrusted with the welfare of the people, and have abused their trust. They have become pirates, where they should have remained beneficators. They have destroyed competition till with monopolistic greed they have robbed the public for their own en- richment. They have desecrated the law, which is the conscience of the State. They have "t6t remembered what they should never have forgot- ten, that old admonition still to be seen on a church in Venice: “Around this temple let the merchant's law be just, his weights true and his cov- enants faithful.” then, that they should be controlled and regulated. It is time to drive’ the money changers out of the. temple® “and to substitute for the worship of gold the worship of character. ; On whom, ‘then, shall our salva- tion depend, if not upon the indi- vidual? The many will never make the attempt to regain their lost rights unless they are led by a man. And the man will come. Comes the crisis, he will not be found Want- ing. There is always the great per- sonality who shall lead his pcople out of the wilderness to the promised land. He may not be one of the shining intellectuals, he may not be one of those subtle and brilliant ad- vocates that stand arrayed in behalf of private interests against the cause of the people: but he will have that quality of manliness which inspires confidence. Beware of those storm that they bow. If, then, those corporations which have sprung like mushrooms from the decay of public virtue reveal such appalling defects, can we expect that the State, when it shall have become, as many desire, a universal corpora- tion, will prove otherwise? Is not the danger in proportien to the size of the mononoply? Will not such a solution tend to crush that sense of individuality and that civie conscious- ness which is our sole refuge? Society owes to *h his oppor- tunity. It is the supreme duty of the State to inspire ambition. To thwart, to limit, or to exclude by legislation the enterprise of the individual, is to deaden the world's capacity for pro- gress. To quench the spark of per- sonality is to impoverish: the whole social organization. To attempt by law, therefore, to limit all men, irrespective of skill, endeavor or attainment, to a common wage would be as fatuous as it is unjust. Personality, indeed, ean be subject only to the laws of nature. Needless to say, the souls of men are not amenable to statistics. You may measure material results; you can never calculate the aspirations of the mind. To bring about the readjustment of social conditions many fastastic remedies are proposed; but there can be no panacea for political ills. The law never rises higher than its source. Our hope, then, is in the edu- cation of the public through the in- dividual. It is for you and for me to decide whether public opinion shall become a despotism. The aim of democracy is, I take it, equality before the law, and to guarantee to each his personal liberty — the liberty to be himself. When upon this shall. be superim- posed a burden of restrictions, hedg- ing the individual about with “thou shalt” and “thou shalt not,” then rurely democracy will exist only in name. Every law, therefore, which encroaches upon your personal pre- rogative as a man and as a citizen is a usurpation of your individuality. To submerge the identity of the per- son in the mass is to destroy all pos- sibility for ‘progress. This applies to us all. The ordinary man, indeed, may posses qualities far greater than those of the same nature in his more distinguished brother, yet it is to the exceptional faculties of the few that the world must look for its advance- ment. To give encouragement to person- ality, to kindle by opportunities for reward the incentive to labor, and to nourish tenderly the progressive in- tellect, this should be at least one of the chief functions of government. that provoke the may reap the rein- nl Sevore Treatment. The following is a quite modern Chinese conception of the foreigners’ treatment of infectious cases: “If am epidemic broke out two foreigners took the sick away and put them in a little room, washed them with lime water and then locked them up, so that no.one could see them, on pur- pose that they might soon die and not propagate the disease. Wives and children might ery and weep, but the foreigner would but drive them away with sticks, for until dead no one must see those faces again. Bet- ter for all of us to jump into the nea than submit to this.”—South Chi=a Post. In the last hundred years there have been made in the United States, some seven or eight score of experi- ments in community Hie.