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Mill recoils, and, giving logic to the winds, he trusts that God is love indeed, And love Creation's final law, Though Nature, red in tooth and claw With ravin, shrieks against his creed.

Other considerations appear to me to operate with great force in favor of the measure which I now propose. A citizen who has long served his country in its highest trusts has a right, if he has served with fidelity, to enjoy undisturbed tranquillity and peace in his retirement.

Nowhere have the socialists ever advised the destruction of trusts, nor have they anywhere opposed the taking over of great industries by the State. They realize that, as monopoly is an inevitable outcome of capitalism, so State capitalism, more or less extended, is an inevitable result of monopoly.

You have done right to leave the house, for the temptation might be too strong." "But what excuse shall I make to Mr. Trevanion?" said I, feebly; "what story can I invent? So careless as he is while he trusts, so penetrating if he once suspects, he will see through all my subterfuges, and and "

One sees five-talent men fail and two-talent men take their place; average gifts persistently used yielding rich returns, and the promise of usefulness lying, not in abundant endowments of nature, but in the using to the utmost what moderate capacities one has soberly accepted as trusts from God.

Her joy and gratitude were unspeakable, and the exquisite purity and elevation of her nature shone out transcendent in the new experience. "Now I begin to feel surer that God really trusts me," she said, "since he is going to let me have a child of my own." "O my dear friends!" she exclaimed more than once to mothers, "I never dreamed how happy you were. I thought I knew, but I did not."

American labor conditions are very different from those of Europe. In the first place, the power of the trusts is enormous; the concentration of capital has in this respect proceeded more nearly on Marxian lines in America than anywhere else. In the second place, the great influx of foreign labor makes the whole problem quite different from any that arises in Europe.

There must be a remedy for the evils involved in such organizations. If the present law can be extended more certainly to control or check these monopolies or trusts, it should be done without delay. Whatever power the Congress possesses over this most important subject should be promptly ascertained and asserted.

"His wealth is vast not less than five or six millions," wrote Barrett in 1862 "The Old Merchants of New York City," 1:349. "The Railways, the Trusts and the People":104. See Part III, "Great Fortunes From Railroads." "Kings of Fortune":172. Census of 1900. Eighth Annual Report, Illinois Labor Bureau:104-253.

The wild and terrible expression given to these insidious principles in the havoc of the Revolution should be remembered by all. Nor should the fact be overlooked that, as Mr. JOHN MACKAY. Toronto General Trusts Building, Toronto, 31st March, 1914. How It Came, What It Brought, and How It Ended