114 PRESIDENTIAL ADDRESS SECTION E. 



(3) The Place of Witchcraft. 



Military afifairs. 



Crime. 



The real tribalism. 



Instinct. 

 Law. 

 Custom. 

 Thought. 



Ihe caste system. 



The ancestral superstition. 



Agriculture. 



The unprogricssive lactor. 



The decline of witcncraft. 



The aftermath. 



(4) The passing of communal tenure. 



(a) The primitive conditions. 



(b) Changing conditions. 



(c) Communism. 



(d) The transition. 



(e) The Glen Grey Act. 



(f) Conditions of title. 

 (.?) The commK of survey. 

 (h) Decay ot tribal customs. 

 (i) Communism to individualism. 



(5) The improved communications. 



(a) Earliest conditions on foot. 

 Earliest conditions by horse. 



(b) Ox-waggon. 



(c) Horse vehicles. 



(d) The railway. 



(e) The motor. 



(6) The economic factor. 



(a) Earliest conditions. 



(b) The fairs. 



(c) Itinerant traders. 



(d) Trading established. 

 ( c) Rising values. 



(f) Changing conditions. 



(g) Growth of wealth. 



(7) Review. 



(a) The fact of change. 



(b) Fundamental developments. 



(c) The influence of laisses-faire. 



(d) The dynamic of change. 



(8) Conclusions. 



(a) Witchcraft must go. 



(b) Education by contact proceeds. 



(c) State must satisfy aspirations of all sections. 



(d) The moral peril of refusal. 



(e) Development of asset. 



Good government. 



Taxation and revenue. 



Commerce. 



Contribution to national expression. 



(f) The moral obligations. 

 C?) The spiritual ol:)ligation. 

 (h) A fitting terminus. 



