90 Agriculture and Its Needs 



able to find the ways for meeting their 

 reasonable ambitions. The shorter work- 

 ing day and all the better conditions of 

 labor will have to be reckoned with. The 

 comfort, and the enlightenment, and the 

 moral betterment of all in the household 

 will have to be sedulously studied and gen- 

 erously provided for. 



Of course the social, and educational, 

 and industrial combination will give help 

 to such as accord with it and are capable 

 of making use of its advantages, but the 

 personal equation will have to settle things 

 upon each farm, and the personal attri- 

 butes of the individual farmer will have to 

 prevail. But, while, no matter what the 

 general level of intelligence and sagacity, 

 some will fail and complain, and some will 

 prosper and be happy, yet, there is no 

 doubt about the public attitudes and the 

 common undertakings of a people being 



