158 THE STORY OF THE U.F.O. 



t taken of the final results. The farmer was not 

 considering his occupation from the standpoint 



of the body economic. Too often he was work- 

 ing at cross purposes with his neighbor. 



In some measure at least, that has been modi- 

 fied. Men and women of the country are think- 

 ing beyond their farms and beyond their own 

 community, and are putting their thoughts into 

 operation. They are acting collectively, and 

 that is what organization makes possible. A 

 host of men and women have been fired with a 

 will to make agriculture a great and respected 

 industry. In this host are many who are luke- 

 warm ; a majority probably have not yet caught a 

 vision of what it all means. But amongst the 

 throng are many who see and cannot be daunted, 

 and whose spirit is gradually spreading through 

 the ranks. Outside the ranks are many farmers 

 who are watching and hesitating, and who 

 have yet to be brought in. The organization is 

 the medium through which the dauntless ones 

 can work, and by which all, as they see, can 

 exert their strength in a given direction. At all 

 odds an efficient framework or organization must 

 be preserved. 



But anyone who has scanned the pages of 

 history or has had much to do in concerted 

 action with his fellow men, knows very well that 

 no organization can live and prosper unless it be 



