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18 Very well; the poor must have tine schools, the best teachers and every means to develop all the forces of their children.

The rich have leisure to study and for social entertainment. They have libraries and works of art. They have baths every day, comfortable and becoming attire for all seasons, and a generous supply of good and wholesome food.

Very well; the poor must not be obliged to work all the hours of the day. They must have leisure for study and for social intercourse. They must have libraries and works of art. They must have baths every day, comfortable and becoming attire for all season and a generous supply of good and wholesome food.

And so Mr. Godin goes on showing that all which wealth and industry can obtain should be at the disposal of those who do the world's work. This logic was the inspiration of the grandest enterprise of the century, the Social Palace at Guise.

Ibis palace stands just over the river Oise opposite the City of Guise, and has been in successful operation over ten years. It is adapted to accommodate nearly fifteen hundred people. He is a noble and generous man, a day laborer himself during his younger years. He would gladly have his workmen own the Social Palace, but through trouble with his heirs, and especially through the laws of France, he has not been able so far to accomplish this.

There is the same trouble in this country. The law does not recognize the responsibility of ownership except in the individual. An associative establishment must be controlled by one or two trustees or whatnot whom the