the results of slow, silent, invisible causes. States, even within a few generations. It is, as I say, let it be compassed by law. Small changes wrought by officials are clearly conceived, can benefits be achieved. Is an evil shown? Then it must cial improvements, from natural causes. Nature's power 24 of curing has been in operation. But this large fact and the general drift of things towards better and higher conditions. The heroes of ancient Greece were repre- is a manufacture and not an evolution vitiates political has shown a marked decrease in drinking in the United myriadfold ways. Undeveloped brains cannot recognize other large facts having like implications are ignored by The Committee of Fifty through its Sub-Committee The improvement has slowly arisen, along with other so- on the Physiological Aspects of the Liquor Problem our agitators. They cannot be made to recognize the pro- thinking at large, leading to the belief that only by coercion sented as tremendous eaters, it was one of the at- ! cess of evolution resulting from men's daily activities, though have been wrought through the daily process of things un- but there is no conception of those vast changes which directed by authority. And thus the notion that a society Progress of Temperance. be suppressed by law. Is a good thing suggested? Then facts forced on them from morning till night show this in