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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of Other Worlds, by Lena Jane Fry
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: Other Worlds
- A story concerning the wealth earned by American citizens and
- showing how it can be secured to them instead of to the trusts
-
-Author: Lena Jane Fry
-
-Release Date: January 09, 2021 [eBook #64241]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-Produced by: Richard Tonsing and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team
- at https://www.pgdp.net (This book was produced from images
- made available by the HathiTrust Digital Library.)
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK OTHER WORLDS ***
-
-[Illustration: LENA JANE FRY.]
-
-
-
-
- OTHER WORLDS
- A Story Concerning the Wealth Earned by American Citizens and Showing
- How It Can Be Secured to Them Instead of to the Trusts
-
-
- By LENA JANE FRY
-
-
- CHICAGO:
- LENA JANE FRY, Publisher
- 1905
-
-
-
-
- Copyright 1905
- BY LENA JANE FRY
- CHICAGO, ILL.
-
-
-[Illustration: 156]
-
-
-
-
- THIS BOOK
- IS LOVINGLY DEDICATED
- TO
- THREE OF AMERICA’S
- BEST DAUGHTERS,
- NENA N., BERTHA J., AND
- KATHLEEN E. FRY.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CONTENTS
-
-
- INTRODUCTION.
- CHAPTER I.
- CHAPTER II.
- CHAPTER III.
- CHAPTER IV.
- CHAPTER V.
- CHAPTER VI.
- CHAPTER VII.
- CHAPTER VIII.
- CHAPTER IX.
- CHAPTER X.
- CHAPTER XI.
- CHAPTER XII.
- CHAPTER XIII.
- CHAPTER XIV.
- CHAPTER XV.
- CHAPTER XVI.
- CHAPTER XVII.
- CHAPTER XVIII.
- CHAPTER XIX.
- CHAPTER XX.
- CHAPTER XXI.
- CHAPTER XXII.
- CHAPTER XXIII.
- CHAPTER XXIV.
- CHAPTER XXV.
- CHAPTER XXVI.
- CHAPTER XXVII.
- THE WEALTH PRODUCING AND DISTRIBUTING SOCIETY.
- THE PLANET VENUS. SECOND STORY.
- WE ARE GOING TO BE INSPECTED.
-
-
-
-
- INTRODUCTION.
-
-
-In introducing myself to my readers I believe I can do no better than to
-insert the following clipping, taken from a recent newspaper; for I am
-answering the cry that is going out to those who are able to work out
-the problem, of finding employment for willing hands to do:
-
-
- “THE RIGHT TO WORK.”
-
- Is there such a thing as the “right to work?” If so, why isn’t it
- enforced on behalf of the great army of unemployed?
-
- It does seem that there should be something for every willing pair
- of hands in this great country to do. We have unbounded, unmeasured
- natural resources. We have billions of idle wealth. Ought we not to
- have wisdom enough to bring the idle wealth and natural
- opportunities and the idle hands together?
-
- Think of the suffering women and children who are cold and hungry
- because the husband and father cannot find work for his willing
- hands.
-
- Think of this, you well-to-do, you statesman; yes, and you
- workingman.
-
- Here is a black, horrid blemish on the Christian civilization of the
- Twentieth Century. To wipe it out is a work far grander in the
- possibilities of its results than to construct wonderful subways,
- build libraries and monuments or to perform any of the wonderful
- things of which we boast.
-
- And, bear this in mind, if every man will do his duty by his fellow
- man, the time will come when the piteous cry, “I cannot find work,”
- will be heard no more in this fair land.
-
-You will see, as you read this book, that I believe—as do many
-others—that there are other worlds that are inhabited, as well as this;
-but that is not the point after all. This is a story taken from every
-day life as it is. Many events will be recognized, though no real
-characters have been given.
-
-If my ideas are carried out, it means freedom to the oppressed. It means
-wealth for all industrious people, in fact, the society I picture in
-these pages will be able to confer not only wealth but honors upon all
-deserving members. All thinking people know that we are in the midst of
-the most awful crisis that this world has ever known; that the Trusts
-have us hemmed in on all sides, that we seem to be helpless. I say “seem
-to be,” for we are not helpless, only stunned by the immense power which
-money has enabled the Trusts to use against us in taxing our
-necessities.
-
-I have written this book believing I could give some practical ideas
-that will help to win the battle that is going against us as a people.
-
-The Trusts are not our enemies in reality; they are only the whips that
-have been used to draw us into line and show us how to manage our
-affairs as a Nation instead of in the individual way, with its wasteful
-competition.
-
-In all the ages past, when nations were menaced, a leader came to their
-aid; but in this age we need many leaders along many lines to take hold,
-for all people have been guilty of a crime that few even know was a
-crime.
-
-It was money that gave the Trusts their power over us, and it was money
-that has been the root of evil in all the ages. It is hard to know when
-it was established as the world’s idol, but as an Idol it rules the
-virtuous as well as the depraved. “Thou shalt have none other gods
-before Me,” the Lord of Heaven has said. Down with the money Idol, or
-destruction shall fall on your head, we say as we look around and see
-the consequences of its power. It rules our lives, and is it necessary
-after all? is the subject upon which I have written.
-
-I believe in justice to all, and I have written this book because I have
-something to say in it that will help to bring prosperity for all.
-
-I have done my best, and, if I have not done the best that can be done,
-my only wish is that others will take up the ideas I have given here,
-until all humanity can clasp hands and say: Thank the good power of
-united action that has shown us how to secure homes and our necessities
-independent of the money powers.
-
-May all who read it, choose evolution and safety and not wait for war
-and its attending calamities that the money rulers are bringing, is my
-greatest wish.
-
-
- HOW I HAPPENED TO WRITE “OTHER WORLDS.”
-
-[Illustration]
-
- ’Twas evening. I was sitting in my parlor alone in the home, not a soul
- was near.
- A strike was in full blast and had been for a year.
- Lives had been lost and mourners would weep
- As funerals passed slowly down the street.
- Watching at the window as a procession passed,
- Mentally I asked the question: how long O God! how long shall this thing
- last?
- Is the Idol of the Nation—aye, the Idol of the earth—
- That thing, that is called money;—oh—is it of greater worth
- Than the creatures thou hast created?
- Not knowing I had uttered a prayer, in the fullness of my heart
- I sat in the gloaming, and in time it became quite dark.
- I was resting—sitting passive—not even trying to think,
- When an angel stood before me! Perhaps ’twas—a dream; who knows?
- Who can tell when a dream commences or when we doze,
- Or when imagination creates a thing; if practical, why need we care?
- To me it was a vision and the angel was most fair,
- As she pointed to the stars in the heavens, shining there:
- “They too, are worlds,” she whispered, “struggling to the light,
- Gaining wisdom by experience and power by their might.
- Go write and tell the world about them and how they won:
- When powers and principalities seemed greater than the sun.
- This monster called ‘money,’ that all love so well;
- Has opened wide the very floodgates of hell,
- Until you have a toiling, struggling mass called humanity.
- Go, now, write the story; I bid you make haste
- For your homes are menaced! Your country will be laid waste
- By the Trusts who weave webs, as a spider to catch flies;
- The Nation may be throttled until it dies.”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER I.
-
-
-In a country place near a town called Lake View, on the planet Herschel,
-lived a family of the name of Vivian. They were known all over the
-country for their hospitality, wealth and their beautiful daughters. For
-generations the name Vivian had been associated with brave deeds, honest
-lives and intellect. The girls were even known as “those very clever
-Vivian girls.” Mira, the youngest of the four girls, just sixteen as
-this story opens, was a bright, winsome girl, tall and graceful, with
-large hazel eyes, a pink and white complexion, and an abundance of
-golden hair.
-
-On a bright autumn afternoon Mira was on the lawn watching the birds and
-listening to their clatter as they collected in large numbers to take
-their yearly journey to a warmer climate. “How wise they are,” she
-pondered; “though so small, they know more than the people do. Away they
-go to another part of the world. I wish I could go with them. I am so
-weary of always staying in one place.” She gazed after them as they took
-their onward flight, and her mother, who had been watching her from the
-window, seemed to catch the thought, for she said aloud: “I am afraid,
-like the birds, she will soon be leaving me alone.”
-
-“Why, mother,” said a young man, approaching her; “you are actually
-talking to yourself. I thought Helen or Mira was with you. I want one of
-them to go on the lake with me.”
-
-“Tom, look at Mira,” the mother exclaimed. “She is quite grown up. I
-have never realized it till now. But before you call either of the
-girls, I want to talk to you about the society you young people have
-been organizing. The ideas are strange to me. When I was young, married
-women didn’t take positions. Is it possible that you cannot support your
-wife?”
-
-“Why, of course I could,” the young man replied; “but when you were
-young you had no Trusts to absorb your income as we have in this
-generation. Nellie and I are dedicating ourselves to this undertaking.
-We intend to work together to free ourselves and all who join us from
-their tyranny.”
-
-“It is quite an undertaking,” his mother replied. “I don’t see how you
-are going to succeed without capital. It takes so much money now to
-start anything to what it did when your father was young, and he
-inherited the property.”
-
-“The world hasn’t shrunk,” Tom replied, “since father’s time. The only
-difficulty is in our knowing how to meet the situation in a new way. The
-industry of the masses in every way, is how wealth has been collected,
-and the people are as willing to work now as they ever have been. But
-here is Mira.”
-
-“Will you take a row with me, Mira?” he asks as she approaches them. “I
-will tell you all about the society, mother, when we come back. I want
-to rest my brain for a while out on the water. You don’t mind, do you,
-mother?” he inquired.
-
-“Oh, no,” she replied; “there is time enough before you return to the
-city.”
-
-Mrs. Vivian, her eldest son Geron and his family, besides Mira, lived on
-the Vivian estate. The rest of the family had gone to the city to live,
-after their father died; as their wealth had decreased it was necessary.
-Tom was a lawyer; Libra had married a banker, and Scoris and Helen had
-employment. The next day the rest of the family arrived at the old
-homestead, for it was the mother’s birthday.
-
-The family dinner had been a success, and they had all assembled in the
-old-fashioned drawingroom for the evening. Old friends had been invited
-to meet the city members of the family, especially Tom, who at that time
-was making a change in the industrial life not well understood by his
-friends or some members of the family. The gentlemen in the party had
-grouped around Tom to hear about it, for it had been a surprise to them
-that he had set aside his profession to take up this new line of work,
-for he had been a successful lawyer for so young a man. In another
-corner of the room some of the ladies were discussing the fashions,
-while still another group had centered around Nellie, Tom’s bride.
-
-The room was long and this evening the music room doors had been thrown
-open on one side and the library opening into it also by large doors
-afforded an opportunity for each group to converse without interrupting
-the other. Mira had not been noticed when she and Jack Moberly (an old
-acquaintance) had passed out on the lawn. He had something to tell her,
-he whispered. He was going away nearly two thousand miles. An old uncle
-had offered him a position superior to anything he could ever expect if
-he stayed in Lake View. He wanted Mira to marry him and go, too.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-“I cannot leave you,” he said; and she in her inexperience thought she
-couldn’t live without him. They knew her mother would never give her
-consent, for she had been heard to say that if a child of hers married
-under age she would break the marriage. No one had objected to Jack, but
-none had suspected the true state of affairs between him and Mira. She
-was so young.
-
-They joined the rest of the family after a time and the evening passed,
-all having enjoyed the music and the singing, as well as the renewing of
-old friendships.
-
-No one imagined that this birthday would be a day to be remembered as
-the turning point in more lives than one among them, but it was.
-
-Libra, the eldest daughter, and her husband had returned to the city.
-Scoris and Helen, as well as Tom and Nellie, remained for a few days
-longer. The next morning Tom announced that he was going to take Nellie
-across the lake, and possibly they would go on farther and see some old
-friends, so would not be back until evening. The morning was bright and
-the water was as clear as crystal as they passed out from the small lake
-through the narrows into the larger body of water, then on to one of the
-small islands to the wonderful cave Tom had discovered when a boy. They
-had fastened the boat, climbed the steep hill and walked about half a
-mile through thickly grown shrubs, trees and brush, and over rocks;
-still no cave was in sight. Nellie looked at Tom inquiringly. She could
-see a high rock on one side with shrubs growing on its side in places,
-but no sign of an opening except almost at the top, but that was fully
-ten feet high.
-
-Pushing aside the brush with one hand and holding the overhanging limb
-of a large tree with the other, Tom said: “Now you follow me and I will
-show you my old hiding place.” They went down a narrow passage rather
-steep in places, but by hanging onto the roots of an old grape vine
-managed to keep their footing until they landed on solid rock. They
-walked a few feet, when, before them Nellie saw an opening about two and
-a half feet wide. Beyond she could see a large chamber, lighted by the
-opening she had seen on the outside. Part of the floor was flat and on
-one side of the wall it was broken, as if it had been cut out for use at
-some time, for it formed a seat and a table, or rather a shelf large
-enough to hold the basket of provisions they had brought. Several boxes
-were lying about, showing that it had been used at some time before. Tom
-selected a box for Nellie, seated himself on the rock, then exclaimed:
-“This is the place; what do you think of it?”
-
-“Think!” she exclaimed; “I haven’t got beyond wondering yet. And it was
-here you thought out all the plans for the society?”
-
-“Yes,” he answered; “after I had lived in the city and seen all the
-miseries the poor have to endure—the injustices.”
-
-“No, no, dear, don’t say it,” she interrupts him. “This is our resting
-time, and in such a place we are not going to spoil our holiday by even
-thinking of unpleasant things today. So you came here to be quiet and
-plan for the future?”
-
-“Yes, the most important rules were written on that table of stone.”
-
-“What a lovely memory so many of you have who were born and raised in
-the country,” she continued. “How little the city people know about its
-resources. Why, this cave would answer for a summer home. I wish it was
-earlier in the season. We could bring in branches of trees and cover
-them with pine needles for a bed, some bedding, rugs, etc., and what
-more could we wish for as a quiet place to rest in?”
-
-“Your enthusiasm would make up for deficiencies,” Tom answered. “While
-you arrange our lunch I will go to a spring for water, so we can make
-tea. Do you see the stove over there under that opening where the light
-comes from?”
-
-“I see a pile of stones,” she answered.
-
-“Oh, you poor, ignorant city girl,” he laughed, “not to recognize the
-camper’s most useful kitchen utensil.”
-
-While her husband was gone for water, Nellie looked around the cave,
-feeling the calmness of this God-made Temple. Only the twitter of birds,
-and the rustle of falling leaves could be heard. She arranged the table
-for their lunch, then waited till he came. Tom made the tea after he had
-boiled the water over the twigs he had gathered and burned in the stone
-stove. After lunch they strolled on through the woods, gathering
-flowers, while Tom showed her all the beauties of the place. Evening
-came before they realized it and as they ascended the hill on their
-return home after securing the boat, when out from the shadow of the
-trees they saw a calf tied to a tree.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-“Oh, Tom!” Nellie exclaimed, “look at that poor, helpless creature. It
-cannot even lie down. Who tied it like that?”
-
-“No one,” he replied. “Don’t you see it has wound itself up by twisting
-the rope about the tree as it ran around it.”
-
-“Such a look of resignation,” Nellie said. “It reminds me of the people
-in the cities. They, too, are tied by the rope that the trusts and
-custom have wound them up with.
-
-“They suffer and die without knowing how easy it is to—go back—just
-like—the calf. Oh!” she cried; “it will run over me. I didn’t know the
-rope was so long.”
-
-“Look out, or he will kick you before I can get hold of the rope. I had
-to drive him back the way he came, and I forgot that you didn’t know the
-ways of calves,” Tom said hurriedly, as he ran to secure it. She had
-moved far enough away to feel safe before she continued in the same
-train of thought.
-
-“It has trampled its food down as it ran around its shelter, besides
-amusing itself. Again that is like the majority of city people. The
-infants play with rattle boxes, but the grown children with politics and
-money. A shelter and food are gambled for until the age limit confronts
-them.”
-
-“There you are, old fellow,” Tom exclaims, not noticing Nellie’s reverie
-as he unties the rope. “Now, Nellie, you go on to the house, and tell
-them I am coming as hungry as a bear. I’ll give him a drink before he
-does the same thing over again.”
-
-Nellie started and was crossing the orchard when she saw a number of
-cows eating apples that had fallen on the ground. She thought of little
-children in the city who rarely tasted an apple and could be seen
-looking longingly at the street stands. The abundance of fruit
-everywhere on this large estate of several hundred acres was amazing to
-her, as she compared the need of these things in the cities. “Oh, what
-an unnecessary waste,” she thought. “It would have seemed incredible if
-I had been told it. Here are cows feeding upon the rarest varieties.”
-
-“Well,” exclaimed Mira, laughingly, as she appeared around the corner of
-an outbuilding, “are you trying to cheat the cows? We have been keeping
-dinner until I expect it is spoiled, waiting for you. Mother became
-uneasy and sent me to hurry you up.”
-
-As Tom overtook them he laughed also at seeing the fruit in Nellie’s
-arms. After dinner he took her to the cellar and showed her the great
-bins of apples without a flaw that were stored for winter, besides all
-the vegetables and all kinds of fruit; then they went to the parlor,
-where the rest of the family had assembled.
-
-A low fire burned in the grate to make the room cheerful as it had
-turned chilly.
-
-Scoris, the eldest unmarried sister, was trying to interest Geron’s wife
-in the society, but in spite of her own enthusiasm, Grace did not seem
-to respond. Just at this time Scoris found it hard to talk on any other
-subject for any length of time, it seemed so all-important to her.
-Helen, the other sister, and Nellie exchanged glances, both realizing
-that there was a prejudice against the society in the home circle they
-had not expected. Scoris, with Tom, had been the means of starting the
-society, which had grown so fast that Tom had finally sold out his law
-partnership so that he could devote his whole time to it. In the city
-almost every one responded that they had been able to reach, and here
-were their own relatives absolutely indifferent.
-
-Several times during the evening Nellie would ask questions about the
-abundance of things that were thrown away or given to the animals. Geron
-finally explained that all those things were of less value to them than
-the labor would amount to. “We live so far away from the cities that it
-doesn’t pay to ship them. Tom’s idea is the best, evidently, for he
-intends to bring the people to the farms where they can secure all the
-surplus. You will have your hands full, I can promise you. If I wasn’t
-so far away I would advise you to take my place; farming don’t pay any
-too well.”
-
-Tom answered: “You must remember I am not starting a farm, merely using
-the land to provide the necessities at first hand. The object of the
-society is to secure homes for its members, then food at first cost,
-while it aims to give them employment as nearly as possible according to
-their talents and the society’s needs. We take the farms to build our
-town because it has to be started under new conditions, for we must
-compete with the old money system for many years.”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER II.
-
-
-“Tom,” Geron said, after arising and moving around aimlessly, “you are
-going to waste your time. The trusts are too strong for any one man to
-undertake to down them.”
-
-Tom, who had been sitting with his chair tipped back, reached out to the
-table to balance himself before he answered, then he stood up,
-stretching out his arms and yawning, said, “I am not trying to down
-them. You remember the story of the lion and the mouse, don’t you,
-Geron?”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“Well, for the sake of the case at point, I will liken the masses to the
-lion; I will merely pose as the mouse, as it nibbled the cord that let
-the lion go free.”
-
-Just then Mrs. Vivian, who had been looking after the comfort of the
-room by poking at the fire in the grate, asked: “What lion are you
-talking about, Tom?” This caused all the family to roar with laughter.
-
-“He is trying to convince Geron that he is as harmless as a mouse,”
-Scoris replied.
-
-The two men left the room laughing, Geron saying that he was going out
-to smoke.
-
-Then Scoris explained it to her mother: “Geron thought that Tom was
-trying to break the trusts, and Tom took that way of explanation, for he
-is merely showing the people how to live independently of the trusts.”
-
-“Tom promised to explain to me what you are all doing in the society,
-but he has not had time yet,” the mother said. “I wish you would tell me
-something about it. Geron says it will fail, he knows it will.”
-
-“Well, it will not,” Nellie answered, her eyes flashing, as she changed
-her seat to get nearer to Mrs. Vivian, “Tom never fails.”
-
-“No,” Scoris exclaimed, she also resenting Geron’s idea; “and if he did,
-some one else would take it up! The people are ready now to free
-themselves from the trusts. They have only been waiting for a leader,
-and Tom is that man.”
-
-Nellie had arisen and was standing by Scoris. Helen raised her head, for
-she had been absorbed in a new poem, and Nellie’s voice had actually
-sounded sharp.
-
-Geron’s wife looked apologetic. She stood up, then sat down, not knowing
-exactly what was expected of her, for it looked for a second as if there
-was going to be a family dispute. Mrs. Vivian looked distressed until
-Scoris laughingly asked:
-
-“How much do you know about it, mother?”
-
-“Not much,” she answered; “only Geron says that each member pays only
-one dollar per year for membership, and that no society could be kept up
-on such a cheap basis; that Tom intends to build immense hotels and
-factories, and he can’t see where the money is coming from to do it
-all.”
-
-“Mother, dear,” Scoris answered, “you only know a very small part of it.
-The fee is small so as to reach the very poorest class. They can start
-as members on twenty-five cents per week, after the membership fee is
-paid, ’tis true, but it is not their money that we value, but their
-labor. They can become members by their labor alone. The poorest member
-must secure one share each year, which only amounts to twelve dollars.
-We have two hundred such members, but we have one hundred that are
-securing twelve shares yearly, besides two hundred more that are ranging
-from twenty shares each year to many thousands, invested already.
-Considering that the society is only one year old that is encouraging.
-The society also owns a number of automobiles that we have been using
-instead of cars. I am sure that don’t look like failure. We employ a
-large number of men to manufacture bricks, and what is more, they did it
-by hand labor, the old-fashioned way, using horses to turn the
-machinery. The men were those that had been crowded out of employment by
-the age limit. Two men, seeing the advantages of the society, advertised
-for such men, explained the advantages of the society to them, then
-secured the clay land suitable for bricks. The results are that there is
-enough to start the first apartment house in the spring. They have also
-made artificial stone to beautify the buildings. Another man has been
-burning lime stone on his own place. These are the principal building
-materials and they are either found already or will be by some member,
-for all are contributing either their labor or money to secure the
-success of the society. Mother, dear, you cannot imagine how many poor
-souls were glad to get the work to do, especially when they knew they
-were not expected to work more than six hours each day and that they
-were provided with shelter and food besides being able to save for the
-future. Some who had always been accustomed to digging and hard work
-will dig the foundations in the spring. Now this is the strange thing
-about it. The men who gave them the work did not have to pay them one
-dollar in money. They were only too glad to secure a permanent home for
-at least this winter. Every one of them has scrip and shares in the
-society as a result of their summer’s work.”
-
-“Well, that is a good thing for poor men, but how did the society get
-the benefit of those two men’s labor who superintended the work, as well
-as using their capital in paying the rent for the brick-clay land,
-buying horses, and feeding them as well as the men?” her mother asked.
-
-“The society bought the bricks from them, exchanging farm produce, and
-shares as well as scrip, in payment for two-thirds of their value. The
-balance was paid in money; don’t you see?”
-
-“Where did the society get the money?”
-
-“Why, it was taken out of the permanent shares. I forgot to tell you
-that we issue two kinds of shares. The ones of which all members have to
-secure at least one each year are the permanent ones. They are paid to
-the society in money or labor, and the money representing them can only
-be used for buildings or any kind of permanent wealth. These same men
-are going to set the workmen to putting up roughly made buildings on the
-farm we have secured, to store ice in for the summer, as well as a house
-for themselves to live in. They are not particular where they live, poor
-fellows, so long as it is a shelter and that their food is sure, as well
-as clothing. These two men I mentioned have secured materials from the
-wrecking companies in the city, for the buildings will be only temporary
-ones, boarded inside and out, and filled in between with sawdust.”
-
-While listening to Nellie’s account Mrs. Vivian had been anxious when
-Scoris began, but gradually relaxed as the explanation advanced. “How
-very simple after all,” she remarked. “It is like a broken stitch in a
-stocking. Stitch by stitch we draw the thread in and out until it is
-whole again!” But she started up, exclaiming, “Who is going to redeem
-the scrip?”
-
-“Tom is,” Nellie answered. “At present he has charge of all produce, and
-the different members are providing for all kind of exchanges.”
-
-“Well, girls,” their mother said, “don’t think me stupid for not
-understanding all about it, but how is Tom to derive an income from what
-he sells to the members and redeem the scrip besides?” Scoris and Nellie
-exchanged glances to see which would explain. Scoris motioned to Nellie
-to proceed, feeling that she knew more about it.
-
-“Our immediate income,” Nellie answered, “is from what Tom sells to the
-members, and we have five hundred members besides their families that
-consume food. Tom has been buying it from the farmers at wholesale and
-selling at retail. It has been enough to keep us so far, and we take
-charge of the first farm next week, so then we will be able to buy to
-better advantage and have no rent to pay besides, for the society
-provides that by the $1.00 membership fee. You see we have over five
-hundred members, and they represent that amount. You know Tom sold out
-his law partnership. Well, he has used the money to buy with. Besides
-vegetables and fruit, we have charge of the milk which he sells to the
-dealers, who allow the members a percentage on all they buy. The members
-bought our scrip, then Tom used the money to secure the milk; he then
-redeems the scrip as payment for the milk consumed.”
-
-“Well, I hope it will be a success,” Mrs. Vivian declared, with a sigh.
-
-“Why, it has already,” both the girls exclaimed together. “No one had
-ever imagined that it would succeed so soon. We all hoped it would in a
-few years, but it is growing so fast that it is taking nearly all of
-Tom’s time just to manage it. That is how I happened to become his
-secretary,” Nellie said.
-
-During the conversation some young people had called, and Mira had shown
-them into the library until her mother and sisters had finished their
-talk, then joined the rest. Jack Mobray was there and it was hard to
-remember afterwards how he and Mira could have had a chance to talk over
-their arrangements to leave the old home as they afterwards did, but
-when the young are in love they find a way.
-
-In a few days the two girls had returned to the city. Tom and Nellie to
-the farm that the society had secured to start the colony, and, as the
-mother had predicted, Mira left her also a few days afterwards, although
-she had never thought of her child marrying so young, nor did she
-suspect the attachment between them. She did think that Mira might wish
-to go to the city. The whole family had become restless as they grew up;
-even Geron had hinted that he was tired of living all his life on the
-estate.
-
-Tom and Nellie were settled in the farm house, for though it was in the
-fall of the year they had decided to take up their residence then so as
-to get ready for the spring building. Materials were being collected so
-as to cause no delay. The past year Tom had gone in different directions
-from the city looking the country over before this place had been
-selected. In this way it gave him an opportunity of locating just the
-kind of land needed for the many uses that would be required of it.
-
-A large lake was on one side with clear, cool water, an abundance of
-large trees on its edge, sufficient to make a pleasant place for a
-summer resort and yet not interfere with the farm. This lake was not
-very far from the farm buildings and was not on the road but partly on
-the next farm adjoining, with sufficient, however, on the society’s
-property to enable them to control or have the use of it.
-
-They had not intended to take up the land in the fall, but Tom had seen
-the advisability of securing it while it was in the market. The owner
-had died suddenly, leaving it to his widow, and she being anxious to go
-to the next town to her children who were married, it was arranged that
-the rent would not begin until the following spring. The house was not
-large or of much account, but it answered the purpose, and the land had
-been obtained cheaper on that account. It was the land and fruit that
-had first attracted Tom’s attention after he had proved the nature of
-the soil. He had secured a lease for ninety-nine years with the
-privilege of buying the whole of it at any time at a set price, of
-erecting any kind of buildings that the society might deem proper, the
-said buildings to belong to the society exclusively.
-
-They enjoyed their new home, these two enterprising people, because they
-liked to know that they were making a start for many hundreds, if not
-thousands, of others to live happily and contentedly in years to come.
-
-There, however, I will leave them for the present and go back to the
-beginning of the society before Tom’s marriage.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER III.
-
-
-The society met at first in the Vivian parlors, that is, in Tom’s flat,
-where Scoris and Helen, his sisters, assisted in entertaining their
-friends as well as helping to form the society. On the evenings of the
-society the rugs were taken up and all the furniture excepting one table
-and the chairs were stored in a smaller room. This was done to save
-expense, for it was not a money scheme, remember, and “infants creep
-before they walk.” In the same way the society wished to know how to
-keep on its feet when it got there.
-
-The new ways of earning a living were talked over at the meetings held
-in the Vivian parlors.
-
-“Automobiles are one of the first necessities in this society,” a Mr.
-Suegran declared one evening, and it caused such a roar of laughter that
-it was some time before he was allowed to explain his meaning. No one
-had taken him seriously, and when they saw that he was in earnest, they
-tried to hide their lack of interest by taking up a less important
-subject; and he, feeling rather crushed, let the matter drop. The next
-evening he called on the Vivians. Helen was the only one in. He said
-that he wished to see Mr. Vivian and would wait till he came in if he
-wouldn’t be intruding. Helen assured him that he was welcome and in a
-few moments the conversation turned to the usual topic, “The Colony.”
-
-“You know, Miss Helen,” he said, “I want to talk to your brother about
-the subject I mentioned last evening, I am sure that I am right,
-automobiles are the greatest necessity the society has at the present
-time!”
-
-“What about capital?” Helen asked. “Automobiles cost more than our
-society could afford at the present time.”
-
-“That is where I don’t agree with you,” he replied, “the society has men
-who work in automobile factories. They are willing to give a certain
-amount of their time evenings and on holidays to make one to start with,
-and we have a young man who has invented a new model that he is willing
-to have us use.” As he said this Tom came in and Mr. Suegran repeated
-the advantages he had told Helen about, then asked Tom if the society
-could supply the money to buy materials? Tom told him no, that according
-to the rules that had been made to protect the members’ wealth, the
-shares could only be invested in buildings, land, or anything that would
-yield an income, or in the implements of labor or in its products.
-
-“I can tell you what to do, though,” Tom continued. “You bring these
-facts before the meeting and I will see that you have a hearing. In the
-meantime go to any of the members that you think will help you out, tell
-them that I sent you; then you can form a company among you, each paying
-for shares representing the amount required, but remember the price of
-all materials, labor, and everything concerning the transaction must be
-kept on record. If you are successful, then the society will buy it from
-you and in all probability will start the men in business who gave their
-time. I have no right to risk any wealth intrusted in my keeping by the
-members, but they may risk any money they have to spare over and above
-what the society exacts, and you may promise them 10 per cent for the
-risk and we will pay you that amount on your time as well as your labor,
-and you know we pay union wages.”
-
-At the next meeting the subject of transportation was taken up and the
-members were shown the advantages to themselves in owning a system of
-traveling that would not necessitate the laying of tracks or limit them
-to any one street. Mr. Suegran then proposed his automobile scheme and
-asked the members to buy shares. In a few weeks the amount was vouched
-for. Mr. Suegran was required to give security as well as to keep an
-account of every item of expense. This was done not only to test the
-honesty of the men who were manufacturing the machine, but to protect
-the management against any unjust suspicion. There was another reason
-also and it was an important one. It was taxation. The society expected
-to pay all just taxes, but had no intention of paying for inflated
-stock. The officer in charge of that meeting explained to the members
-that the society was formed to protect its members’ wealth in every
-possible way and that in doing so it was necessary to guard the small
-items. “We all realize the importance of homes, and the most of you know
-that to secure them is not the whole difficulty overcome. We must have a
-way of getting to them. Automobiles solve that difficulty, especially
-when we own them. Then they can be used as soon as they are ready right
-here in the city to take the members to and from their employment. The
-society might as well have the benefit of fares and by providing our own
-conveyances the members may use the society’s scrip to pay them. For,
-remember, the more scrip the society can issue the sooner it can secure
-employment for its members. The automobiles once established as means of
-transportation will bring about the settlement on the land of those who
-would otherwise stay in the city for several years to come. As we cannot
-lease any land to build upon until we have enough members to represent
-the amount of rent that we will have to pay each year, we may as well
-devote ourselves to securing our transportation first.”
-
-The members who risked their money to perfect the first automobile were
-given a good percentage, and they either loaned it again for the same
-purpose or withdrew it for some other enterprise. These undertakings
-paid a large profit, but were not secured by the society and only those
-who could afford to risk losing in case of failure were allowed to
-invest. No money was lost, however, and the members who were natural
-speculators found in it an opening to increase their money faster than
-in shares, “for,” they argued, “we can buy extra shares with the
-interest so obtained.” At all times the value of numbers had to be kept
-in view, because every member added to the society increased its market.
-The society by its numbers secured a market for anything its members had
-to sell. The first automobile, being a success, was bought by the
-society, as were others made later, and when the land was secured a
-factory was built upon it to manufacture them as well as implements of
-labor.
-
-In this way the society gained control of the industry and kept the
-wealth so produced in trust for its members. After the factory was built
-on the land controlled by the society, the society took charge of it and
-paid the workmen the same price as the union paid for the same work. The
-advantage gained by living in the Colony decreased their expenses to
-such a degree that it was equal to double the amount of money in the
-city. Of course all had to agree to accept scrip or shares in payment
-for labor, but scrip bought everything, even money, so was just as good
-and safer.
-
-The president was appointed for five years with this proviso: That he
-proved himself capable of directing the affairs of the Colony in a
-satisfactory manner to at least three-fourths of the members; that he
-had the ability to manage so as to ensure the returns from the money or
-labor invested that the society guaranteed to its members; that he was
-working for the advantage of the largest number instead of a privileged
-few; that he was keeping all revenue on record as well as expenditure,
-so that the members could at any time have the accounts audited; that
-his security was increased as the wealth of the Colony advanced, so that
-he could not endanger the members’ shares as so many people have done;
-that when the temptation became too strong (from the members’
-indifference or overconfidence) he could not if he would “feather his
-own nest” by neglecting the members’ interests.
-
-Tom Vivian made these rules, not to protect the members against himself,
-but all members in all societies that were formed later. He saw the
-temptations that inexperienced members left in his hands, and he knew
-that riches harden the majority of people’s minds, so he intended to
-protect them in every possible way that he could think of.
-
-A president had to be an honorable member of society, and not addicted
-to any habits that would bring disgrace upon said society. He had to be
-honest and truthful in his dealings. He had to live in the Colony that
-he was overseeing and give his undivided attention to its interests
-(except in its beginning when he had to provide for his living as well),
-attending to the society’s business transactions, etc. The president had
-to be free from all burdens that would interfere with his giving his
-whole attention to the society except as stated in the first year or
-two, or as long as it took him to place it on a paying basis.
-
-The president being organizer as well as manager of the society was
-allowed a percentage of shares instead of a salary. The members
-realizing that he had devoted several years of his time and energy to
-the cause, presented them to him when the first farm was secured. He,
-realizing that he had to be self-sustaining at first when he took up his
-duties on the farm, purchased enough cows to supply the members with
-milk and butter. He also bought poultry (particularly hens), as milk and
-eggs were always in demand, they helped to secure him an income. He was
-also given the benefit of all the garden truck he produced the first two
-years, the members being allowed 10 per cent on anything they bought
-from the society. He also received a percentage on each member that was
-enrolled on the day the society was organized.
-
-This percentage was one dollar per member, but was not paid in coin but
-was allowed him on the purchase of permanent shares. In paying for labor
-on his personal account he could sell these shares, excepting the amount
-the society compelled him as well as all other members to keep in the
-society.
-
-He could issue scrip with the consent of the members to the amount of
-his personal wealth or security.
-
-The third year the society was able to buy out both the hennery and
-dairy, for they were in a position then to give him a percentage of all
-its business transactions. Several farms had to be secured at this time
-for pasture lands, and a separate place for the hennery. The president
-secured a large number of shares by the transaction, but he could not
-exact money. His shares secured him a suite of rooms in an apartment
-house, then the percentage he received on all the business he managed
-for the society secured him a better income.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER IV.
-
-
-There is a direct law of attraction that very few people recognize. In
-the beginning of the society, if Tom Vivian had been told that he would
-marry soon, he would have scorned the idea. “I am devoted to the cause
-of the people,” he would have told you, “and I have no time to devote to
-love affairs,” and yet he was the first to succumb. Nellie Gaylord was a
-friend of Scoris Vivian, and when the society was started she took an
-active interest in it. It was soon seen that Tom Vivian referred oftener
-to Nellie’s opinion than he did to others in cases of importance, until
-he believed that she was necessary to the success of the society. That
-he was in love no one doubted, and it was a satisfaction to many members
-when they were able to say: “Didn’t I tell you so? Oh, you can’t fool
-me.”
-
-Nellie’s life had been a sad one in some respects before she became
-identified with the society, then everything changed for the better. She
-had some one to love, honor, yes, almost worship, in Tom Vivian. I am
-going back in her life, though, to the time when she was earning her
-living before she was married. She had been a stenographer and when her
-eyesight troubled her she found that she would have to take employment
-in something that would require less application. At this time she was
-in a factory where she was head forewoman over a large number of girls,
-all running power sewing machines, making ladies’ underwear. Her duty
-was to inspect the work and see that no one wasted time. She sometimes
-regretted that she had to work among a class who never seemed to think
-of anything beyond pay-day or “their fellows,” as they expressed it. The
-idea of bettering their condition never seemed to enter their mind
-unless it was perhaps some day to marry a rich man like some other girl
-they had heard of. To marry one day was fully expected, but pay-day
-generally outweighed all other considerations. Today, however, she was
-thinking of herself as this was her twentieth birthday and it brought up
-the sad memories of a time when her mother used to remember it by some
-little gift, or her father would arrange to take her to some amusement
-in honor of the occasion. Now both had gone from her and she was among a
-lot of girls to whom she thought she couldn’t possibly talk of the
-things that interested her most. She looked up presently and saw two
-girls holding out a silk waist for the admiration of their friends. “I
-am thirty-six bust measure and will try it on if you like,” she said, as
-they were looking at her after asking who was that measurement.
-
-“Oh, what a pretty waist; whose is it?” she asked. Their mother’s
-birthday present, they told her, which would be next day and the mother
-would never suspect they had walked to and from work every day for two
-months to save car fare, and had done without fruit or cake for their
-lunch, just to be able to make it their own present. “For you see we
-give her all we earn and it is all we three have to live upon, and she
-makes it spin out someway by earning a little, sewing when she can get
-it to do, but she does our sewing and washing and takes care of the
-home, so this is something she will prize, and we are so glad we could
-get it in time,” they explained.
-
-“Well, girls, you are lucky to have a mother, and your mother is to be
-congratulated for having two such self-denying daughters. I lost my
-mother just two years ago and this is my birthday.” One of the girls
-took her hand and held it lovingly, while both remarked how nice she
-looked in the waist and hoped their mother would look as well.
-
-[Illustration: Mary Smith, the only support of the family.]
-
-This little incident, born of sympathy, the touch of the hand, the
-kindness to the mother, spoke volumes to Nellie, and she and the sisters
-became friends. She had felt alone when she first came into the factory.
-When one spends long, weary hours with people who have different ideas,
-life is more lonely than if one were in a solitary place.
-
-She had been considered reserved, or “proud,” as some had called her,
-but her quiet, firm manner had been her main recommendation to the head
-of the firm. She acquired a great liking for many of the girls, however,
-as their little difficulties came under her notice. Their hardships with
-poverty, although never called by that name, were borne so bravely. The
-insults they endured from girls employed in offices or stores on their
-way home at night, the sneers and the drawing of their clothes aside for
-the fear of coming in contact was enough to make them feel inferior,
-even though they were not. To Nellie this was abominable, for labor is
-labor, in the banking house, store or factory, in the home, or anywhere,
-and should be respected.
-
-One day a little cash girl had been hurt by a street car. The newspapers
-told how this little child of eleven years was the only member of a
-family of four who was earning anything, and all she got was two dollars
-a week; how she lived two miles from her work and had to walk each way,
-then run from eight in the morning until six at night.
-
-When one evening while returning home the accident occurred. It was
-pitiful to hear her cry after her ankle had been attended to, for the
-pain was not the worst part of her trouble. Oh! if she should lose her
-employment, what would they do at home? she cried. Baby Bob couldn’t
-have his milk. Why, they couldn’t have any food at all. Her anxiety
-about the money touched the girls’ sympathy who were taking her home.
-They had carried her to the car and were trying to comfort her.
-
-The girls found an old frame building that had been abandoned as unsafe,
-propped up to keep it from falling. There were no lights and voices were
-heard asking what had happened. They got her to bed, still in the dark,
-and no one offered to help. Through sobs that shook the whole building,
-the mother explained that she couldn’t move because of rheumatism. The
-father was also too weak to do anything and the baby cried because Mary
-and his mother were crying. The girls went home for their mother and a
-light and when they returned saw the most pitiful sight they had ever
-seen. Four helpless people, and not enough food in the house to satisfy
-the hunger of one.
-
-The Healey girls did not forget little Mary Smith, the cash girl, but
-said nothing at the time in the factory. Every few days they went to see
-that she was not in need and did all they could for the family. Mrs.
-Healey soon drew the story of their wretched life from them, and their
-gratitude to her and her daughters was the opening of a friendship that
-only those who have gone through such misery can realize its strength.
-
-John Smith, the father, had been a builder and carpenter, and though he
-was a first-class workman and his labor had helped to build some of the
-best homes in the city, yet he had only a condemned shell to die in, for
-dying he was, from the effects of poverty, sickness and inability to get
-work. This last stroke of misfortune, Mary becoming helpless, at least
-for a time, was too much for his shattered nerves and two days
-afterwards he died. The shock had been so great that both mother and
-child were stunned as well as helpless. They had one comfort, he at
-least had not been separated from them, which had been his greatest
-fear. Many times he had laid on his bed, unable to escape the cold winds
-that blew through cracks in the wall or the rain that fell through the
-roof. There was no comfort for him unless it was being with his loved
-ones and they knew if the authorities discovered his condition, he would
-be taken away and possibly they would never see each other again.
-
-Before coming to this place, the Smiths had been unable to pay their
-rent, the husband had been ill for more than a year; so one day feeling
-better than usual, had gone for a walk. When he returned, he found all
-their possessions on the sidewalk, the door shut against them and
-nowhere to go. His wife was away washing. He saw the things they
-treasured scattered around at the mercy of any one and was too weak to
-gather them up. All he could do was to watch them until some kindly
-neighbors came and moved them to this old ramshackle place.
-
-When Mary came home at night, weary, footsore and worn out, there was no
-warm supper to cheer her, not even a shelter, and it was some time
-before she found her parents and Bob. Poor little soul, she had been
-forgotten in the efforts of getting the household goods under cover
-before night. All events till now were dated back to this last
-degradation. The mother had become unable to work since then, and now
-even Mary was helpless. What would they do? It was a trial an older
-person might find hard to bear, but a child of eleven years looked upon
-it in desperation.
-
-“Surely there must be something wrong with our whole social structure,”
-Nellie had thought when the girls told her the next day. “What can we do
-to help in such cases? Simply nothing. We have all we can do to earn
-enough to exist ourselves.”
-
-Fortunately the city sent help, and as the girls talked it over in the
-large work room, it was rather interesting to hear the old wornout ideas
-get their quietus as a quiet, pale-faced girl sitting in a corner by
-herself remarked, “But this was not a case of drinking or laziness, but
-misfortune caused from ignorant management in the affairs of our city
-and we may say, in our country itself. Employment should be provided for
-all, then such things wouldn’t occur.”
-
-“Well,” one of the girls said, “we never receive charity and I don’t
-believe any one needs to become so poor as to need help from the city.”
-
-“I don’t see why they shouldn’t,” the pale-faced girl continued, “when
-they are the ones who contribute all their labor to provide, not only
-for themselves, but their employer besides, and make it possible for the
-city to have a fund for that purpose.”
-
-This caused a general roar of laughter from most of the girls. The bell
-rang. Work began and was continued for the rest of the day, but the next
-day some one of the girls asked her what she meant, and Nellie, seeing
-them a little excited, joined them also. Then she said that Annie, which
-was the girl’s name, was right.
-
-“We are all employed by Mr. Forbes. He pays us so much for our labor or
-time. Well, he has to have a large profit, or it wouldn’t pay him to
-hire us. Out of our labors, he has to pay rent, support his family and
-see that he gets sufficient interest on his capital. All this comes out
-of our labor. He merely manages the buying and selling and it does not
-end here; his landlord has to have the rent to pay taxes and receive his
-living. That is what Annie meant. Who do you think is most dependent,
-Mr. Forbes, or us?”
-
-“Why, we are,” they all exclaimed.
-
-“No, you are wrong. We could take our sewing machines at home and earn
-just as much as we do here, if the market was assured us. He could not
-earn single-handed what we earn for him, we three hundred girls, don’t
-you see? Now in this case you have been so interested in, that man has
-built a large number of homes right here in this city and yet he was
-unable to even have the use of one to die in, let alone to live in.
-Girls, I belong to a society that some time I would like you to visit.
-It would help you to solve some of the problems of life, that no one has
-a right in these days to shirk, for it is our industry and every other
-working person’s that keeps the machinery running, not only of the
-factories, but of the cities.”
-
-“Then we sent money and provisions to keep that family from starving,”
-one of the girls remarked, “even though we did it unconsciously.”
-
-“Yes, all who work do their share towards paying the taxes and when the
-society called ‘The Wealth Producing and Distributing Society’ is
-stronger and been in operation twenty or fifty years, we will cease to
-have human beings living at the mercy of so-called charitable
-institutions, poorhouses, or, worse still, starving to death, as they
-are at the present time. There is another thing, girls, that I want to
-tell you; whenever you are called ‘factory girls,’ as you are so often
-by shop girls, just keep a dignified silence. Your labor is just as
-necessary as theirs and if you only considered it a little, you are of
-as much importance also. Every intelligent person should honor his own
-industry and remember that he is fulfilling his mission in life, and if
-all did so, heartaches would cease. Any bright person would do the best
-he could under existing circumstances and would even raise conditions
-which he considered beneath his dignity to his own level, as you may
-learn if you join our society. Respect yourselves and address each other
-as you do Mr. Forbes. Learn to appreciate yourselves, your advantages,
-and then create new opportunities as your ability points out the way.
-All useful employment is honorable, and now is the time to raise labor
-to its proper dignity among all honorable people.”
-
-Many of those girls not only attended the meetings, but joined the
-society. Even Mr. Forbes, who owned the business, saw that he could do
-better by becoming one of them, so he became a member and eventually
-moved out to the Colony.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER V.
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-Nellie stood looking out of the window one morning early in the spring,
-and as she hummed a merry tune and was so bright and happy, she seemed
-to reflect the brightness in everything about her. The sunshine smiled
-and the very trees breathed contentment. This was her first spring in
-the country and the arrangements for the coming colony were bringing
-some funny experiences. A large number were there already and each day
-more were applying or inquiring about the resources before venturing,
-questions would come up and have to be answered until Nellie said she
-could fairly sing the answers, for they had told so many the same thing.
-She laughed aloud finally and Tom, who was reading, looked up and said,
-“What is it?” “Oh, I was thinking of the men who were here yesterday,
-and do you know, Tom, most of them had the same helpless expression as
-the calf you liberated last fall. Do you remember how helpless and
-perplexed it looked? You unwound the cord for the calf, and now you have
-some cords to unwind in dealing with these people, for they need their
-freedom as much as the calf, but don’t see how to go about it.
-
-“Ideas and actual demonstrations are necessary to teach most of them. It
-seems so simple to us who have studied the situation from every
-standpoint, and when one of them asked you how you are going to collect
-the rest of the materials for building without money, he looked so wise
-in his own conceit and convinced that he had you in a corner, I noticed
-he winked at the rest. I had to leave the room, for I knew I would laugh
-aloud if you ever tried to show him up in his ignorance. He certainly
-did deserve it. Every one of them were from ten to twenty years older
-than you are. All had a trade or some means of earning a living, yet had
-to appeal to you to explain every working plan separately.”
-
-Tom replied: “I told them that as members they would not only receive
-their wages at the time, but have an interest in the permanent buildings
-and improvements. That instead of a capitalist owning the property the
-different labors each produced, the society got it and kept it in trust
-for those who earned it.
-
-“It was hard to make them comprehend that it was a Wealth Producing and
-a Wealth Distributing Society, giving to all industrious people an
-opportunity to secure for themselves the full value of their industry,
-and explained that all buildings represent permanent wealth and so did
-fruit trees. The trees remaining but the fruit was consumed; that when
-we give up the tree, we have no right to the fruit.
-
-“I further explained that as members of our society they had an interest
-in all the wealth created, whether it was fruit trees or buildings; that
-fruit would pay for any necessary article or food needed. I tried to
-make them see that it was just as good as money to them and represented
-a part of their wealth. I succeeded at last in making them see that when
-they worked for the society, they received their wages the same as when
-they worked for an outsider, with this difference, they still retained
-an interest, for the buildings represented the value of their shares in
-the society, and that the materials they spoke of were produced in the
-same way. I told them we were already making bricks and producing lime
-and also had a sand suitable for mortar, which were brought within the
-control of the society by the industry and perseverance of individual
-members, who over and above actual necessities were leaving all they
-produced with the society, for knowing it was safe and that their labor
-was as valuable to the society as money it could be entered in the books
-to their credit; that we kept an account of their labor as the banks do
-of money. Before another year, I told them, we expected to control a
-lumber district and saw mill, for all classes were awakening to the
-necessity of protecting themselves and their own labor, which is wealth,
-and they never could do so under any other system, and all other
-exchanges were meeting us half way at least.
-
-“The wealth each member creates belongs to him or her individually and
-by the society’s holding its value would be increased to a greater
-extent than if held separately. As the society increased in numbers and
-resources the necessity of money would decrease. When I made this
-explanation one of the men wanted to know if they did our building what
-they were going to do for cash with which to support their families. I
-told them they could come out here and live, if they had to pay rent in
-the city, for we allowed them to build tent houses to live in during the
-summer, or until the permanent brick ones were built, or until they
-owned shares enough in the society to entitle them to live in the
-apartment we were building. I tried to make them see that the economy
-they could practice would be more to them than big pay in the city. A
-little inconvenience at first and patience would place them on their
-feet in a short time and their homes would be secured with almost no
-expense. Being able to buy food where it is grown, cuts down expenses to
-a very small amount comparatively. When I told them this, one of them
-acknowledged that he could see that they would have less expense, but
-that they would still have need of money. ‘You bind us to take all we
-earn in scrip or shares for our labor?’ one of them asked of me.
-‘Certainly,’ I said, ‘that is the protection of the society.’ But I told
-them they could buy money with their scrip. ‘Oh,’ they cried, ‘it is
-money that we want.’ ‘All right,’ I said, ‘if we are in need of you, we
-will send for you, but I don’t wish to raise your hopes, for we have so
-many among our members who want something more substantial than money.
-You can’t eat money,’ I continued, ‘but you need a home and clothing.’ I
-tried to make them see that our members, according to our rules, come
-first, and that the society wanted men and women to create wealth and
-those who knew enough to keep it for themselves instead of giving it to
-the capitalists. The society was formed for the concentration of the
-wealth produced by the industrious and for the purpose of bringing it to
-one center; then all can have the comforts of the public buildings,
-etc., at less expense than their earnings would eventually secure them a
-pension in their old age. I pointed out to them the tent houses and told
-them that some of these people own enough shares even now to live in the
-first apartment houses that are built, but they intend living as they
-are during the summer so that they can save for their temporary shares.
-This was a surprise to them all, and one of them said, ‘Well, I would
-have enough to keep me for life, if I had not been unfortunate.’ Then he
-told us how one day he had lost every dollar. ‘I was taking the money to
-the bank,’ he said, ‘and stopped in several places on my way and when I
-reached the bank, it was gone. It represented the savings of all my
-life. I had just gotten it in one lump, and intended investing it again
-in another mortgage. When I found it was gone, I was nearly crazy, I
-admit. Now you see I need money, not scrip.’ Then I asked if he was sure
-he needed the money most, and told him about the member who had lost his
-all last fall. You remember, Nellie, the one who had saved right from
-the beginning to the society, the one who preferred scrip to shares, and
-only left with us sufficient to secure the right to vote. He liked the
-scrip best because it could be drawn out like money and he could always
-get money for it. Well, when he was done working for us he obtained
-other employment at good pay and saved it. He had so few expenses while
-with us he had saved the most of his scrip to buy food direct from the
-society and also clothing from our members who could use it in return
-for their food stuffs. In this way, he had more than half used up the
-scrip. You remember, Nellie, when the treasury bank failed all the money
-he had saved was in it and he had lost it. He took all the scrip that
-was left and went flying around to different members to get it cashed so
-he could pay his rent and have car fare until his salary was due. Well,
-he was a nervous sort of a fellow, and by some unlucky chance he lost
-it, then came to our secretary like a madman to prevent any one else
-from using it. Immediately all members were notified that the scrip of
-certain numbers was lost and were forbidden to use it until it was
-returned to the owner. It was found, but the money he had in the bank
-that he prized so much more, he will never receive. Had he used it to
-buy shares in the society, he could never have lost it. I explained to
-them that we had no debts or mortgages, and if any one tried to use
-scrip that did not belong to them, they could be very easily detected,
-and now the man who lost his money goes to the other extreme and changes
-all his money into scrip or shares to make sure that it is safe. And it
-is safe, for we are represented by thousands already who are
-accumulating wealth and bringing it to this center city we are building
-and it is to be invested in factories, warehouses, dwellings, etc.,
-where the earnings of the members can be saved for their own use.”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VI.
-
-
-“The society receives the profit over and above the expenses incurred
-for buildings, improvements, street pavements, etc., or any necessary
-expenses that are required for the convenience of the colony. Out of all
-the profits so obtained, there is still a balance that is used to
-increase the standing wealth of the society. Then I told them to look
-around and see the buildings in the cities and to realize if they could
-how few are owned by those who built them. The society not only secures
-to every member a profit on his earnings, but the net earnings of the
-society as a whole. When a man plants fruit trees and is paid for his
-labor his individual claim is satisfied, but the society owns the fruit
-each year, and the same applies to their labor in the building. The
-society will exact rent from the builder, if he should occupy the
-building until he owns sufficient shares to represent his right to
-occupy the house, and the man who plants the fruit trees belonging to
-the society will have to pay for the fruit of those same trees, if he
-eats it.
-
-“Then I explained that the society must own everything and govern its
-own interests, and when they realized its strength, they were sure to
-desire its protection, for each individual is a part of the whole. The
-buildings alone are a sufficient guarantee. You have direct returns for
-any amount you leave with the society, no matter how large or small, I
-told them, and those advantages are not given in any other society.
-There is no bank to fail here. I said, ‘My friends, money is not wealth,
-for money scatters your wealth in most instances and gives it to others.
-You need your labor, which is really your wealth, protected, and that is
-what we are doing.’ Then I asked, ‘Do you still want money for your
-labor?’ The only one who answered said, ‘I don’t know. You have a good
-theory, but—’
-
-“At this point, an old member came in to see the treasurer and naturally
-the attention of all turned to him, for he had his hands full of scrip
-that he wanted to exchange for money. The men listening to the
-transaction were amazed at the large amount the roll of scrip
-represented. ‘Oh,’ said one of them, ‘then you do use money. I thought
-you only used them homemade tickets and that they were no better than
-milk tickets.’ ‘Neither are they,’ I said, ‘nor are they any better than
-railroad tickets. We use our “tickets,” as you call them, to protect our
-interests; the railroads do the same. If every one paid the conductors
-the companies would often be robbed (except with five cent fares.) Those
-large combinations study economy in every way and so do we. In signing
-our agreements to pay for your labor in scrip or shares we do it to
-protect the society, but very often we haven’t as much scrip as we have
-money, so we do pay a portion in money at such times. Then of course we
-know at the present time, you need it for some things that we cannot
-supply, so we usually pay you a percentage in coin. We cannot even issue
-scrip until we have its worth, either in product or some wealth that
-would redeem it. This is where your labor is valuable to us all and
-scrip becomes a medium of exchange and is safer than money, for it
-cannot be lost as money can, but each year our standing wealth will
-increase and of course every season will find us in a position to issue
-that much more scrip as well as shares. That is the way millionaires
-were produced. It was the labor of the people. They banked their money,
-the banks loaned it to the rich and in turn they became millionaires by
-speculating with it. We have no right to their wealth now, though, for
-we gave it to them. Now we are producing for ourselves and intend to
-keep these millions for our own necessities.’
-
-“If we didn’t have the land to build upon or produce building materials,
-or grow our food, we couldn’t issue scrip as we do now. It is from the
-ground that our wealth comes, but labor is required to produce it. After
-we had first secured the land we were ready to bring those here who
-could work upon it and those who were capable of making good roads. The
-Government granted us such a small sum in comparison to what we needed
-that of course the real laborers came first. Now we need you builders.”
-
-“Well, what have they done about it?” Nellie asked.
-
-“As they realize it is about the only way they can live, now that trusts
-and combinations are hedging them in on all sides and strikes are only
-bringing them poverty in the long run, the most of them have arranged to
-come. Some have actually signed to do portions of the mason work, and I
-expect we will be getting the buildings erected immediately.”
-
-“Did you read those letters, Nellie?” Tom asked.
-
-“No. What are they about?” she inquired.
-
-“A number of old people have applied to be taken in the society and
-while most of them have enough to pay for the permanent shares entitling
-them to live here, many have not enough to pay for their consumable
-shares; they are able to do a certain amount of work; but they want the
-protection of the society. Others again wish to place their savings in
-the society and live where they are with their relatives until the
-amount required is decided upon. Of course we cannot tell to a certainty
-how much will be needed to keep one person. Their ideas are so varied,
-but after they have secured their permanent shares that entitle them to
-one room, then we can place to their credit what is left and give them
-employment so they can earn sufficient to make up the balance on their
-consumable shares. They will have to judge for themselves as to the
-amount they will require. This they can do after living here for at
-least a year, for in that time they can calculate from what it has cost
-them in that time to buy food or other necessities.
-
-“Here is a very pathetic letter:
-
-“‘Mr. Vivian.
-
-“‘Dear Sir:—My wife and I are alone. Our children are dead and now that
-we are old, we feel the noises, heat and other discomforts in the city
-more every year. The intense cold this last winter has been terrible and
-we want to get to the country where we can have the necessary comforts
-within our means. We have been investigating your society and want to
-join if our means are sufficient to buy the permanent shares that will
-give us two rooms.
-
-“‘We have been trying to get in several places, but in every one we
-would be separated. We have only five hundred dollars between us in
-cash, but I am still able to work, if you think you can find something
-we can do to make up the balance that we will require for our consumable
-shares, as you call them.
-
-“‘If you can help us to be together for the rest of our lives we will be
-very thankful to you. Yours truly,
-
-“‘JOHN G. SMITH.’
-
-“Here is a portion his wife has written separately, as a postscript to
-his letter:
-
-“‘I am as able to work as he and if we could have a little garden and be
-allowed to keep chickens and a goat, to supply us with milk, we would
-not be a burden to any one.
-
-“‘We both lived in the country in our early life and know how to work
-and would be willing to do anything to help, we are so anxious to be
-together while we live.
-
-“‘MARY SMITH.’”
-
-“Well, Tom, I really think we will have to do something to meet these
-cases. I have heard that the usual amount for people over sixty years of
-age is about $300 each and is kept up by charitable societies. Of course
-this not being a charitable affair, it must be not only self-sustaining,
-but self-respecting as well.”
-
-“Well,” replied Tom, “we could place a certain sum of money as the
-lowest amount that we could accept, and in that way we could reach a
-large number. The ready money just now would be sufficient to secure
-them a home together and would be a benefit to the society. As they are
-able to work we will not be running a risk. We will bring it before the
-board at our next meeting and hear what they think about it.”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VII.
-
-
-After Scoris and Helen Vivian had returned to the city they were amazed
-one morning by a letter from their mother, telling them that Mira and
-Jack Moberly had married and left Lake View, having gone to his uncle
-somewhere in the far West. Not long afterwards another letter came from
-Geron, saying that their mother was terribly grieved about Mira and
-asking them if they remembered to what city Jack had said that he was
-going, for they had tried in every way to find out something about them.
-
-Neither of them could remember, so they wrote to their mother in
-sympathy, telling her that they would do all they could to find out
-about her. Their lives were busy ones, so the time passed quickly.
-Scoris was an artist, employed by an illustrating firm, and Helen had a
-position in a large department store. They still lived in the flat they
-had shared with Tom before his marriage, and were giving all the time
-they could spare from their employment to the society in the city. The
-winter had passed, Mira had written to her mother, asking forgiveness,
-and the depression on her account had ceased, for she had declared that
-she was happy.
-
-“Well,” Helen remarked one evening, as she and her sister were dressing,
-“who would have imagined one year ago that we would be benefiting from
-the society’s industry as soon as this? Do you know, Scoris Vivian, that
-I used to be actually envious of any one who could ride around leisurely
-in automobiles?”
-
-“Well, I think if we are to be ready in time for our ride you had better
-finish lacing that shoe,” Scoris replied. “Do you know that it is only
-half done?” Helen looked down in surprise, smiled and gave her hair
-another twist, puffed it out here and there, secured it with hairpins,
-then sat down leisurely and finished tying her shoe.
-
-Scoris watched her as she started to draw on her gloves.
-
-“Oh, wait till you fasten my waist,” Helen said, backing up to her. “I
-never can do it alone.”
-
-While Scoris fastened it, Helen said to her: “How quickly you dress. I
-don’t see how you do it.”
-
-“As I am older than you,” Scoris said, “I suppose I have learned a few
-things by experience, and one thing I am persistent in, and that is to
-have my waists fastened in front so I can be independent of every one
-else. But there they come. Four have passed and are lining up farther
-down the street. Yes, there is Paul and his sister in a two-seated one.
-Don’t take time to look, Helen, just hurry.”
-
-“Oh! Scoris, please get my veil and gloves while I pin my hat on.”
-
-“There they are; tie your veil and come. I will let them see that we
-know that they are here,” Scoris said, as she goes to the door.
-
-“Now come along, you will do, Helen dear; we must not keep them
-waiting.”
-
-The girls appeared amid smiles of anticipation, while Paul Arling
-assisted them into the automobile.
-
-As they followed the crowd of automobilists winding in and out of the
-streets, then out to the country on their way to the Colony, I will tell
-you something about Paul Arling, for he is one of the members and an
-interesting one. He first became acquainted with Scoris in the
-illustrating firm where they were both employed, and when the society
-was first formed in the Vivian parlors she asked him to attend the
-meetings. He did so and soon became an interested and enthusiastic
-worker. He had supported his widowed mother and young sisters for
-several years. Now all were doing for themselves but his mother, and the
-interesting thing about him was his devotion to her. It brought out his
-sterling worth because he made duty a pleasure to himself as well as to
-her. This evening Scoris took her seat beside him while Helen sat in the
-one behind with his sister. It was her first automobile trip in company
-with a party going to the Colony and she was elated. Presently she
-remarked:
-
-[Illustration]
-
-“How quickly ideas are taken up.”
-
-“Yes,” he answered understanding her, “why wouldn’t they be when our
-profits and pleasures are combined? These conveyances being owned by the
-society, it gets the profit, enriching the members by increasing the
-value of their shares. The trusts have been great educators, the more
-they have crowded us the quicker we have learned to protect ourselves.”
-
-“Yes,” Scoris replied, “and it has brought out many a hidden talent just
-by giving it an opportunity to unfold. Ideas are like seeds planted in
-the ground—they must have a chance to bloom or they are no better than a
-weed. No one will know the difference.”
-
-Helen called from the back: “What are you two moralizing about? I do
-believe you two have forgotten how to enjoy yourselves.”
-
-“Oh, no!” Scoris answered. “I am just learning how to appreciate a new
-way.” Mr. Arling smiled at Helen and the conversation became general.
-
-“Scoris said they had missed the drives around the country so much since
-they had been in the city,” Miss Arling remarked in a resigned way. “We
-have never known the pleasure before. The street cars have been our
-carriages principally. Don’t you think, Paul, that you are going too
-fast?”
-
-“Why, no; all the rest are ahead of us; does it frighten you? We will go
-slower if you are uneasy.”
-
-“Just a little,” she gasped. “I suppose I will get used to the speed in
-time. Oh, look at those trees! How beautiful they are,” she exclaimed,
-as the machine entered a thickly wooded road.
-
-“The country is always beautiful in June,” Scoris said, “for its young
-leaves are so fresh and bright, and automobiling is so exhilarating;
-this is the loveliest ride I have had in years.”
-
-Mr. Arling looked gratified, and while the veils streamed out behind and
-the girls hung on to their hats, they flew on until they reached the
-rest of the party and in a short time the Colony also.
-
-It was a lovely evening during the latter part of June. Tom and Nellie
-had moved into a tent for the summer, as the farm house had been needed
-for an office.
-
-Their city acquaintances were very curious to see everything and were
-surprised at the comforts to be had under the circumstances.
-
-The apartment houses were only partly built and some of the factories
-were actually running, so it was a small town of tents and makeshifts
-until their permanent homes were ready.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-All were glad to see their friends. They were to form a boating party,
-and before starting to the lake, Paul Arling said to Tom Vivian: “I want
-to secure four more shares for my mother. You see, we came out here on
-business as well as pleasure. I want permanent shares and I came direct
-to you, for I want them to secure the five-year interest, for in that
-time I hope to have secured her pension as well as her apartments, so
-that she may feel safe for life. It is better than an insurance policy,
-for nothing can be lost here, and in case of my death she is not
-competent to invest money left in that way. Besides, if I survive her,
-which I will in all probability, I will have the benefit of the
-permanent shares. There is a young millionaire in our crowd to-night,
-did you know, Vivian? He seems to be interested in some of the ventures
-that have been taken in starting the factories. I don’t suppose he will
-invest in them. He never earned a dollar in his life, knows nothing
-about the distress of the struggling classes, just has some friends who
-are members; that is how he happened to come. He wanted to know why we
-started before we had more capital. I told him five hundred members now
-constituted a market, for all farm produce to commence with, made the
-transaction a good and sufficient reason for securing a farm. A second
-reason, that being near the city the president secured work for the
-unemployed. The society having secured transportation by manufacturing
-enough automobiles during the first summer that the society was forming
-to take the toilers to the land independent of the railroads, was the
-means of starting enough laborers to grow the food and dig the
-foundations of the buildings. Many people said at the time, ‘But how can
-you find enough land near the city to make it pay?’ he asked.
-
-“‘Our owning automobiles solved that difficulty,’ I told him, ‘as long
-as we had land to build upon and raise garden truck the first few years.
-We only secured as much land as we could pay rent for by the membership
-fee.’ There he is now, he evidently knows Birch, for they have
-recognized each other.”
-
-Yes, he knew him, for at one time he and Birch were rivals. As they
-looked at each other, he exclaimed:
-
-“Why, what are you doing here?”
-
-“I am living here,” replied Birch.
-
-“What!” he said, in surprise, “living in this slow place where there is
-nothing to be seen, and you a graduate of the first college in the
-country? Well, if I had passed with the honors that you did, I would
-have been in some city practicing law. We all thought you intended to.”
-
-“No, sir,” Birch replied, “no profession for me in these days. I want
-freedom. Hundreds of our fellows are scattered among our cities with
-their shingles out to practice on the helpless sick, so I am doing what
-I can for others who are not even as fortunate, by giving them something
-to do in my restaurant. I have two learning to cook. You see they want a
-good living and know they will be as much respected as cooks as
-poverty-stricken doctors and lawyers who fill up the offices in the
-down-town buildings. This society, you know, honors all labor, and the
-higher the education the better the prospects will be, for those who are
-on the spot to take what comes.”
-
-“But I don’t see how you can ever become rich.”
-
-Young Birch answers, “To become rich in these days is to usually become
-a gigantic swindler or pirate. I don’t care to be either. I want to be a
-self-respecting man and expect to be honored as a man of the best class,
-not necessarily rich. I do intend to be a man of means and prosperous.
-This society protects the people of small means and those who have
-talent. But here is my wife, you know her.”
-
-Yes, he knew her for she had been the one in all the world to him, only
-two years before, but young Birch had been preferred to him; he had
-never known why. Most girls are foolish, he had thought, and now he knew
-it.
-
-The whole party filled the boats and were enjoying the fun, singing and
-telling funny stories; in one boat, some were making love and the others
-having a good time watching them. Then one boat would get away from the
-others and some would start singing, another would answer, and all the
-boats would take it up until it was time to start for the shore. When
-they returned to the tents the city friends were deeply interested in
-the supper when they learned it had been cooked by college men.
-
-“You see we have our meals here,” Tom explained, “and the one dining
-room answers for all. Mr. and Mrs. Birch have charge of this building
-and they attend to all the tables and cooking.”
-
-Mrs. Birch remarked, “Yes, we even did the work until there were enough
-to cook for to enable us to pay for having it done, and I am proud of my
-accomplishments in that line, I can assure you.”
-
-“You may be sure we all appreciate your talent not only in that line,
-but in many others besides,” said Tom gallantly.
-
-Mr. Birch had ordered the supper to be ready and all sat down to do
-justice to the luscious strawberries and good rich cream, hot biscuits
-and other delicacies of the farm. Then all the city guests said “good
-night” and went back, spinning along in their automobiles and enjoying
-the cool air while they talked over the possibilities of the Colony and
-their interest in it.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VIII.
-
-
-There is nothing that gives a better opportunity for friendship than for
-people to be thrown together in some interesting work or undertaking.
-
-A great deal has been written about love affairs that were started on
-board ship but the society had broken the record, for it, unlike the
-short passage on the ocean, had been continuous. The men and women have
-had an opportunity to learn more about each other. It raised the
-standard in each sex. Each became independent of the other financially,
-therefore real love matches were the result. Men’s responsibility were
-being shared by their wives, and they were not so afraid to venture on
-the matrimonial journey. One thing, they are not so likely to step into
-it without preparation. Paul Arling was becoming fond of Scoris Vivian,
-but he felt that he had no right to neglect his mother’s interests even
-for her. She was young, while his mother was too old to support herself.
-He knew that Scoris had many admirers and yet he thought to himself,
-“she certainly favors me. I wonder if it is because she sees more of me
-than the rest. I would like to know, but I have no right to ask her
-until I know that mother is provided for. And yet, the society has made
-it possible to so centralize our interests that the risk is not what it
-would have been without it. She wouldn’t be an added burden, for she has
-more shares than I have. What a blessing is rightly directed industry,
-combined with economy! We don’t have to wait until we can fit up an
-establishment. But here I am taking it for granted that she loves me and
-that she would have me. Ah! well, longings and wishes sometimes blind
-our vision. It may be purely imagination on my part, but the expression
-of her eyes rest on me so differently from any other. I have watched her
-closely, I am sure she cares for me. She thrills me through and through
-if she but smiles upon me; and she does not smile in the same way at any
-one else. Surely it is so. I would like to call upon her to-night, but I
-have no excuse,” he still muses. But love always finds a way, and in
-looking around for it, his mother appeared dressed for the street.
-
-“Where are you going?” he asked.
-
-“Oh, just for a walk, not anywhere in particular. Won’t you come along?”
-
-“Which way?” he asked, as they stand at the door, apparently uncertain.
-
-“I usually go to the lake,” she answered. “The air is so clear and fresh
-there and I like to watch the water rolling and see the people. I go
-there often.”
-
-“Very well,” he replied, and they start in that direction, he turning
-over the thought uppermost in his mind all the time. “You go to the lake
-often do you?”
-
-“Yes, quite often. Why, do you want to go anywhere else?” (She had
-noticed his abstracted air.) “It is immaterial to me; I am so glad to
-have you take a walk with me I will go anywhere.”
-
-“Oh! that is not quite fair,” he answered, smiling. “You always have the
-girls to go with you, so I don’t like to intrude.”
-
-“Lucky thought,”—he said to himself. “That new building near the
-Vivians’ flat, with the figures on it that were drawn by a member of our
-society, I will take her to see it. You know Will Green, the architect,”
-he continued. “Well, if you don’t mind I would like you to see a
-building he has been erecting. It is around on another street. We will
-turn here. Clever fellow, clever fellow,” he said absently. His mother
-looked at him sideways, wondering what he meant. He slipped his arm
-under her’s while they crossed the street. Presently she said: “There is
-no hurry, is there?” for he had quickened his pace like a horse on the
-home stretch, not quite running, but faster than she was accustomed to
-walking.
-
-“Oh, no,” he answered as he slackened suddenly, “I didn’t know I was
-going so fast.” Some middle-aged women learn to be diplomatic, though it
-is not usual. She knew that this walk was not taken on her account, but
-she was not going to spoil it by letting him see that she knew it. They
-stopped at the building he had spoken of. He pointed out the stone
-carving he had brought her to see, all in a mechanical way. Then they
-walked along a little farther, when he in the most surprised way, that
-even his mother did not detect at first, said: “Why, here is where the
-Vivians live! Let’s make a call.” At that moment Scoris appeared at the
-window, and thinking that they were coming for that purpose smiled and
-came to the door. The intimacy between the two families became closer as
-time passed, for there was always something to bring them together.
-
-Scoris would wonder sometimes if Paul really did care for her. He would
-seem so interested in her, take such pains to bring his family and hers
-together and his eyes had often spoken more than words, yet he was
-silent. She would like to have known. “But after all,” she said to her
-self, “we are not in a position to marry if he did care for me.”
-
-Two years passed and she had so many cares to occupy her mind that she
-was satisfied to let things remain as they were. She had secured a
-number of shares in the society, saying to herself, “marriage is not the
-only aim in life, and I will devote myself to art. I am weary of seeing
-my creations used for advertisements—of working for a firm that looks
-upon me as a part of its machinery. If our society was older
-advertisements wouldn’t be needed. What will you do then?” she asks
-herself. “Why, why,” she hesitates, then thinks again, “what will I do?”
-The answer didn’t come right away. She returned to it many times. Once
-she thought, “I will have enough saved to keep me before then. I can
-live in the Colony where the necessities of life are of more consequence
-to all than luxuries, and I can do without many things I like. Why, I do
-now. First my drawings and paintings are used to attract trade. The firm
-gets the credit for them, and about ten times more than I receive for
-them. Do I like that? It has greater expenses I am aware, but not ten
-times the amount. I work six days out of the week from 8 a. m. to 5 p.
-m., with about two weeks’ holidays once a year, and then I have to lose
-my time. If my eyesight fails in middle life, the age limit will pounce
-upon me with the lash of necessity. I certainly do not like the
-prospect. Marry the millionaire that Libra has taken so much trouble to
-persuade you to.
-
-“Marry? No, if I ever marry, it will be for love and companionship. He
-is a nice fellow, his money would help to carry out the very things I am
-working for! I like him and he is fond of me. If I had never seen Paul I
-would have learned to love him. He and others who are wealthy have
-proved to me that human nature is the same whether rich or poor. Both
-kinds of people can be selfish and they average the same in generosity,
-both he and Libra’s husband are generous. Lear is a rich man and Libra
-is happy with him, why couldn’t I? Because,” she answers the one-sided
-debate, “we wouldn’t be companionable and because he knows nothing about
-the poverty in our midst. He would expect me to out-rival other women
-and display his wealth while I would know that little children were
-hungry and the aged were cold and homeless. Every time I took up the
-daily newspaper and saw the accounts of suicides and all the rest of the
-misery caused by money being drawn into the hands of the few, I would
-have to say to myself ‘coward!’ No, I will not marry him. I never
-encouraged him. He would never have asked me but for Libra. I can hear
-him say it yet, in answer to an argument brought up about the working
-classes, ‘No one can reach them all, so what is the use of our trying to
-do an impossible thing?’ ‘No one person can change any condition in
-which all the people are involved, but if each one does his or her
-share, individually, it can be done,’ I told him, ‘and I will not desert
-the cause.’”
-
-Scoris had been alone all evening, and as she loosened her hair and let
-it fall around her shoulders, she arrived at this mental conclusion;
-then she heard Helen unlock the front door and come in to their parlor.
-
-“I thought you had gone to bed, you were so quiet,” Helen said.
-
-“Did you enjoy the play?” Scoris asked, as she fastened her loose gown
-and slipped on her soft shoes.
-
-“Very much,” Helen answered. “Libra and Lear would have come in if they
-had known you were up.”
-
-“I am glad they did not,” Scoris said. “You know what Libra is after,
-and I have made up my mind that I will never marry.”
-
-[Illustration]
-
-Scoris had been alone all evening and as she loosened her hair and let
-it fall around her shoulders she arrived at this mental conclusion.
-
-“Never?” Helen asked in a quizzical way. “There are other men besides
-the millionaire.”
-
-“Yes, dear, I know,” Scoris answered, “but some of them, like me, don’t
-wish to marry.”
-
-“I have not seen you since morning,” Helen said after a while. “Well, I
-have been promoted.”
-
-Her duties were in a basement of the store where she was employed and
-she had discovered that her eyesight was becoming defective. She was
-told that it was from the glare of the electric light and that she would
-have to wear glasses after two or three years there. “You cannot tell
-the colors accurately without them,” the oculist had said.
-
-It was bad enough to have to work in a basement, day by day from one
-year’s end to another, without having to impair her eyesight. Glasses
-were her horror, but she must work, and at last she applied to the head
-manager to give her something where she could work by daylight for at
-least a part of the day, and was sent up to the dress department.
-
-“You see, Scoris,” she explained, “after my capabilities had been
-inquired into as a saleswomen, then I had to be looked over for all the
-world as if I was a horse for sale. I passed on the strength of my
-figure, height and ladylike appearance. The humiliating ordeal was
-trying, but I won’t have to wear those glasses, thank goodness, and, do
-you know, Scoris, my salary will be raised. But I have to get a new
-tailor-made gown with a train, made in the latest style, so as to make
-the best appearance.
-
-“Well,” Scoris remarked, “it is very nice to be dressed well and I am
-pleased you are going to be out of that basement. I felt uneasy about
-your eyes. I have seen so many people who had to give up work altogether
-on account of the long hours under the electric light. Especially when
-their work is steady all day, as yours has been. Now, my work is more
-trying to the eyes than yours, and if I had to use electric light it
-would blind me, even with my shorter hours.”
-
-The next evening Helen came home in her new dress, walking rather
-slowly, paying more attention to the holding up of her skirt than to her
-surroundings. She walked past her own door before she noticed it. Scoris
-meeting her, she exclaimed:
-
-“Do you know this dress has cost me so much that it will take me over
-two months to pay for it, and when the weekly amount is taken out of my
-salary I won’t have as much as I did in the basement? No wonder they pay
-more for this kind of work, or agree to, for in reality, they don’t pay
-as much, as we have to get new gowns every three months so as to be in
-style.”
-
-“Never mind,” said Scoris, “it won’t last many years, for the society is
-gradually gathering in all the industries. Then we will only have to
-work about half the time that we do now and have more holidays, and
-rest. I have just been reading the society’s paper for this month.
-Listen and see what you think of this.
-
-“‘Mrs. Thorn and our president have just completed the transferring of
-the property to the society. We know all our members will be pleased to
-learn that we now own the land our principal buildings are on, as well
-as the buildings themselves. I also wish to draw attention to the
-increase of the society’s wealth in being able to secure this land in
-such a short time since we began our society. It proves the theory of
-concentrated effort as well as the combined industry of us all. Our old
-obligations to Mrs. Thorn are the same as to any other member. She now
-owns sufficient shares in the permanent wealth to entitle her to a
-three-room apartment. These shares are in the names of her three
-children, giving her a life interest in said shares. Besides, she
-receives a pension during her life. This places her in a better position
-than when she only received the rent, securing for her a better home
-than she had before. Her apartments have a hot water bath and other
-conveniences and are heated; then, like all the other tenants, she has
-the use of the dining room and kitchen, public parlor, etc., in fact, it
-makes her independent for life and secures to her two married daughters
-as well as to her son a home during their lives, after her death, of at
-least one room each, they having become members so as to entitle them to
-that privilege. Our business transactions have been very satisfactory
-with her and we take great pleasure in recommending her for the title we
-are about to confer on all honorable members, and this is the first
-publication of her name. The society is about to confer the title of
-“The Honorable” to Mrs. Thorn’s name, if there are no just reasons why
-such title should not be given. This notice will be published in regard
-to her and the other members, for three months, and the list will be
-found on the second page of this paper.
-
-“‘All members who have proven themselves to be honest and trustworthy in
-their lives and an honor to our cause during the past two years are
-eligible. Their past life up to two years ago we do not hold against
-them, as we believe this society enables all to live honestly. If,
-however, it is proved that any who have applied for the honors we wish
-to confer upon them are unworthy, or if they in any way break the law of
-the country, they cannot receive these titles until they have reformed.
-Again, no person in our society can retain any title if at any time
-proven unworthy. These titles cannot be transferred to any other person,
-nor are they hereditary, nor can a husband confer a title upon his wife.
-A wife cannot give this title to her husband. They are issued to our
-honorable members to give them prominence over the idle and the
-undeserving, also to show our respect for all labor. We believe that in
-this way the generations of the future may become equal. We know they
-are not at the present day. We are treating facts as we find them and
-intend doing our duty by honoring the best among us by titles. Those who
-do not come up to the standard we do not condemn, but silently ignore in
-all business transactions where they could get the best of us or
-disgrace us. They are not allowed to hold office nor to help make the
-laws or to sit in the Council of this society. Therefore, the title
-gives to the society a dignity that is required in the present time on
-account of the dishonesty that prevails among all classes. We are sure
-that all honest people will appreciate these titles, for by them they
-will be known.’
-
-“Quite an article, don’t you think so?”
-
-“Why, yes, indeed, but it will be years before we can use them; that is,
-you and I. We would be ridiculed in the store or illustrating house
-where you are. Just think, if it were known that you are ‘The Honorable’
-Scoris Vivian, for now you are considered only a good servant by the
-firm, and nothing more.”
-
-“Oh, yes, of course,” Scoris replied, “still it is a good deal in our
-private life to be held worthy of the honor. It will always give us a
-standing among the best class of people, and to be known as an honorable
-person is a protection for us in that class. Holding a title will show
-where we belong socially, no matter what our employment may be. In the
-present time, if we do certain kinds of work, we lose caste, because
-labor is not honored as it should be. See the position I am
-in—illustrating for a firm that gets the benefit of my talent and
-ability. I have no opportunity of enjoying the triumphs; all is the work
-of the firm and they can be depended upon—the public says. ‘According to
-the opinions of the money class this is as it should be. This woman is
-only too glad to find employment. We who have money have a right to
-dictate.’ I think differently. It is mine and I should have the benefit
-of my own creations and industry, and it is hard to bear when some rare
-illustration has been used for common advertising.”
-
-“Yes, Scoris, I know it is harder for you than my position is for me,
-but I would sooner do anything else. When I mentioned the fact to Libra
-she begged me not to do so or it would disgrace her if it became known
-among her set. I hate to be on my feet all day, bowing and saying polite
-things to the people I serve in that store, and then to think I only
-receive a bare living. I know I have talent and it makes me almost
-despise myself to be subjected to it.”
-
-“Patience, Helen dear, the times are changing and you are doing your
-share. That article you wrote last week was a rousing good one and I
-have been complimented on having such a clever sister who was capable of
-expressing herself so fearlessly in the cause of right. Keep up your
-writings until you are better known and sufficient returns come in to
-justify you in making it your life’s work. You are not the first or the
-last to be placed in an unpleasant position.”
-
-“And just think, Scoris, so many have asked me how I ever got such a
-nice position. Oh, well, every one to their taste.”
-
-“Here is a letter from Nellie,” Scoris said, “and she and Tom are coming
-to make us a visit.”
-
-“I don’t suppose we will see very much of them for already the different
-members are arranging to entertain them. Tom will change places for two
-weeks with the city manager and will be very busy. I am glad they are
-coming,” Helen replied.
-
-One morning Scoris received a letter from her mother, saying that Geron
-had mortgaged his portion of the estate and that Lear Shuman had secured
-him a position in the city at such a good salary that they were all
-going to move in a few months. The girls had heard about his
-dissatisfaction and were not surprised at the news, but regretted it,
-for they knew that it was a mistake. “One comfort we will have out of
-it: mother will live with us,” Helen remarked.
-
-“Yes,” Scoris said, “it will be nice for us, but hard for her, after
-living all her life in the freedom of the open country, away from smoke
-and dust. Think of Geron investing the money he received on the mortgage
-in stocks. The uncertainty of it and that Lear advised it. That is the
-outcome of that visit Geron and Grace paid them a year ago. The salary
-Geron is to receive seems large to him now, but how little he knows
-about the destruction of clothing and household goods with the constant
-dust. I am afraid they will regret it.”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER IX.
-
-
-In another week Tom and Nellie arrived in the city on a visit and were
-astonished at their reception. They had intended seeing their old
-friends and enjoying a quiet time, but instead were rushed from one
-place to another and were constantly told that “of course you must see
-so-and-so, for they are such good workers in the cause, don’t you know,
-and will be encouraged if you will only see them.”
-
-They went everywhere and enjoyed the occasion, being pleased that they
-were so well received.
-
-“But, Tom,” Nellie said one morning, “we must see more of Scoris. I am
-getting impatient to see the effect those presents will have upon her
-and the surprise they will be. Do you know, Tom, what Scoris Vivian is
-like? A beautiful diamond—a continual surprise; the setting is so
-simple, so unobtrusive, but the gem is always seen. To me her life is
-one continual sparkling ray of love that is never hidden. Just think of
-it! Here we have been feted and given receptions by members who were so
-glad to honor us for what you have done, and she had as much to do with
-this movement in the beginning as you had and a great deal more than I,
-yet no one seems to realize it. We are receiving all the presents from
-the manufacturers, and I am glad I found out her taste in regard to
-dress. Now we can give her her choice, for she certainly deserves the
-best. I never was dressed so well before and it helps the cause that
-much more. I am glad it pays them to send them to us.”
-
-“Pays them!” laughed Tom. “Well, I should think it did. Do you know how
-many cases our members have already taken from that firm that was the
-first to send these samples?”
-
-“No; how many?”
-
-“I forget the exact figure, but it was more than any of the old firms
-they have been dealing with, I was told, and we are only in our infancy
-as a society. It has paid them well to become members and will start
-others to do so, for of course we secure them a market in a way that
-helps the society and makes them no expense for advertising and the
-returns are large. It will be only a matter of time when they will
-manufacture under the name of the society.”
-
-“So you have gotten away from them all at last!” exclaimed Scoris, as
-she met them at the door the next evening. “We were afraid they were
-going to monopolize you during the whole visit, you are so popular. I
-have felt so gratified. And your beautiful gowns! Why, Nellie, you are
-bewitching! Come, now, stand up for inspection. That dress is lovely and
-fits like a glove. From your hat to your shoes all is perfection. I am
-going out to that colony, for I see you have a fairy godmother out
-there. Why, my dear, you look like a girl of sixteen.”
-
-Tom drew the two women to him who had been so much to him, while all
-laughed at the demonstration of affection.
-
-“A bright group worthy of a larger audience,” said Helen, as she breaks
-in on their meeting.
-
-“But the fine clothes,” said Scoris.
-
-Nellie laughed and struck an attitude that the girls might see all the
-beauty of the costume, while all were convulsed with laughter at the
-faces she made.
-
-“Has that colony struck a gold mine?” Helen asked, “or from whence
-cometh all this grandeur?”
-
-“Yes and no,” continued Tom. “We have struck a mine of wealth and it
-produces gold when that metal is desired. So it amounts to the same
-thing and it is the greatest mine on earth, too, for it is producing
-what gold cannot buy, and that is the kindly interest and affection of
-our members. We all stand by each other.”
-
-“We have something here for you, Scoris, so you can take your choice.
-You come first then. Helen, then we will send the rest to other workers
-in the cause. We want you to help us select and sort them.”
-
-“Why, Nellie,” said Scoris, “these are beautiful. I never had anything
-like this silk, and when can I wear it?”
-
-“The occasion will be marked by well dressed members of the Colony,” Tom
-said, “and it is just as it should be. Our coronation days should be so
-distinguished by well dressed people that they will always be remembered
-and the picture will make a decided impression upon the minds of every
-one.”
-
-“Oh,” exclaimed Scoris, “here is something I have wanted for years. It
-is so light, cool and beautiful, these dainty lawns, these woolens,
-silks and cloths. Why, they will last me for years. Everything I need is
-here in the way of clothing.”
-
-Helen was given her choice, then amid the exclamations of joy and
-satisfaction of being the first to appear in all these samples sent out
-from the manufacturers, the conversation soon turned to the discussion
-of dress-makers. They abounded in the Colony, but the one who made
-Nellie’s dresses was preferred. It was apparent that her style was
-superior and the work of the best.
-
-“Now, girls, all you have to do is to look lovely as becomes a thriving
-and wealthy community. These presents make it possible, and remember you
-are producing wealth and should be making use of the best of everything.
-In this exchanging of interests and materials we must make a good
-appearance. We owe it to ourselves as leaders and it will have a great
-effect on the people at large.”
-
-“Nothing succeeds like success,” continued Tom. “The appearance of it
-stimulates the ones who are afraid to venture. A nicely dressed person
-always lives in our memory.”
-
-The girls laughed.
-
-“Well, if you don’t believe this, try the effect of walking down the
-dreary, dirty streets in any of our large cities and see if it doesn’t
-have a depressing effect. Then cross over to the ones that are bright
-with all that prosperity gives to enhance the general appearance of both
-the houses and the people and see if the memory of the latter will not
-be stimulating in comparison, especially when you have it in your power
-to improve your own surroundings, as this society gives you. The main
-thing is to fix your aim high. To build a grand house it is necessary to
-dig and make lots of dirt in laying the foundation and so it has been in
-achieving the end we had in view, but when we meet together to enjoy the
-well-earned recreation, we must see to it that our bodies are properly
-clothed, for they will show the amount of our ability and will prove how
-much we know of the power of concentration, or the law of attraction. No
-one should be ignorant of these things.”
-
-“Well, Tom, I believe you have studied human nature from every
-standpoint,” said Scoris. “I will certainly profit by all these lovely
-things, for I was beginning to be ashamed to go out anywhere. I have
-saved so much of my salary to secure shares that I have hated to spend
-anything for clothes, but I believe you are right. My whole life is
-before me, and I may as well enjoy it.”
-
-A day or two later, when Tom and Nellie found themselves in their home
-again, Tom said, “We have had a pleasant time and I thoroughly enjoyed
-it, but I am glad to get home again. These apartments we are using this
-year are so superior to anything we ever had in the city. Fresh air is
-certainly a luxury, and an atmosphere free from dust is another.”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER X.
-
-
-At this time the society was in its sixth year and many changes had
-taken place. Tom Vivian had proved to the most skeptical that wealth
-producing and distributing among the members was the only just way of
-doing business. He and Nellie were talking it over one day when he
-exclaimed quite abruptly:
-
-[Illustration]
-
-“Nellie, I have just found out that our sister Mira has signed away her
-legacy that she should receive now on her twenty-first birthday. She
-signed it away two years ago. I wish we could find out where she is, for
-mother is grieving herself to death, it is so long since we have had any
-word from her. I find Geron is sorry that he ever mortgaged his place.
-He seems to be very blue, and that may be partly the reason mother is
-looking so worried. We must cheer her up when she comes.”
-
-“I will do my best, Tom dear. I think the sight of the children will do
-her good, they are so bright and happy. Everything is systematized here
-and our apartments are so cheery and bright that I feel sure she will
-enjoy her visit.”
-
-Mrs. Vivian came the next day and Tom and Nellie showed her all the
-improvements made since her last visit. She seemed most interested in
-the children’s department, but thought the idea of having them in a
-public nursery might be all right as long as the parents were in
-constant communication. “But I cannot see that it is best to separate
-them.”
-
-“But, mother, we are not separated. We can have them here as we like,
-only the advantage to them is greater.”
-
-Next day Mrs. Vivian took her place in the nursery and was there long
-enough to be convinced that this kind of place was the best on earth for
-children. The top floor was the infants’ department from a month old to
-the age when they could walk. Every contrivance to teach the oldest ones
-to use their feet and at the same time protect their bodies was here to
-aid them until they were strong enough to stand on their feet. Swinging
-chairs and frames to push around in learning to walk were placed around
-on the bare floors, which were white and clean. In another apartment
-were little cots in a row and an arrangement (if one became restless)
-was attached to each cot so that it could be rolled out into another
-room.
-
-The nurses had eighteen hours for themselves in their own homes and six
-in the nursery. These short hours made them much more patient than
-mothers who have usually from two to six children to take care of,
-besides cooking and taking what time they can get to rest at night.
-
-Telephones were in all the buildings and the night watchmen in the
-apartments were kept at close range so that the parents might be called
-at any time.
-
-The next floor was where the older children live. These from the time
-they were old enough to learn are placed in the kindergarten three hours
-daily. The rest of the time is spent in resting and amusing themselves.
-Another grade, still older, are taught to be useful for a short time
-each day, to form industrious habits. Then they amused themselves the
-rest of the time and were under the watchful eye of the nurses and
-teachers.
-
-In the evening Mrs. Vivian was ready to tell of her experience.
-
-“Well, I am surprised,” she said. “I never thought of having children
-all in one place and special people to take care of them. Certainly the
-children are the better for the good system it necessitates. I was
-impressed with the graceful bearing of the girls and the manliness of
-the boys. All speak to each other in such a polite, kindly way. When you
-consider that some are born of parents who are ignorant of the
-refinements of social life, it is surprising. At the table particularly
-they handled their knives, forks and spoons as if bred and born in a
-social atmosphere of ease and refinement. I must say, Tom, that I don’t
-understand this. I have always supposed that children born of parents
-who only understood work could not be taught these things but would show
-their breeding at least for three generations.”
-
-“Well, mother, you are right to a degree, for the breeding of human
-beings has been so terribly neglected that it requires the constant
-attention of our nurses to watch and guide these unformed minds in the
-principles of right living and thinking. The latter is the most
-important, of course, for thought precedes action; every means is
-employed to direct their thoughts into the right channels. We employ a
-number of artists to guide the first impressions of these young minds.
-Every picture on the wall teaches some lesson, and the reward of loving
-deeds must be taught by those in charge. The nurses must be in good
-health, patient and bright, for the future of these children demands it.
-In the beginning of this colony we carefully selected women who were not
-only educated, but adapted to teaching, guiding and nursing. We realize
-that the early life of children is the most important, for the
-impressions gained then and the habits formed are hard to change. We
-don’t allow any harsh dealings with them, though determination is
-absolutely necessary.”
-
-The next day Mrs. Vivian reported her experience. “Well,” she said, “the
-more I see of the simple arrangements the more perfect the system seems
-to me. I only saw the long tables yesterday, where all sat up as
-straight as soldiers, with their napkins spread over their laps, instead
-of being tucked into the necks of their waists, but today I discovered
-there are grades, and the newcomers are placed at a table behind a
-screen until the nurses see how they behave. Those who have been there a
-long time are not allowed to see the little strangers until they are
-taught to behave properly. A roar and a scream of laughter was heard
-from some new children. As I glanced their way I saw a teaspoonful of
-milk thrown with good aim in the face of one of them by a culprit who
-looked as innocent as if he couldn’t do such a thing. Only the twinkle
-in the eye that the children could see gave evidence of the guilty one.
-Bits from the table were scattered upon the floor and one was holding
-her plate with both hands, actually licking it. Presently, one after the
-other jumped down and seeing one left, ran around and drew her chair
-from in under her. Down she came, spilling her milk all over her
-clothes. All were laughing and choking with their mouths full and began
-running around the building. Still not one word was said to them. The
-other children, at a signal from the lady principal, stepped down from
-their chairs, waited in line until told to move, which they did as
-orderly as soldiers on parade, and passed from the room.
-
-“The small table and the polished floor were left in the same disorder
-until all the rest of the dining room was straightened and the children
-out of sight. Then the little strangers were called in and told to pick
-up everything and remove the cloth. They immediately resented the
-authority, so the nurse told the one she had noticed licking her plate
-that when little girls didn’t obey orders they were not allowed to have
-any more preserves and that all their cake was taken and given to the
-good children. It had the desired effect and she gave in, seeing which
-the others did also. The worst boy was only a daring, bold, fun-loving
-urchin who had never been taught his own rights, much less those of
-others, so the nurse said, ‘Come, let us hurry or we will miss all the
-fun they are having outdoors.’ She showed them how, and they laughed at
-the mistakes made, but they did their best, just the same. The floor had
-to be swept and they were amused at the unusual play, as they considered
-it, for the nurse kept them laughing until all was done. When they were
-through they found all the other children had gone and were told they
-could put on their flannel suits and wade in the pond and throw all the
-water they liked on each other so long as it did not hurt them. They
-still looked longingly around to see where the rest of the children
-were. The nurse told them they would always have to play by themselves
-until they had learned to be tidy. They saw the rest having a good time,
-while they were like chickens in a coop, thrusting their little, chubby
-hands through the wire fence, trying to get out, with wistful glances
-turned to the nurse in charge. She played horse to amuse them, still
-they realized that they were not having the same privileges that the
-rest were, and it had the desired effect. A lesson in obedience had been
-taught; they had learned that even fun in the wrong place and at the
-wrong time was a mistake. If they bring those children under the same
-discipline that the rest are I will give them more credit than any one I
-ever knew.”
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XI.
-
-
-Both Tom and Nellie explained to their mother everything they could.
-
-Nellie told her that only those who are born under certain zodiacal
-signs were capable of teaching children and have the natural patience
-necessary. “We have it all down to a science. We have every child’s
-birthday recorded and can tell almost to a certainty their dispositions.
-Some can be managed through their affections and crave to be caressed;
-others will push you away and resent such familiarity, even when quite
-small; some are so fond of their pretty dresses that dressing them
-plainly at such times serves as a punishment; others don’t care what
-they wear. We have certain people thoroughly taught to attend to this
-one branch of their education, and we chose our lady principal from
-those who have been thoroughly drilled along this line. They know which
-children will be attracted to each other and don’t interfere with their
-likes or dislikes. They only need guiding. Now in their homes they don’t
-have the same advantages that they have here or among a number. Children
-born in a fire sign very rarely agree with those born in a water sign
-and constantly fret each other, and there is a continual spluttering and
-sissing such as we find where fire comes in contact with water. Among
-the four elements that the race represents is a vast variety of
-dispositions, and it takes persons of great ability as well as
-experience to classify them and bring out the best in each child. We
-believe that human beings have as good right to be bred as animals, but
-we don’t find they are, so we have to make the best of them as they are.
-We do all we can to make each little life a pleasure to itself and to
-every one else. We have no favorites; one child gets the same attention
-as all the rest.
-
-“Did you see our babies today, mother?” Nellie inquired.
-
-“Why, I see them every day I go. Do you suppose I could go where they
-are and not see them? Your boy is growing finely and little Scoris so
-like her namesake. I feel that you have named her under an inspiration.
-She is so demure and quiet, yet so determined when she imagines she is
-not being treated right. Today the head nurse asked her to take a shoe
-to the nurse that a baby had kicked off, but Scoris shook her head.
-‘Take the shoe, Scoris, dear,’ the nurse repeated. ‘No, me won’t,’
-Scoris said. ‘Yes, be quick, that is a good girl.’ ‘No, me will not,’
-said the mite, at the same time running and giving it as she had been
-told, yet resenting that she had to do it. ‘Now, me won’t,’ she
-continued, stamping her little foot. It was hard to keep from laughing,
-she looked so angry. They say she won’t be ordered without a protest,
-unless in one of her best moods. They know what to do, however, and she
-minds as a rule and has one of the best dispositions. I saw her at the
-sand pile afterwards and her voice could be heard above the rest and her
-laugh was the merriest. Then again I found her at the pond, splashing
-water and enjoying life as all children should. That pond is a splendid
-thing. I never saw children enjoy anything as much as they do that basin
-called ‘the pond,’ and the water being kept at the right temperature,
-makes it safe. They have three sizes I was told today.”
-
-“Why, yes,” said Tom, “for all children like to splash in water and we
-have the right dimensions according to their size. Each day they are
-allowed to splash and wade in it. The doctors say it is healthful for
-them. Then usefulness is taught as young as they can understand it.
-Obedience is enforced in one way or another, and thus it makes harmony.
-We get Scoris nearly every evening and take her out during the fine
-weather, but if she has been rebellious, we don’t. She understands and
-has needed only one or two lessons.
-
-“It is a comfort to have such intelligent women to take charge of them
-while we are busy attending to the affairs of the society. Not only ours
-but every child has everything to make them happy and contented, and all
-are bright and healthy. Such a contrast to the homes shared with grownup
-people! Those who have charge of them giving their whole attention to
-them and no scolding or faultfinding! Just a continual guiding and
-patience while the young minds are expanding. The merry laughter and fun
-always acts as a tonic after I have been there. Everything is done in
-such an intelligent manner. The way those women study the dispositions
-of each child and bring out only the best in each is wonderful.”
-
-The next day the little ones who had been rebellious were so much better
-that they were allowed to have their table where they could see the
-others. One remarked: “I wish we could have flowers.” Another asked:
-“Can’t we have a linen tablecloth instead of the oil cloth?” The nurse
-said, “Yes, when you stop spilling your milk and food on this.” “And the
-nice dishes with flowers on them?” another said. “Yes, but you must
-learn to use your knives and forks correctly first, and then you may sit
-at the long table.”
-
-“In this way they were taught to look upon each improvement as a
-promotion and tried all the harder to be neat so they could be with the
-rest, so you see punishment was not necessary, for one child taught
-another unconsciously.
-
-“The flowers in the garden were enclosed so the small children could see
-but not reach them, and this was done to teach them to love nature; but
-the wire fence shows that restrictions are a part of their education,
-and as soon as they can be trusted or are old enough to understand they
-may go among them. They are not for show alone or beauty. The older ones
-work among them and consider it a privilege to weed or rearrange them.”
-
-“Yes, I see,” said Mrs. Vivian, “and I think the idea of making them
-useful is a splendid one.”
-
-“Oh, we do,” continued Tom. “The older children always help to gather
-the fruit and a strict account is kept of their labor and we place it on
-their shares. During the fruit season our school hours are short, for we
-consider industrious habits of just as much value to them as book
-learning. The kindergarten is kept up the same for the small ones. The
-work keeps the children out of mischief and makes them self-reliant, and
-as their future is provided for there is no need to hurry them. During
-the heat of the day they rest or amuse themselves. Our strawberries pay
-well and the children do most of the gathering. The boys also climb the
-fruit trees while the girls pick the lower branches for all other kinds
-of fruit. Their playing, sleeping and resting is all looked after. They
-are only allowed to work about two hours a day and we look upon it as
-the exercise that is necessary to develop muscle and strengthen the
-body, and the brain being occupied at the same time, while they are
-breathing good, pure air, will make them stronger men and women.
-
-“The most of our great men have lived at some time of their lives in the
-country, or were so surrounded by nature that they have been able to
-breathe the pure air in their earliest childhood. Certainly their clear
-brains have proved the virtue of it. It is wonderful what children can
-do on the farm when protected by the laws of the society from overwork,
-and it will be a benefit to them all their lives, for without healthy
-bodies you cannot have expert brains or well rounded lives.
-
-“The surroundings of large cities are responsible in a great degree for
-the crimes committed there. Money is such a necessity, there being no
-other exchange for labor, it has got to come some way. Then the poor,
-stunted brains with only enough animal cunning to realize their present
-necessities, steal. Are they responsible for their action, especially
-when their labor is at a discount or no work to be had at all? All their
-muscles are stiff and in need of exercise that some regular employment
-would give them.
-
-“We are not rearing children to amass fortunes for the idle.
-
-“The society was growing rapidly, branches had sprung up near every city
-with their full equipments of industries, all being separate at first.
-Each one as they had proved their ability to manage their own affairs
-were applying to the original society to unite, and we are ready to do
-so,” Tom explained to his wife and mother.
-
-“We own large tracts of land in every direction and control a number of
-mines, timber lands, rubber plantations, coal in every grade and coal
-oil. We own sheep ranches and cattle, besides large cotton districts in
-our southern climate. The society has at this time, its order houses,
-representing everything, all managed under the scrip system, yet using
-money when necessary. No new system could change the old order of things
-all at once. Those who imagined the working people were created for
-their special use were indignant that intelligent people should
-introduce a system compelling them to pay larger salaries and decrease
-their dividends. They had imagined that the working people were born
-especially to earn a living for them. When I refer to working people, I
-include all who earn their living from those who work in the ditch to
-those who call their employment positions, it’s all labor. Intelligent
-people have shaken off their burdens since the society has shown them
-how. They have taken their experience, gained by serving others, into a
-co-operative system protected by the society and they are accumulating
-the wealth for themselves that they used to give away.”
-
-“Yes,” Nellie answered, “and this natural result is strengthening us on
-all sides.”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XII.
-
-
-“Well, the children are off my hands at last,” said Mira Moberly. “What
-a comfort it is to be able to sit down and think once in a while! Oh,
-dear! there is the bell. No wonder some people think heaven is a state
-of rest, if they all long for it as I do. A letter from mother! Oh, I am
-so glad!” As she reads her letter, we will tell you about her life since
-she left her old home.
-
-She had the fate of thousands of others. She had come to a large city a
-young, inexperienced bride, very much in love with her husband. The
-uncle who had been the cause of their coming, fitted up their home with
-every luxury, besides showing her many kindnesses. Jack was proud of her
-and through his uncle’s influence they were introduced to a circle of
-acquaintances. She was happy and enjoyed being a center of attraction
-the first few months. She was often homesick but Jack did all he could
-to make her contented.
-
-The first year passed, then the baby took up her attention. The third
-year came and two babies claimed her. The fourth year found her a
-sad-faced matron with more cares than she knew how to bear. Jack had
-changed. He was no longer the loving husband, but was becoming bloated
-and reckless with drink, so that even his little children shrank from
-him. This was what she had left home, mother and plenty for. This was
-the man she had promised to love, honor and obey. Could she love a man
-who neglected her children as well as herself? Could she honor this
-drunkard and gambler? Could she obey such a specimen of manhood? In what
-could she respect him? And yet the memory of other days would come to
-her and she would try again and again to change him. He was the father
-of her children and she must save him. Thus the years had passed. Then
-the uncle died and failed to remember Jack in his will. The firm changed
-hands and he lost his position. That was over a year ago, and though
-friends had helped him and other positions had been secured, he lost one
-after another. No one wanted a man who could not be trusted.
-
-An old acquaintance who had known her family lived in the city. He had
-told her to come to him if she was ever in any trouble. She thanked him
-and said she would. That was in the second year of her marriage and she
-had said in jest, “Of course I will.”
-
-Her third child was four months old now and her piano was gone for the
-mortgage. She felt weak and helpless, for now she saw that Jack was a
-wreck, incapable of looking after them. She had never earned her own
-living, and how were her children to be supported? “I thought I was
-doing wonders when I did my own work and took care of them, but what am
-I to do now?” she questioned herself. She sat down and thought and
-presently she remembered the promise of her old acquaintance. “He told
-me to come to him and I will ask him to lend me some money until I am of
-age.” She went to his home in the evening, thinking at that time she
-would be more likely to find him.
-
-As she looked around at his magnificently furnished home, she thought,
-“Of course he will help me, but I do wish I didn’t tremble so.” She
-hesitated to speak as she looked more closely at his face. “Surely I
-must be mistaken,” she thought as she realized how cold and indifferent
-his manner was. Was this the same Mr. Carron she had remembered in her
-childhood days, who had told her to come to him? How well she remembered
-his very words, his admiring glances, and the same evening, as she
-thought, accidentally, she heard him tell an acquaintance how beautiful
-she was and what a good family the Vivians were and that he considered
-Jack Moberly a lucky fellow to have won her. In her inexperience of what
-a large number of men are, who live in affluence in our large cities,
-she considered his reference to her as flattery. Now she felt sensitive
-about letting any one know of her position and the necessity of talking
-about her husband, but he had told her to come.
-
-“Mr. Carron,” she said, “I am in trouble and have come to you for
-assistance. I want to borrow some money until I am of age.” Looking at
-his hard face, she said, “I am willing to pay you any interest that you
-wish. You know I will have a legacy from my father’s estate then.”
-
-“Why, Mrs. Moberly,” he began, “I would like to help you very much, but
-I don’t quite see my way. I hear your husband is gambling and drinking
-and not taking care of you and I don’t see how you can ever repay it.
-Now, if it were not for him, I wouldn’t mind giving you a lift. You must
-know that I have many cases of charity coming to me all the time, and I
-am sorry to say that they are more urgent than your case can possibly
-be. I don’t see how I can help you. Of course, you haven’t told me all
-about your troubles, but I know all about these matters. Ladies imagine
-they have troubles.” He had gone that far when she realized if she
-remained in his presence another moment she would cry aloud. He had been
-her only refuge and he had not only refused her, but called her request
-charity. Crushed and helpless, she wished him good night and went out
-into the darkness. Then she realized the straits they were in. The tears
-she had restrained came now, in spite of all she could do, so she walked
-on as quickly as she could for fear some one would speak to her. Oh, the
-misery of it all as she remembered the little faces that had looked so
-appealingly to her when she could only give them sufficient food to keep
-them alive and now she cried, “Oh, God! What shall I do? What shall I
-do?”
-
-[Illustration]
-
-She had no car fare and it was dark. The shortest way home was across a
-lot of vacant property and the fenced-in estate of wealthy men. The
-streets were lighted only on the corners and between them was dark, for
-it was in the fall of the year. She had two miles to go and fully
-one-half was dark. It was the first time in her life that she had been
-out on the street alone in the dark and she was afraid. When no houses
-were in sight she ran on and on and at last a man met her about half way
-in one of the darkest spots. She remembered all the terrible things she
-had read in the papers of men assaulting women. Still he came nearer and
-nearer and when close enough to ask her a question, it was only about
-the locality. She was trembling so much she couldn’t answer him. In her
-fear she had forgotten her unsuccessful mission. Now it loomed up before
-her with renewed force. She had been refused help! Another dark stretch
-of the street was before her. She had walked nearly three miles,
-counting the walk there and the distance back, but there was no help for
-it, and she began running, crying as she ran, imploring God to help her
-and not to let her children starve. “They say there is a God of the
-fatherless and the widows, but is there none for the drunkard’s wife and
-his children?” she cried in her misery.
-
-The next day she was ill in bed, her baby cried and there was no one to
-care for them, all was confusion, and a neighbor called and offered
-help. In her gratitude she told her of the state she was in and also how
-her old acquaintance had treated her.
-
-“Oh, yes, you might have known that he wouldn’t help you,” she said,
-“for he is a hard man.”
-
-“Then why did he tell me to come to him? I never supposed I should need
-help when he offered.”
-
-“Oh, he knew the signs of the times better than you did. He possibly
-thought you might become like many others at such a time, and then when
-you came to him he would know how to get around you.”
-
-“Oh, no, no, Mrs. Carr, he couldn’t have had such a thought. I cannot
-believe it.” Then Mrs. Carr said, “Why didn’t he help you?”
-
-“I don’t know, but he could not be so cruel as that.”
-
-“Well, I don’t think he could have been worse than he has been. Now I am
-going to tell you what to do, Mrs. Moberly, so you can earn a little
-money. Sell your best furniture. Fit up your dining room and kitchen for
-yourself and your children and rent the rest.”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIII.
-
-
-In a few weeks, she had her rooms rented to gentlemen, but they only
-stayed one week at a time. She saw it was on account of the children,
-who would cry at night sometimes. Her friend and adviser then said,
-“Take women, for you must live and no one wants them in rooms; do your
-best and give them the use of your kitchen.” The house filled; she could
-pay her rent and gas bill, with a little over. Her husband had been
-keeping sober now for a long time. Perhaps he had reformed—how she hoped
-that he had. A friend took him up again and got him something to do, but
-he had to travel and that left her alone with the children. Six weeks
-had passed since he had left. All the money she had to live upon for the
-four of them, counting the baby, was $3.00 per week and they lived in an
-expensive city. She had eaten bread enough to keep her alive, no butter,
-not even syrup. She drank the weakest tea, sweetened to soak the bread
-in. For six long weeks nothing else had passed her lips. One evening one
-of the roomers found her sitting with her baby in her lap, her elbows on
-the table, her hands holding her temples, while her poor little baby was
-trying to nurse her dry breast, tugging and pounding it with his little
-fists, kicking, and occasionally giving vent in a disappointed, pitiful
-cry. The roomer spoke to her, but she was unconscious from the pain in
-her head, caused by starvation. The woman took the baby and fed it and
-got it to sleep, then did what she could for the mother, working over
-her all night. In a few days her husband came home, but only for a day.
-He had brought her a few dollars, all he could spare, he had said, after
-paying his own board and expenses. In leaving, he took a heavier coat
-and left the one he had been wearing hanging up among her things. In
-taking it down, a letter dropped from its pocket that she found was
-addressed to herself. The stamp showed that it had been received a year
-before. She found that it was an answer supposed to have come from her
-to a money lender who got their piano. She went to him to see what it
-meant and found that her husband had imitated her writing and had
-received from him about a fifth of the money she was to have received
-from her father’s estate; by this act the money lender was able to
-secure it all. What had Jack done with it? In the midst of all the rest
-of her poverty he had robbed her of that! The money lender could send
-him to prison if she demanded it from him. This was the last straw! She
-wrote to him never to come back.
-
-It had been hard enough to bear children and then support them, but
-injury to insult had followed. What was she now? A drunken gambler’s
-wife—ah, even worse than that—he was a forger as well. Her twenty-first
-birthday would soon be here. Oh, how she had looked forward to that
-time! She had intended going to her mother and telling her all and
-asking what she should do for her children, but it was impossible now.
-
-One day a new roomer told her she wished she knew of some one who could
-sew fur, as she needed help.
-
-Mira said, “I would like to learn it if you will teach me.” That was the
-first time she had ever seen it done but she went at it diligently until
-she was as proficient as her teacher. It was paying work and she soon
-found that she could make her living by it.
-
-We left her reading her mother’s letter filled with messages of love and
-begging her to come back to them once more, if only for a short visit.
-Oh, if she only could! How little they knew at home of her hard
-struggle! Possibly they thought she was as selfish as she had been when
-she left them all. When it was over she would tell them, but not before.
-
-Only one year before, she shuddered as she remembered how she had walked
-through the streets of the wealthy and fashionable people, trying to
-find the person who had answered her advertisement for fur work. As she
-passed the well lighted homes on the streets and saw the luxury, she
-realized how she had become year by year poorer. Happy faces, free from
-care, were in those homes.
-
-Finally she found the place. The lady had given the work to another, so
-she had her walk for nothing. Weary in mind and body, she returned home.
-There were her children huddled together on the couch. Evidently they
-had cried themselves to sleep. The oldest had the baby in her arms. “My
-God! what a contrast to the homes I have just had a glimpse of,” she
-thought. “How I have worked and struggled and tried to live in the last
-two years. Did I say ‘two’? It seems a century. What is the use of it
-all? These children may have to do the same as I when they grow up. I
-would sooner see them dead than go through it. I don’t wonder at people
-taking the lives of those they are responsible for, as well as their
-own, and yet how could they?”
-
-Just as this thought had crossed her mind, little Freddie aroused and
-was in her arms in a moment. “Oh, mamma, I did cry so hard for you and
-you didn’t come. Little baby cried and Nellie, her cried, too. I’se
-hungry, mamma, awful hungry.”
-
-“My darling, I don’t wonder you cried. I have been gone a long time, but
-mother couldn’t help it, darling; mother couldn’t help it. There, you
-have awakened the baby. Oh, children, do be quiet,” for all three were
-crying by this time.
-
-It took her fully an hour to get them all quiet and asleep. Next day,
-first one and then another of her roomers came to tell her that they had
-to leave. Some made one excuse, some another; only one told her the
-truth, saying, “You ought to know better than to keep people in your
-house when your children cry as they did last night. I hate to leave
-you, but it unnerves me to hear such a racket. I work hard all day and
-must rest at night. This is the third time now. You ought to put them in
-a home like other women do.” It was this that made her decide to go to
-the colony that was near the city she had been living in. It was one of
-the many branches that had been successful and had been exchanging with
-the original society in its productions.
-
-That spring found her living comfortably among green fields and free to
-earn a living by renting tents to those who only wished to stay in the
-country a few weeks at a time. Her baby was then two years old and she
-kept him in the nursery; this left her free to attend to her business,
-as the other children were in the boarding school.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIV.
-
-
-Mrs. Moberly was looking forward to the time when she could secure
-enough money to take her back to the relatives she had left so many
-years before. Little by little she was selling her household goods, the
-members securing customers so as to help her. Any new members coming to
-the colony were asked to buy of her, if they needed anything. The story
-would be told over and over again how that she hadn’t seen her mother
-for many years. She had sold everything except the things she needed for
-her personal use. The new comers had been told how she rented tents in
-the summer by putting her surplus furniture in them, and many bought to
-do the same thing. She had now enough to cover all her expenses for
-traveling when who should appear but her husband. He was well dressed
-and upon asking for her was told at once where to find her. No one
-suspected who he was.
-
-“Mira, don’t drive me away. I am sorry that I treated you as I did,” he
-said. “I want to see my children. Where are they?”
-
-“Jack Moberly, how dare you even come in my presence after the wrong you
-have done me?”
-
-“Mira, I must see the children.”
-
-“They are not here,” she answered, “and neither can you see them until
-you have assured me that you will go away after you have seen them.”
-
-“Mira, won’t you live with me again?” he begged. “I love you. I love my
-children.”
-
-She looked at him for a moment, and a great longing came to her that it
-might be true.
-
-“No,” she said, “a man who could leave a woman to get along the best she
-could with his helpless children, has no heart.” As she gazed at him,
-all the misery he had caused her seemed to pass before her like a
-panorama. She even wondered at herself. Here was the man who turned her
-head in her youth and inexperience, who had been the magnet that had
-drawn her away from all that she had held most dear. As he stood before
-her for the first time in three years, she could think of but one thing
-and that was to get him away.
-
-He had only told her that he loved her to hear what she would say. He
-laughed to himself at the joke. He had a curiosity to see her and the
-children and nothing more. Just as though he would give up Rosy for this
-thin, careworn woman, who at any time might upbraid him for his past
-life. Then, besides, he thought, “who wants to be tied to a woman? I had
-enough of it. Rosy suits me now, and if I get tired of her, there are
-others.”
-
-Finally he promised he would leave as soon as he had seen the children.
-She took him to the public parlor, not wishing to leave him in her
-apartment and then went to the school for them. In about fifteen
-minutes, she had them before him, not a little proud to show him how
-well she had been able to get along without him. They approached him
-rather timidly, as they would a stranger, even Nellie feeling the change
-and neglect. His whole attention was given, however, to Freddie, who ran
-up to him.
-
-“You know papa, don’t you, my boy?”
-
-“Of course I do,” said the little fellow, as he cuddled up to him.
-
-Mira noticed that he did not look at the others, but that he could not
-take his eyes off of Freddie.
-
-“My poor little boy,” he said. Then tears came to his eyes.
-
-It was harder than Mira had anticipated. The man really seemed to have
-some feeling for his boy, but the thought came to her, “It is only one
-of his outbursts. The man is not all bad, but too vile for me to have
-any more of these meetings.” Then he turned to her and asked if she
-would not live with him, if she at least would not give him the boy, for
-she had the other two.
-
-With one rush, she grabbed the child and ordered him to leave her,
-reminding him of his promise.
-
-“Give you my child!” she said in scorn.
-
-“You forget he is mine as well as yours,” he replied, “and the law will
-give him to me, so you had better take care.”
-
-Their gestures and loud voices frightened the children and their cries
-brought the superintendent of the building.
-
-Mira explained and the superintendent told him that he must not come
-there; that Mrs. Moberly was there under their protection.
-
-He turned to her and hissed between his teeth, “I see you have some man
-keeping you.”
-
-That was too much.
-
-“You insolent wretch,” she exclaimed, “Go!”
-
-The superintendent touched a button. Two able bodied men appeared and
-Jack Moberly left quietly.
-
-After he had gone she decided to get away to her relatives as soon as
-possible. Now that he had started to come back he might annoy her in
-many ways.
-
-The few shares that she had were transferred to the original society
-where Tom and her family were, so she telegraphed them that she was
-coming home sooner than she had intended. Then the journey began. Over
-two thousand miles were to be covered and they must travel night and
-day. “Only eight hundred more,” she said to herself, as they were
-changing cars and were walking around the large station, looking at the
-many different kinds of people, all waiting for their trains to be
-called. Suddenly, she fancied she saw a face that looked like Jack, but
-she came to the conclusion that it couldn’t be, that she was mistaken.
-So many look alike when you are traveling, she mused, and thought no
-more about it.
-
-After they had been on the train some time, a nicely dressed lady made
-herself attentive to the children. She gave them candy and showed them
-pictures in the book she had until finally Freddie took up his quarters
-in the seat with her. All day long she amused him and the others. She
-became friendly with Mrs. Moberly also and they chatted about the
-children and other things. Mira began to feel a relief at having some
-one to help care for the children.
-
-The second evening, this lady proposed that Freddie should sleep with
-her as she was alone in her berth and it would give Mrs. Moberly more
-room. Freddie was delighted with the idea, so it was arranged. Mira and
-the other children had slept well all night and were aroused by the
-porter, announcing that she should get off at the next city. She dressed
-herself, then the two children and started to find Freddie. She found
-that no such persons had been seen since the middle of the night when a
-man, woman and child had left the train. From the description of the man
-she knew it was Jack. They also said they heard the child call him papa.
-Poor Mira! And this was her homecoming, her poor little child at the
-mercy of that man!
-
-Just then the name of the city was announced and all left the train.
-Everything was changed and strange to her, but there was Tom, dear old
-Tom. He would know just what to do about Freddie, and there was her
-mother and Scoris. They didn’t know her and were looking in every
-direction, but there she was. At last she reached them and tried to
-attract their attention but it was too much for her and she fainted at
-their feet. All was confusion and even then they could not recognize
-her, she had changed so much. Nellie explained, “It is because Freddie
-has gone. Papa took him away last night.” She began to cry, for this was
-not the introduction she had pictured in meeting her grandma or the
-aunts and Uncle Tom. The family then realized that it was Mira and her
-family that was before them. They had her carried into the waiting room
-until she recovered consciousness; then when she told them what had
-occurred Tom promised to find him. She told them about her life in the
-six years since she had left them.
-
-They tried to show her it was necessary to keep up her strength so that
-at the proper time she could give the information that would be needed
-not only in regard to Jack, but the woman who had assisted in stealing
-the child.
-
-Detectives were sent out and Mira began to rally, yet no clue amounted
-to anything. Disappointments seemed to be the order of the day. Nothing
-resulted from any clue they were given. Advertisements also failed, and
-she often wondered, “Had he followed, or had he seen them by chance?”
-All the misery she had endured was as nothing to this terrible
-uncertainty of the child being uncared for, and the longing to see him
-once more was intense.
-
-“Freddie, my boy, my boy,” she would cry out in her agony, “I must, I
-must see you.”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XV.
-
-
-Mrs. Vivian, Scoris and Helen had been living in the colony for two
-years before Mira came. Scoris still did drawings for illustrations and
-Helen was doing well at writing for magazines and the society paper.
-
-Their apartments were nicely fitted up, each one having one room, while
-they shared the parlor together. They had intended to secure one more
-room for they often had their meals sent to them when they were
-unusually busy, instead of going down to the dining room, but since Mira
-and her children arrived they all saw that she must have help.
-
-She couldn’t live in the same apartment building because children were
-not allowed there nor were the conveniences the same as in those built
-for children. They had tried to persuade her to leave them in the
-nursery and for her to live with them, but she couldn’t be separated
-from them at night. Jack might come and steal them, she said. “They are
-all right in the daytime, but at night I must have them in sight.”
-
-“Poor girl,” her mother had said, “we can do without the extra room and
-secure two for her, besides help to provide for the children.”
-
-“Yes, indeed,” Scoris had answered, “this help to her now will be worth
-more to her than an extra room to us.”
-
-“Our sympathy without practical help wouldn’t be very cheering,” Helen
-said, “and I intend to provide for one of the children until they are
-old enough to provide for themselves.”
-
-“And I shall support the other,” Scoris declared.
-
-“She has had her share of punishment for her willfulness,” her mother
-remarked, “and the least we can do is to relieve her of some of her
-burden. How my heart has yearned to see her all these years, and I am
-willing to give up anything to help her. I think Libra will assist her
-also, but she must keep herself busy; it is the only thing that will
-help her to bear this new trial.”
-
-[Illustration]
-
-One day Scoris and her mother were having a chat by themselves when
-Scoris said:
-
-“Mother, do you know that you are constantly spoken of as the mother of
-the Vivian family?”
-
-“Well, Scoris, why shouldn’t I be called your mother?”
-
-“Because you are as much to be honored as any one, and if, as is the
-custom now among us, you were called ‘The Hon. Mary Vivian,’ that would
-settle it without further pretext. Being Tom’s mother is not a personal
-honor, but being an honorable woman, you should stand the challenge. We
-are all called ‘Honorable’ but you, and naturally we want you to hold
-the first rank among our social acquaintances. The title is given so all
-may know whom to trust.”
-
-“But, Scoris dear, I am not in any business, so what difference does it
-make? I like the old ways that I am accustomed to. The name of Mrs.
-Vivian has always designated who I am.”
-
-“Very well, mother, do as you like. We would sooner you were taking the
-honors because they, like a uniform, show where each person belongs. In
-our old town the name was sufficient, but customs have changed. People
-are thinking more deeply than they used to do and it has become
-necessary to classify our members so all may know where each stands. The
-old families were honored because of their wealth and their influence
-and their ability to employ dependent people.”
-
-“Well, my dear, what has this to do with me?”
-
-“The society wishes to honor you because your life has been honorable in
-every way. You are a woman of good, sound judgment and are badly needed
-in the Council. Only honorable members can sit in the Council and we are
-anxious to have an equal number of men and women preside. Only women can
-understand all that is in a woman’s life, and they must not shirk from
-their duty. Both women’s and children’s interests are involved and until
-the members become more accustomed to seeing their interests as fully
-recognized as the men, they will suffer. It is the duty of our Council
-to define carefully the value of every man, woman and child’s labor, for
-there is a mental as well as a physical value to be considered and this
-needs fine calculating. Only one just and right way is by the profits
-when the products are either sold or exchanged. The profit must be the
-value awarded all equally. If a child earns as much as a grown person,
-that child must receive the same amount. Mother, you have thought more
-deeply than the majority of women and have the faculty of seeing the
-point at issue more clearly than most women, or men, either, for that
-matter.”
-
-“You know the strawberries were picked by children mostly this year.
-Well, do you know those children didn’t get as much as the grownup
-people for the same labor?”
-
-“Well, why not?”
-
-“Because some of the Council argued that children’s time was not of as
-much value as an adult’s. Now that was not just under this new system,
-for it aims to give full value for the labor done, no matter by whom. I
-claim that when the berries were sold for the same price as those picked
-by adults, that the children had the same right to the profits.”
-
-“So do I. But you know I have never had anything to do with public
-affairs and am pretty old to be drawn into it now.”
-
-“There is one thing certain, mother, you cannot start younger, so please
-think it over, for you are needed.”
-
-Not long after this Mrs. Vivian heard an old woman and the secretary
-counting how much was coming to her from her summer’s work. He looked
-over the accounts and told her. Mrs. Vivian thought it was a small
-amount. She remembered how hard the poor old soul had worked all summer,
-never losing a day and being always ready to do everything. A young man
-asked about his account and was told, but Mrs. Vivian knew the young
-fellow and was familiar with his habits. She knew that he had not worked
-as the old woman had, still he had double the amount to his credit and
-they had both done the same amount of work.
-
-Mrs. Vivian had a talk with the woman a few days afterwards. She saw her
-limping along when Mrs. Vivian questioned her. She said she was thankful
-to be allowed to stay in the colony as she had been unable to pay the
-dues.
-
-“Of course,” she added, “I got all I asked, but I wish I could earn more
-so I would be sure that when I die I will be decently buried. I don’t
-want my body in the potters’ field. My back aches awful bad,” she said,
-“I can’t sleep for the pain at night.”
-
-She passed on, but Mrs. Vivian couldn’t forget the conversation. She
-kept thinking to herself, “That woman ought to have as much as that man,
-if not more, and I am going to find out why she didn’t get it.” So she
-asked the foreman.
-
-“Well,” he said, “she came here without any recommendation. She said she
-was willing to work for her food and a place to sleep. I consulted the
-president and he said to take her and see if she was capable of
-anything, if so, to let her stay a while.”
-
-“Now, foreman,” Mrs. Vivian said, “don’t all get the same price for the
-same work?”
-
-“Oh, no,” he said. “These outsiders don’t ask so much; in fact, don’t
-expect as much as the members who pay in their dues.”
-
-“Poor souls,” Mrs. Vivian said. “Some way must be found to supply them
-with work enough to keep them from living in misery. If they have to
-work I shall see that they are paid for all they earn.”
-
-Next day Mrs. Vivian told Scoris that she wanted to apply for the title
-and she wished she had done so before.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XVI.
-
-
-“Oh, mother,” she said, “I am so glad, for I made application for you. I
-was sorry you did not see the advantage of it, and now there will be
-just time enough for your name to be advertised, so you can get it on
-the first coronation day. I was sure you were too good a soldier to let
-old-fashioned ideas hold you back. No good woman will stand idle in
-these days, especially when so many are needed to face the foes of
-humanity. Why was that poor woman afraid to ask sufficient for her
-labor? Because she didn’t know that her labor was wealth.
-
-“Many old men and women who had been poor all their lives, who had never
-known anything but poverty, were given light work to do, such as
-gardening with short hours, under the direction of a competent gardener.
-In this way the grounds in the colony had been beautified, trees had
-been planted, waterways dug. The women helped to take care of infants in
-the nursery for a few hours each day, or do necessary housework,
-mending, etc. As the society was formed to secure homes, it was as easy
-to feed these poor creatures as it was animals, and they could earn what
-they got also.
-
-“The majority of people crave independence. Did you ever see a number as
-large as we have here take such pride in pointing out the beauties of
-the place? You see it is their wealth. Their labor has been expended to
-make it what it is. It is so much more to be enjoyed than a park that
-any one can use, so, of course all take great pride in it. It is so
-lovely to be able to step down from our apartments and crossing the
-street enter a thick foliage, swing hammocks among the trees and look up
-into the beautiful green so restful to the eyes. To lie there seems like
-a taste of heaven.”
-
-“Yes, Scoris, I agree with you and when I remember that it is my son who
-has been the leader in bringing out this happy state of affairs, I am
-very much gratified, and, oh, so proud! I feel that all the old
-warriors, who have been honored for their share in all the great changes
-that have come to the world, have not done more than he has, if as much.
-Under this system wars will cease. I have had quite a talk with an old
-friend on this subject. Your father and I met her years ago, while
-abroad. Her oldest son was killed in one of the late wars and two others
-wounded. One is blind and the other had both legs amputated, one below
-the knee and the other above. He wears artificial limbs as a result. All
-three had wives. I asked if the cause they had fought for was worth the
-glory; if the duty they had been called upon to perform for their
-country, the bloodshed, the blindness of her son and the mutilation of
-the others, the total loss of the oldest one had been any alleviation.
-‘No,’ said she, ‘oh, no; but of course they were honored for their
-heroism. One has been knighted and both receive a pension and the widow
-of the oldest son also has a pension, but of course it would not support
-them without our help. They were all such good, brave boys. I shall
-always feel very proud of them.’
-
-“‘So am I proud of my son,’ I remarked. Well, dear, I shall never forget
-her face nor the effect the remark had upon her as she mentally drew the
-picture.”
-
-“‘Your son, the General, you mean? Oh, but he is a genius, you know.’ ‘I
-believe your sons were also,’ I said. ‘All were brave men and ready to
-do their duty as they saw it.’
-
-“‘Well,’ she said, as she sighed, ‘I would have been one of the happiest
-of women today if they had only seen the facts as your son did. You all
-have in prospect a much larger income than my living sons are receiving
-from the government. You have them all alive and whole with you, not one
-maimed, or one who has had to suffer as mine did. Your son is more
-honored than any man who ever conducted an army of men. No title
-conferred upon him can ever adequately describe how much he is
-appreciated, and your daughters and his splendid wife are equally
-admired for the part they have taken in this movement. Now see the
-difference: my poor Frank is dead; the others have only the merest
-pittance to live upon; they only exist, for it is not living to be
-blind, nor to be crippled as they are, and the cause was not won or the
-enemy vanquished. Then that war raised the taxes to such an enormous sum
-that it leaves us very little to take us through life, considering our
-habits and mode of living.’
-
-“I asked her if she knew we considered this movement in the light of
-war? She said, ‘Why, no, how can it be?’ I told her it was a bloodless
-one, nevertheless a war upon all oppression; that the rich were
-determined to keep the working people in all subjection, and that as the
-working people outnumbered the moneyed class they could tie up all kinds
-of industry and that by their united efforts showed that the odds were
-just about even. When the laborers become indignant and the strikes rule
-for a time, there is only distress for the majority and another lesson
-learned by those in power to divert their minds in some other quarter
-until they could outwit them, or keep them out of employment until all
-their savings were gone. The people have never had justice until this
-society secured land for them and started all their industries running.
-Now the trusts can bring all the emigrants from other countries to take
-the place of the home laborers that they like, and the society is
-gathering them in and sending them further out on to the land where they
-are being self-supporting and at the same time could not interfere with
-the wages of the people.
-
-“‘Well,’ she said, ‘I never bother about these things. They only excite
-me. I really think a gradual evolution is taking place and the right
-results will come in the long run.’
-
-“I told her that I had once felt as she did on the subject, but I had
-known many persons to prepare for a journey and to miss the train on
-account of their indifference to the time table.
-
-“‘My not knowing that there was a war of conquest,’ she said, ‘of more
-consequence to us all than the ones my sons fought in has left me in my
-old age a very sorrowful woman. Think if we had only had our thoughts
-directed in this greater cause of justice, I and my boys might have been
-living in comfort and affluence instead’—then she broke down and cried
-so bitterly that she broke me up also. You see, Scoris, she had never
-realized that she had any part in the world’s great events. She wanted
-them to excel and as the army glorifies the successful ones, there was a
-chance for her sons. I feel sorry for her, but I also feel sorry for the
-unthinking thousands who are venturing along life’s paths, unprepared
-for the future.”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XVII.
-
-
-So many changes had been brought about since the society started that a
-large number had leased land for a long term of years, building their
-own houses or cottages near the colony after they saw the advantages of
-the society. They did not like to live in the apartment houses or
-hotels, nor did they care to have their children in the boarding
-schools, but did like the system of revenue that came so regularly from
-the factories, stock farms, cotton plantations, etc., and the short
-hours that all the members had to give to the society’s industries.
-These people lived where they liked. Their shares were placed in the
-different industries. As they already owned their homes it secured them
-a regular income. It also provided for the future of each member of
-their family, instead of an insurance; all saw its advantages and
-appreciated the fact that they could become honored members of the
-society. It gave them rank that nothing else could, because the members
-wouldn’t allow dishonest people to be called Honorables. All sorts of
-discussions took place for and against the idea of having children under
-a system of government. It generally came from the older people or from
-those with large incomes. It had caused a prejudice to arise among many
-and naturally they talked it over. One lady, a Mrs. Holmes, had
-pronounced it a breaking up of homes, and her father had written several
-articles about it in the papers. He was coming on a visit. When he
-arrived he looked into the subject.
-
-“Yes, indeed, you may count upon me in opposing all such ideas as that.
-Our little children should be right in the home with us.”
-
-So they arranged to have a party come to discuss the matter, for and
-against it. He had only been with them a few days when it was arranged
-to have the meeting. The hour was to be at three o’clock in the
-afternoon. Now it was just two when Mrs. Holmes came into the library
-where her father was sitting and said:
-
-“Papa, would you like to have the care of the little ones for half an
-hour or so? I will have to go to the dressmaker.”
-
-“Certainly,” he answered, “I would be delighted to have them all to
-myself.”
-
-She replied, “I let the nurse go out this afternoon, not knowing that I
-would have to try on my dress, and tomorrow will be my reception day.
-The baby is asleep and these two little ones will keep you company. Cook
-will attend the door if any one comes, so I will go now and be back in
-time for the meeting.” As she waved her hands, saying, “Bye-bye,
-precious ones, be good children and amuse grandpa,” she closed the door
-and was gone.
-
-Grandpa held a child on each knee. This was an event in their lives, to
-have grandpa all to themselves.
-
-“Well,” he says, “what shall we do while mamma is away?”
-
-“Oh,” says five-year-old May, “let’s play horse and let me ride on your
-back.”
-
-“No, me,” cried Roy, while May climbed the quickest and got there. Roy
-pulled her feet and they quarreled until grandpa decided that he would
-get down on all fours, then both could get on, while May held on to her
-doll. Away they went, in and out of the two rooms, the children laughing
-and screaming as they lurched from side to side in danger of falling,
-while grandpa enjoyed the fun almost as much as they, even though he was
-puffing and blowing. When that failed to amuse they played hide and
-seek. Grandpa soon discovered that he is not so young as he used to be
-and laid back in the big arm chair to rest.
-
-“Now, children, you play a little while by yourselves,” he said, as he
-put his hands to his head.
-
-“Now you amused us,” said May, “so it is our turn and we will amuse you.
-Want your head rubbed? I can do it like mamma rubs papa’s when he’s all
-tired out.” She looked at him so coaxingly that he said:
-
-“Yes, to be sure.”
-
-“All right,” she consented, climbing to the back of his chair and
-running her fingers through his hair. She did it so quietly and
-soothingly as she scratched gently back and forth, that he thought to
-himself, “What a little fairy she is!” He got no further, for sleep had
-claimed him and May soon discovered this.
-
-Grandpa had nice long hair, so here was her opportunity, for she loved
-to braid hair. She would do it so gently and “My! wouldn’t he be glad
-when he saw how pretty she had made it!” Then she espied some wool in a
-work basket of her mother’s. Such pretty colors—blue, green, yellow, red
-and white! “What a lot,” she said in glee. In a little while she had
-gone all over his head and fine little braids were standing out in all
-directions tied with wool. As she stood admiring her handiwork, her eye
-detected Roy in the next room teasing her kitten. He saw by her glance
-what was coming. In two seconds he had bounded up the back stairs,
-flying madly on and on until he reached the nursery, then he fell. She
-grabbed the kitten. Roy set up a howl and baby awakened. May quieted
-baby, took it up and set it on the floor, then started after Roy again,
-who had made off with the kitten.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-At this moment the door bell rang. The cook ushered in several
-strangers. It was three o’clock and the committee had arrived. The
-confusion awakened the old gentleman asleep in the chair. Just as the
-door opened, he straightened down his vest, smoothed his trousers and
-believed he was all right. He advanced to explain that his daughter
-would be in in a moment, and noticed that they were looking at him
-strangely and laughing so hard they could not speak. He rushed into the
-hall only to see his daughter acting worse than those in the library.
-She was stealthily running up stairs, and as he looked up to the top
-step he saw the eight months’ old baby kicking his heels and seeming to
-be enjoying the situation, as the mother cried, “Wait for mother,
-darling, wait—” Just then the baby sprang forward and she caught him
-only in time to keep him from going head first to the bottom of the
-stairs. There she sat the tears streaming down her face while she hugged
-her baby. She looked down upon hearing her father’s voice and roared
-with laughter. He, thinking that she was hysterical, begged her to calm
-herself. It was all she could do between screaming and laughing to hold
-her child, he looked so funny. By this time every one was in the hall,
-roaring as they looked at the staid old gentleman. His daughter led him
-to the mirror. It is needless to say that there was no meeting. Their
-arguments were answered before begun. Children are safer when certain
-people are responsible for their care and welfare. The society heard no
-more about families growing apart.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XVIII.
-
-
-On a bright afternoon, two old men could be seen strolling along
-leisurely, talking of the difference the society had made in their
-lives.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-“Who would have thought fifteen years ago, John, that you and I could be
-living in the comfort and ease that we are today? The most comfortable
-house ever built on ground, large or small, when built separately, could
-never have the advantage these _apartment_ buildings have. Our large
-windows give the necessary light we old people need, and I tell you when
-the eyesight is dim, especially when we had good sight, it is very hard
-to go stumbling along, especially in your own home. I think the
-society’s determination to preserve its light and air and not allow the
-buildings to be crowded together, is a very great advantage. It suits
-me, I can tell you.”
-
-“The variety in the cooking is what I like,” said Mr. White. “When our
-girls got married and wife and I had the farm to ourselves, she seemed
-all played out and couldn’t cook as she used to. Then one after the
-other of the boys left us and went to the cities. They thought the farm
-work was too hard, when they could have the money in their hand each
-week, and it seemed a lot to them out on the farm, where they had no
-board bills to pay, but they have found out the difference and I have
-now arranged to have them all here now. When I signed over my farm to
-the society all three came out in a great state of mind. They thought I
-had done them an injustice. I told them, ‘You must remember that after
-your mother and I had raised you and worked hard to keep the place
-together, first paying for it when you children were too young to be of
-any help, we fairly begged you to stay with us and help us when you were
-grown up. Oh, no, the city was the only place for you then.’ Then I
-said, ‘Do you think we are going to work and pay out all we can rake and
-scrape together for hired men to work the place, so you boys can have it
-after our death? Have we no rights? Are you children of more consequence
-than we are? Who earned it?’
-
-“Well, they didn’t like the way I was doing it. What was I going to do
-with the stock? I told them I had given it all over to the society and
-arranged it so that wife and I had permanent shares in exchange to keep
-us in comfort the rest of our lives. We also had the satisfaction of
-seeing younger men and women earning enough to make up any deficiency in
-a way that you would not do if we should need it.
-
-“‘Well, what will become of your shares after your death?’ one said.
-
-“‘They will go to the society,’ I told them unless they joined it. In
-that case I could leave them to my children if they would do as other
-members would and increase their own shares. I told them that all had to
-look ahead for their old age if they became members, for the society was
-representing wealth and wouldn’t take any one that would spend
-everything they earned while in the freshness of youth. I said that they
-could easily save enough in the next fifteen years to make them
-comfortable the rest of their lives if they became members and I wished
-that they would. Then I asked them why they didn’t tell us that it was
-more loneliness than hard work that took them to the city. They looked
-surprised and one said that it wasn’t. I told them that I had thought it
-was, since I had lived in the community where all could hear good music
-and lectures, see good plays and something worth listening to in the
-conversation with those one came in contact with. I had become convinced
-that they were right in leaving the farm, and I did not blame them.
-
-“‘Still you don’t secure your property to us?’ one said.
-
-“‘Oh, no,’ I told them. ‘If you boys have not the ability to earn
-sufficient for your old age, you don’t deserve to have anything. These
-young men and women who are keeping up the work in the society have the
-best right to what I leave, unless you show that you will do as they are
-doing.’
-
-“Oh, yes, young people can leave their parents just at the time when
-they are most needed and if in after years there is any property left,
-they think it a great hardship if their parents leave it to any one
-else.”
-
-The old friends talked on and presently their wives joined them. They,
-too, had been taking a walk and hearing the last of the conversation,
-gave some of their ideas of the society.
-
-“What I like about it,” remarked Mrs. White, “is the freedom from care.
-On the farm it is continual work, late and early, looking after the
-stock and feeding or growing food. Now I can rest. Our apartments need
-only a little straightening and dusting once a week. Each day while I
-make the bed, husband waters the flowers and I must say I like the wide
-porches with the boxes of plants on the edges. We make the porch our
-sitting room in the summer and when winter comes, the windows are so
-large, we can keep a nice lot of them and send the rest to the
-greenhouses.”
-
-The four walked along and talked of the society and wondered they had
-not thought of it years before. The short hours the young people have to
-work and exercise the different portions of their body until it becomes
-a pleasure to be employed, is a great change from the drudgery of the
-past.
-
-Mrs. Brown here stated that she expected their married son to come on in
-about a month or six weeks.
-
-“We have arranged for him to receive our permanent shares after our
-death,” Mr. Brown said. “He, like your boys, did not see what advantages
-the society offered him until we reminded him that our permanent shares
-could go to him, but he would have to keep increasing his own shares. It
-was hard for him to understand that we were leaving a certain amount in
-consumable shares and using them in our living. He is not very strong
-and his wife thinks they can have the children in the nursery and she
-can work in one of the factories to help them out while the children are
-small. We told them the advantage they would have of buying their food
-already cooked, leaving her free to earn all that she could while the
-children would have the advantage of every kind of learning that their
-minds were capable of receiving, or their age or strength permitted.
-
-“You were not here last year, Mrs. Brown, when the men all came home
-from the wheatfields? I suppose you know the society sends all our men
-that are required to harvest the grain. Well, they have to go hundreds
-of miles away and the last few years when they return they bring the
-unmarried men back with them; that is, all who wish to come, to spend
-the winter in the Colony. Only a few were married when the Colony
-started, so many men go out and take up the land on the prairies and
-bush land also. Well, they get settled there and for years never have a
-chance to see any women to speak of. Now our Colony invites them to come
-here during the winter and, if they want it, we find them work. However,
-many come to share the social advantages and to learn the new ideas that
-are being taught. It makes the winter very lively, I can tell you. I
-never saw so many marriages as this exchange of interests brings about
-and they are the right kind, too. This bringing the unmarried men from
-those new parts of the country back here where they can find wives and
-the sending of our able bodied men out there to work for the summer is
-exchanging with a vengeance.”
-
-“But do our men want to go out there?” asked Mr. Brown.
-
-“Certainly,” says Mr. White, “they volunteer. You see our steam wagons
-make it possible for them to go with very little expense. They are
-fitted up with folding beds, cooking utensils, and with the use of
-gasoline for steam and to cook with we make the exchange a very easy
-one. They also bring the grain with them when they come. Our men can
-earn higher wages by going out there and of course they want to go. Then
-the novelty to the young men of sleeping wherever night overtakes them.
-The covered wagons are as comfortable as their own beds at home; then
-the advantage to the men who have the land and the grain to harvest is
-more than most people think, besides having the ready market assured
-them at prices that make it pay. It does away with the gamblers and
-stock exchange as far as the society is concerned. We store it on our
-own property. Well, here we are at our own home. I expect it is near
-dinner time, so good-bye for the present.”
-
-They then went to their apartments.
-
-A day long to be remembered was when the boys and men were expected home
-from the wheatfields. It had been a successful season and in the Colony
-all had been excitement for days, preparing for their return.
-
-“Oh, what a bright day,” a young girl exclaims as she rushes to the
-window in the morning. “I am so glad it is fine. We can all enjoy
-meeting them together out in the grounds now. I wonder who will see them
-first. I wish they would allow us to go on the watch tower. We could see
-so far away from there.”
-
-Several other girls were now at the windows and one said, “Do you see
-the dust just beyond the hill? That is them.”
-
-Then they rushed into the homes to tell the news. Soon the verandas were
-filled with expectant and happy faces, all wishing to get a glimpse of
-the dear ones returning to their homes.
-
-Such an army as it takes to attend to this industry! Nearly all are able
-bodied men and they were waving their handkerchiefs and tossing their
-hats in the excitement of getting home again. All were brown as berries.
-There were husbands and brothers, sweethearts, fathers, all to be
-welcomed and the older women were attending to the dinner for the hungry
-men and boys. It was a great event to the boys, especially those who had
-gone away for the first time. So many strangers were there to be
-entertained also. It was funny to see how shy many of the girls became.
-The sparkle of their eyes indicated their excitement as the old and the
-new comers appeared.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-All rushed to the balconies to welcome them. Such a happy, jolly lot.
-Just then the home band that had gone out to meet them struck up the
-glad strain of “Welcome Home,” while cheer after cheer sounded again and
-again. A father lifted a little child up on his shoulder after kissing
-her. She struggled and tried to get down, looking startled at such
-familiarity. Every one roared, laughing, until some one cried out, “It
-is a bad case when your own children won’t recognize you.” “This is
-papa,” you would hear in one direction, or brother, as the case might
-be, while many were trying to coax the little ones to kiss them. All
-were so tanned and dusty, yet looking well and strong.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIX.
-
-
-Geron Vivian was sitting in his arm chair. It was the day of rest, or
-should have been, but none had come to him. He was constantly thinking
-how he could manage to get back to his farm and wondering how he had
-ever been enticed to leave it.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-The salary that he had received had seemed enormous while he lived upon
-the farm, but now he reasoned, money is like holding water in your hand.
-It slips through your fingers, no matter how tightly you hold it, or how
-much you have. I have spent more money in the last four years than in
-all my lifetime before. First comes rent, gas bills, servants’ wages,
-and clothing—more needed in three months than in that many years in the
-country—and shoes! Why, they are a weekly tax for some one of the
-family; stone pavements scour them to pieces. “Then car fare—well I had
-better stop or I will have the blues worse than ever. I don’t feel quite
-myself today and I suppose I am blue from worry over that mortgage. In
-six months’ time the lease will be up and we shall go back to our home
-and when once that mortgage is paid I will never place another dollar on
-anything I own.”
-
-Walking to a large mirror he exclaimed: “Father! is it possible?” and
-then glanced around to see if any one was within hearing. “I thought it
-was he, but how old I am looking—as old as he did a short time before he
-died, and yet he was thirty years older than I. He raised a large family
-out there on the land and amassed wealth, while I have played the fool
-by coming to the city. Tom is a brighter man than I, I see now. One
-comfort I have—that interest was paid on the mortgage yesterday and if I
-can only sell those stocks, I will get that mortgage paid.”
-
-Just then Lear and Libra Shuman drove up to the door in their carriage.
-He greeted them cordially, as Grace, his wife, brought them into the
-room. The conversation became general for a time and then the ladies
-went off by themselves. Geron and Lear talked of their business affairs.
-
-Finally Geron says, “I want to sell those stocks and clear off that
-mortgage, Lear. Do you think I can do it before spring, for I intend
-going back to the farm again?”
-
-“They have gone up and down,” Lear replied, “and they must advance soon,
-so I would advise you not to be in a hurry.”
-
-“I wish they had gone up before I ever mortgaged my property to buy
-them, or down to perdition, I don’t care which,” Geron replied.
-
-“Well, you must not blame me, for I did the best I could for you. You
-wanted to give your boys a chance to attend the colleges here in the
-city and have the refining influences of association not to be had in
-the country. I am sure it has improved them and gives them a polish that
-they never would have had had they not come.”
-
-On the way home afterwards, Lear told Libra that her brother seemed to
-imply that he, Lear, was to blame for the mortgaging of the estate.
-
-“I don’t think I am,” he said. “I merely told him how he could secure
-the stock. I bought heavier of it than he. He complains because he has
-never received any dividends, only promises. Neither have I.”
-
-In about two months Geron thought he had a customer. Every evening as he
-came home the old, bright expression seemed returning. He was already
-planning for a return to the old home. Grace had begun to prepare for
-the packing, and she had just come to the front door to look over some
-plants she had felt uncertain about taking with her when who should
-stand before her but Geron, his lips drawn and his face as white as
-snow. Before she realized what he was about he had fallen across the
-floor. All was confusion. The members of the family were running about
-in all directions. A physician was summoned and said it was paralysis,
-caused by some sudden shock.
-
-In a day or two he changed his mind and declared it was brain fever
-caused by several other ailments and he must be kept quiet. Weeks went
-by and his delirium was terrible, as he shrieked, “I am ruined!” and
-then again over and over, he cried, “Watered stock, watered stock—I am
-ruined!”
-
-Then he would imagine he was on the farm again and he would tell them
-how he wanted everything done. Again he would become partly conscious
-and cry out, “All the money is gone, all is lost. We are paupers!”
-
-It took all the strength of two men to hold him at these times. Finally
-he became conscious with a full realization of his great loss, and
-almost the first word he heard was a voice in the hall, saying, “I must
-have my rent or I will send him to the hospital, and I will only wait a
-few days longer. If you have not the money for me day after tomorrow I
-will send the ambulance. He ought to be there anyway.”
-
-Poor Geron became unconscious again. In a few hours he revived and
-wanted to know what it all meant. What had happened to him?
-
-His wife implored him to be patient and not to mind until he was well
-and by coaxing succeeded in getting him quiet again. But memory would
-return and with it the awful straits they were in, but he said, “I will
-not sink under this and leave my helpless family alone. Yes, I will be
-quiet. I have will power to do that much. I will get well, but I must
-know one thing; have I lost my situation?” Poor Grace only looked the
-answer she was afraid to put in words.
-
-“I see,” he said, “it is as I feared. The same schemers who sold those
-stocks to me have taken all else that I have. It was only a part of the
-scheme to entice me to risk all.”
-
-“Not all, Geron dear, you have the boys, and am I not worth having?”
-
-“Oh, Grace dear, to think that I should have been so foolish.”
-
-For an answer she kissed him and begged him to go to sleep and they
-would talk it over when he was stronger. When he revived the first thing
-he said was, “Thank goodness mother’s property is safe and we can live
-on that and the mortgage does not close for two years. With the boys’
-help we can make a living. Will they be willing to go back to farm
-life?”
-
-They were just at the age when boys who have lived in the city consider
-it a great hardship to live in a smaller place.
-
-“Yes,” they said, “we will go if you will only get well.”
-
-In a few weeks he was better and then he would say, “To think of being
-robbed by your friends. Fiends would be a more appropriate name for
-them.” And to think that Lear had advised him! They raised enough to
-appease the landlord until he was better and by selling most of their
-furniture got back to the old home once more. All was so different now.
-None of the conveniences he had had in the years past belonged to him
-and all he could do was to work with the tenant and take it on shares.
-It was a terrible humiliation, but it was better than the uncertainties
-of the city. The best part of their mother’s home had never been used by
-the tenants and all the best furniture had been left there, so old Mrs.
-Vivian could have gone back had she wished, but she had always found it
-too lonely and had never gone.
-
-For two years at least Geron would have to pay interest on the mortgage,
-and after that he could not calculate what would be done. He saw no way
-of paying the principal and though her land was exempt, still it could
-not be sufficient to supply the family with the present prices that they
-would make from the farm.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XX.
-
-
-Mr. and Mrs. Birch had given up the restaurant in the Colony at the time
-he was required to take a position in the interests of the Society. He
-turned out to be a splendid organizer and they had gone from city to
-city to get the colonies in line. In the meantime two children had been
-born, and first one, then the other had been left at the original Colony
-on account of the parents traveling about. Both Mr. and Mrs. Birch were
-good talkers and very much in demand. Everywhere they went success
-followed the enterprise. Just at this time they were staying at the
-hotel in the Colony to be near their children and to arrange to have
-their shares transferred to another part of the country where the
-weather was not so severe. In fact it was summer there all the year and
-they preferred making it their home. Six years had been devoted to the
-society; now they intended to live a domestic life and be with their
-children.
-
-Mrs. Birch and Scoris Vivian had always been friends and while the
-Birches were going from place to place, Scoris (after moving to the
-society) saw that their babies had enough attention that they should not
-feel the loss of their parents; in that way she had become very much
-attached to them, and to the little tots she was a second mother, in
-fact they called her “’nother mamma,” to express their own sentiments.
-Their father had been trying to teach the youngest one to call her Miss
-Vivian, but she shook her head and said, “No, her is another mamma.”
-
-Living in the Colony had brought about very close friendships. Those who
-had to keep their little ones in the nursery while employed could not
-give them all the fondling that children crave, but others were glad to
-take an hour every day or so. There was not a child in the nursery but
-what it had some one or other to take it out and give it recreation if
-it was only to take a walk. The lady principal of the establishment knew
-every one in the place and knew who to trust with their care.
-
-Scoris felt the loss of the Little Birches more than she had
-anticipated, and when an invitation came for her to visit their parents
-she gladly accepted.
-
-Paul Arling and his mother had just nicely settled in the Colony and
-Scoris was glad to get away for a time to overcome what she considered
-her foolish attachment for him. She had always thought it more womanly
-to let others see that you care for them, than to hide it, so while they
-had lived in the city the family had been more intimate than she
-intended they should in the Colony. Like many others she had found that
-to let a man see that you care for him is a mistake until they are ready
-to declare themselves. She knew his position but thought he could
-confide in her under the circumstances if he actually cared as much for
-her as at first she thought he did. In bitterness she realized that a
-spark of fire may be quenched if not allowed to burn too long, so she
-made up her mind that a change would indicate her indifference to him
-and possibly bring it about. Time had passed quickly nevertheless since
-she had been associated with the society, and she had formed habits that
-brought her in touch with nearly every family there. One thing, no one
-in the association knew that her heart had gone out to Paul Arling. It
-was only in the secret of her own soul that she acknowledged it.
-
-In this new country the change had been so complete that she forgot she
-ever had any other motive for going away than pleasure. The society
-papers had announced her arrival and before she knew it all kinds of
-demonstrations were on foot to honor her as the Honorable Scoris Vivian,
-who had helped to bring about the conditions under which they all were
-prospering. She had forgotten that she ever had heartache for everyone
-treated her as if she was a princess and she was beginning to believe
-that she liked this new country better than the old. Men who were
-wealthy as well as devoted to the cause of the people, asked her to
-marry them. One in particular wouldn’t take no for an answer and he paid
-her such marked attention and had said so persistently that he would win
-her that it was announced in the papers that there was an engagement.
-There was much to see and the warm climate made a difference in the
-buildings which interested her, for instead of building them in
-apartments as in her home Colony, they were built separately because
-land was not so expensive nor was building material.
-
-Laborers, machinists and builders were not as plentiful as land, but
-almost any one could put up a shelter, and improve upon it as their
-shares increased. She thought what a fine place it would be for aged or
-delicate people who suffer from severe climates, and she was looking
-around for possible employment for them. She knew that with the
-automobile system they could be sent there. She was interested in “the
-Solar system” that had been discovered there also, and intended to bring
-it before the home Colony when she returned. Her attention had been
-wholly on the affairs of the society, so she was not aware of the
-personal interest that she was attracting.
-
-Her letters to her mother described the system instead of telling them
-news about herself.
-
-“The Solar system was produced by using mirrors shaped like a large
-basin,” she wrote. “This was so arranged that it reflected the rays of
-the sun and the heat generated was focused upon a large, furnace-boiler,
-producing steam, this in turn was used to produce electricity and was
-stored in a storage battery. The reason the mirror had to be a basin
-shape was to focus the rays of the sun directly upon one spot, otherwise
-the heat wouldn’t be sufficient to produce the steam. It was so
-inexpensive that it soon revolutionized every other system of heating,
-lighting or producing electricity in that part of the country. It could
-be erected on the top of a house, or on a building built for that
-purpose which was found best where new conditions were practiced as they
-were in this colony. The fact that heat could be secured by reflecting
-the sun’s rays on a mirror was one of the greatest factors in making
-this colony a success. Its simplicity placed it within the reach of any
-intelligent person. Of course all kinds of patents were claimed for the
-different patterns, but even the trusts could not monopolize the sun,
-and small boys began to shape pieces broken from glasses in their homes
-or go to the factory and collect any kind and shape them together in a
-circular basin with the use of plaster paris and then stand it against
-the wall or a box and let it reflect the sun upon a pail of water
-suspended from a string that couldn’t come in contact with the rays.”
-
-Helen and her mother were talking about Scoris’ letter and the advantage
-of the solar system would be to all the colonies. Presently Helen says I
-am sorry for Paul for I know he has always loved Scoris, and she doesn’t
-deny what the papers are saying.
-
-While they were talking Paul Arling’s mother called. She said she had
-come to ask if it was true that Scoris was going to marry someone out in
-the new Colony?
-
-Mrs. Vivian told her that Scoris had never written them about it, but
-she hadn’t denied it either. That possibly she had intended waiting
-until she came home before letting them know.
-
-They had been old friends, Mrs. Arling reminded Mrs. Vivian, and she had
-hoped that some day Scoris would have been her daughter-in-law.
-
-Mrs. Vivian sat with her chin resting on her hand, looking away out to
-the future; in thought she, too, had wished that Paul and Scoris would
-marry sometime.
-
-“Our dreams rarely come true,” she replied, softly. “I had hoped that
-all my children would be near me while I live, but, ah, well,” she
-sighed, “Scoris has always been a sensible girl and I am sure will not
-make a mistake.”
-
-Mrs. Arling reported the conversation to Paul and it seemed to him a
-fact that he had lost Scoris after all these years waiting to have
-something to offer her. He didn’t try to hide his grief from his mother,
-and when he told her why he hadn’t spoken to Scoris, she reminded him
-that he had been in fault.
-
-“You must remember that it is the custom for women to keep silence on
-that subject. I always supposed that there was an understanding between
-you.”
-
-“To tell the truth, so did I,” he answered.
-
-“There you go!” she said. “Like all the rest of men, taking things for
-granted. I would sooner have had one room for the rest of my life than
-to have come between you two. Why, with the advantages we have here in
-this colony I would have been more comfortable, for I would have less
-care.”
-
-[Illustration: PRINCESS LOVECHILD.]
-
-There was a touch of human nature; she had been selfish, and now as she
-thought she had made her son unhappy she blamed him.
-
-“I see I am to blame,” he soliloquized when alone. “I should have
-consulted her; perhaps she would have married me now. I have enough to
-start with, for it doesn’t require as much in a colony like this, where
-you are sure of employment as long as you need it.”
-
-He had invested a small sum in starting some exchanges and the dividends
-had been unusually large. “If I could only have had it before!” he said
-to himself; “I would have known just what to do. Now I suppose I have
-lost her.”
-
-About this time Helen’s engagement had been announced to a young Prince
-and he saw the effect Scoris’ engagement had upon Paul Arling, for Paul
-had been unable to hide it. The four had been constant companions in the
-city and he believed that Scoris cared for Paul. One evening he called
-for him to take him automobiling and after they had left the Colony
-behind and were going slowly through a cool stretch of bush, where the
-trees almost touched their heads, the Prince said:
-
-“Helen and I are going to be married in the fall.”
-
-“And I suppose Scoris will be married also?” Paul questions.
-
-“I don’t know,” the Prince answered. “You are referring to that
-announcement in the paper. She will be home in two weeks, and we will
-know then. I am disappointed, old fellow,” he continued, “for I used to
-think that your heart was in that direction.”
-
-“It was, and is yet,” Paul answered softly. “I am dazed with the news.
-You know, Charley, I had nothing to offer her until now.”
-
-“Well, neither had I; but I let Helen know I loved her, so she wouldn’t
-learn to care for some one else.”
-
-“But you hadn’t anyone else to support, as I had,” Paul said. “I will go
-away before she comes back,” he continued. “I never could live here and
-witness that wedding. I don’t know when I began to love Scoris Vivian.
-Long before I saw her she was my ideal in imagination, and I knew her to
-be my fate when she appeared.”
-
-“And you never told her this?” Charley asks.
-
-“How could I, when I was not able to give her a home such as she
-deserves?”
-
-“Paul Arling, the trouble with you is that you are too cautious. I
-didn’t even have a position when this Colony started, but I pitched
-right in and now I can take life easy. I was bound to win and nothing
-daunted me. I kept Helen posted all the time, and she encouraged me to
-succeed.”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXI.
-
-
-In thinking it over Prince Charley said to himself: “What a strange
-thing man is anyway! Some plod all their days and every one connected
-with them holds them in one place at the point of duty, while others are
-looking around for the chances that are sure to turn up if the mind is
-clear. You never catch me taking bracers to steady my nerves, nor
-smoking to derive comfort, as some say. Those things take money and when
-I made up my mind that I wanted Helen Vivian for my wife, not one cent
-was spent that didn’t count for necessities. My mind was clear because I
-had no habits to attract my attention and compel me to pander to them. I
-intended to succeed, and I did. The men who smoke may succeed in
-business if they have plenty of backing but I have never known one man
-start out with only his two hands and brain for capital succeed so that
-the world would hear from them if they were smokers.
-
-“These brains of ours need to be kept clear by plenty of rest, good food
-to keep the body vigorous, lots of pure air, exercise, physically and
-mentally. If we are attending to these necessities and look upon our
-bodies as an instrument that must be kept in tune as we would a musical
-instrument, then harmony will result. Harmony is the secret of
-concentration. Concentration leads to success.
-
-“Paul Arling is a pattern among domestic men and yet he has lost the one
-thing his inner nature craves for because he has allowed himself to be
-swayed by circumstances.
-
-“I intend to look into this matter for them, for I’ll be blessed if I
-don’t think it is a mistake all around. Let me see,” he mused, as the
-machine slowly mounted a long hill going over the same ground that it
-did a few evenings before when Paul was with him. “Scoris is to stay a
-few days at the colony in Tripside. That is only two days’ ride from
-here. I shall persuade Paul to take the trip with me. He will never know
-what I am after. Then I will throw them together, for if I don’t get him
-away from here before she comes home and her engagement is announced
-then nothing can stop it.”
-
-Paul readily accepted his invitation, not knowing that Scoris would be
-there. Leaving Paul at the hotel upon arriving the Prince hurried to the
-friend’s apartments where Scoris was visiting.
-
-“Why, Charley!” Scoris exclaimed, laughing, “did you come all this
-distance just to meet me?”
-
-“Yes, I did, sister-in-law,” he answered, using his pet name for her.
-Then aside he told her that he must have a talk with her alone as soon
-as it could be managed. She was rather startled at first, fearing that
-something must have happened at home.
-
-“Everything is all right,” he assured her. “It is about yourself I wish
-to talk. Is it true that you are going to be married?”
-
-She laughed heartily. It seemed so absurd for him to have come all that
-distance to ask her that.
-
-“Why, Charley, what gave you such an idea?”
-
-“It has been in all the papers,” he answered.
-
-“In the papers!” she exclaimed; “before I had even told my own family!
-How strange!”
-
-“Then it is true?” the Prince said as a matter of course.
-
-“I hope so,” she answers teasingly.
-
-“Paul Arling is with me,” he announces to see the effect upon her.
-
-“Oh! how nice!” she answers. “I am so glad he came too. It shows that I
-am appreciated.”
-
-“Scoris Vivian, don’t you know that Paul Arling loves you and has all
-these years?”
-
-“How could I,” she answers, “when he never told me?”
-
-“He told me so only two weeks ago, but I knew it long before,” the
-Prince said.
-
-“And he came to meet me thinking that I was engaged to another! How
-neighborly you all are!”
-
-“Do stop your bantering, Scoris,” the Prince answered. “He doesn’t know
-that you are here. That was my doing.”
-
-“Well, Charley, it was good of you and I appreciate it. Go back to the
-hotel and bring him to join the boating party that we are to have this
-evening. Tell him I want to see him.”
-
-The Prince started for his hotel going in a round about way to gain
-time. “What will I tell him? He will know at once that I put up a job on
-him. I believe I have made a fool of myself after all; but nothing
-venture nothing win,” he said to himself.
-
-He quickened his pace when nearing the hotel, rushed to Paul’s room in a
-breathless way and then said:
-
-“Who do you suppose is here in town?”
-
-“Well,” Paul questioned, “how can I tell?”
-
-“It is some one you will be pleased to see. It is Scoris and she wants
-to see you.”
-
-Paul turned pale for a second, then answered: “I came here hoping to
-avoid seeing her until I become accustomed to the fact that she will
-soon belong to another.”
-
-“Well, it is too bad,” the Prince answers; “but you better go to the
-party. I am going and I don’t wish to leave you alone. Besides, if you
-don’t go she will feel badly.”
-
-“Do you think she would care to see me?” Paul asks in a hopeful way.
-
-“I am sure she meant what she said when she asked you to come.”
-
-“I don’t think I’ll go,” Paul said after a while. “The man she is
-engaged to may be there.”
-
-“No, I am sure he is not,” the Prince answered, “or she would have said
-so. It would be much better to meet her away from home the first time
-too. No one here knows about you.”
-
-“I believe you are right,” Paul answered; “and yet I am sure to say or
-do something I should not.”
-
-“See here, Paul,” his friend replies, “it is a lovely evening and there
-will be quite a crowd and it will be the best time to see her. Come!”
-
-When Scoris met them she was so natural that Paul was soon at his ease.
-She asked after his mother, sisters and friends in the colony and before
-the evening was over he felt quite comfortable with her, they had so
-many interests in common.
-
-The next day they met in the park and he made up his mind that he would
-see her all that he could while he had a chance. They were with a party
-and it was impossible to talk about themselves.
-
-Two days passed and still every one seemed to claim Scoris’ attention
-until Paul became desperate. “See her alone I will!” he exclaimed at
-last to the Prince. “Here is an answer to my note saying that she will
-go for a drive with me; now I intend to have it out with her. I can’t
-stand this any longer. If she is going to be married at home I shall
-leave the Colony until it is over.”
-
-“That is all right,” the Prince had answered, “but while there is life
-there is hope, they say.”
-
-They had driven two or three miles and every topic had been exhausted,
-still Paul had not touched on the one subject he was determined to talk
-about before they returned to the Colony.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-Scoris could see by his face that he was suffering, but she had waited a
-long time for him to tell her what she now believed he was going to say
-and she wouldn’t help him. They had reached a grove that had been used
-for picnics and she suggested that they alight and walk around for a
-change. Wild flowers grew in abundance and she was gathering some when
-Paul said:
-
-[Illustration]
-
-“Scoris, I would like to have a talk with you while we are here by
-ourselves. It is about your engagement. I had hoped to be able to say
-our engagement some time.” He paused a moment as if waiting for an
-answer, but she let him continue while she laid the flowers down in her
-lap to attend to what he had to say. “Do you love him?” he questioned,
-“and are you sure that he is good enough for you?”
-
-“I am very much in love,” she answered, “and I believe he is good enough
-for me.”
-
-“Of course I have no right to tell you this now,” Paul said; “but I have
-loved you ever since I first saw you and I do yet; but if you love
-another I will never obtrude upon your affections. One thing I ask, and
-that is that you will always think of me as a good friend.”
-
-“Paul Arling,” she cried, “I will not take you for a friend. It is you
-that I love and if we are not engaged then I am not going to be
-married.”
-
-“Scoris,” he exclaims, “is this true?”
-
-The log upon which they had been sitting for some time was surrounded by
-a thick foliage.
-
-Well, and then, after a little of that sort of thing, Paul began to sort
-the flowers. Scoris had jumped up to pick up one that had fallen, for
-some one was coming. Just then an inquisitive collie dog poked his head
-through the bushes. Nothing but the dog appeared, however, and
-confidence was restored once more.
-
-The Prince and Paul arrived home the next day, Scoris the one following.
-
-The public announcement of the engagement was rather a surprise when it
-became known that it was Paul Arling instead of the stranger all had
-supposed him to be.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXII.
-
-
-It was gratifying to know that the society had been kept up all these
-years by the industry of the people, although it could not be claimed
-that any one system could have done it alone, and it had been recognized
-that the honors conferred upon the deserving had a great deal to do with
-the success. It brought together larger numbers of the better class than
-could have been done under any other system. Those who came into the
-ranks supplied with money enough to last them their life time were not
-able to receive even the title of “Honorable” unless his or her life was
-truthful and honest in their dealings with the public. Brave deeds were
-not ignored because those who accomplished them were only ordinary
-people. Each member who lived a self-denying life to better the whole
-people was honored publicly, and by so doing the world was made better
-for such acts. All could not gain the highest titles, but all could be
-“Honorables.” Only the honorables could make the laws that governed.
-
-The society had princes and princesses simply because these people had
-lived princely lives. Some of them had brought to the society large
-fortunes in money, land, mines and jewels. They gave their wealth to
-promote the welfare of the whole community, keeping, in many instances,
-only the amount the society compelled each to hold during their life.
-Still their money could not buy for them even the smallest title. What
-then? Labor, for all holding titles had to honor labor in some way. This
-is the way one princess gained hers:
-
-Princess Lovechild was the daughter of a man who had been disinherited
-by his father for marrying against his wishes. His father sent him
-adrift without money enough to keep him a year. He had no profession, so
-he went to the mining district of a new country, and was given
-employment overseeing miners. In this way they got along for several
-years. A child had been born to them the second year. She was the pet of
-the camp and considered their mascot. Every time a large find of gold
-was discovered, she was given a share, the father investing, besides
-buying several for himself. One day a great grief came to the mother and
-child; the father was killed. They had to leave the camp, it not being
-safe for them to remain. The kind-hearted men gave them gifts to take on
-their journey as well as buying the claims. The mother took the child to
-a city to find employment. Before she was successful, her money had been
-spent. She tried among her friends, but they were unable to help her;
-then she got cooking to do, but that separated her from her child. She
-then obtained a place as housekeeper, even doing the hardest work to
-keep her little girl with her. It was not long before the man who
-employed her gave her to understand that he expected more from her than
-she was willing to give, so she was obliged to leave and live in a noisy
-district that racked her nerves because those who had nice houses
-refused to take children. In time her money was gone again and she had
-no friends who would help her. One day when the child was about six
-years old the mother became ill and died.
-
-The child was placed in an orphans’ home, and then given to a woman who
-used her as a little drudge. It was hard to have no mother to love her,
-no pretty clothing, but she could love the baby that she had to mind and
-her poor little love nature had all gone out to that baby, even when it
-had grown older and would abuse her until she cried with pain, she still
-loved it. The husband in this home died, and again she was homeless.
-
-She was at the age of thirteen then and had taken a place as nurse, when
-one day she had been called into the breakfast room to answer some
-questions about her name and her father, by the master who was reading
-the morning papers. After a day or two she was startled to find that she
-was expected to show a new nurse where to find all the things belonging
-to the baby and children; then she was told that in the future she was
-to be one of the family and was asked how she would like to go to
-school. It had been her secret ambition; she studied hard and was
-admitted to one of the best colleges. At the age of twenty she was home
-again, or rather the place she had learned to look upon as home and
-still did not know why these people had so suddenly changed toward her.
-One day she was reading the paper and saw her mother’s name. She had
-often read over her marriage certificate and found it was the name
-advertised for. She had often wondered why she had to sign a paper for
-the allowance which they were giving her; it seemed strange. She
-answered the advertisement, however, and discovered that her mother had
-fallen heir to a fortune which became hers. Instead of these people
-rejoicing with her, as she had expected, they were angry. They said many
-things about ingratitude that made her feel so uncomfortable that she
-left them. Her lawyer discovered that she had had a larger fortune left
-her by her grandfather years before, she being the only direct heir on
-her father’s side. Suitors and friends sprung up like mushrooms, but the
-man she loved died. Life lost all interest for her then in a personal
-way. She could never forget the poverty she and her mother had suffered.
-She was watching to see what she could do with the money that had come
-too late to be of use to the parents who had needed it so much.
-
-Then she heard about the society. She said, “What a good thing that must
-be.”
-
-Then she donned plain clothes and went to work in the worst paid places
-she could find, just to learn the histories of the women who were forced
-to work in such places. This is how she gained the title (she worked for
-a cause). As is the case with so many who are already rich, the mines
-that had been theirs had not been sold according to law. Now all this
-money had come to her without any effort on her part. She had merely
-inherited it, so she determined that it should do the most good to the
-largest number of people.
-
-She had become acquainted with Scoris, Helen, Tom and the rest of the
-family, and was given the name of “Princess” because the people among
-whom she had worked had always spoken of her as “The Princess
-Lovechild.” A little girl once asked her name and she replied, “Love,
-child,” not intending that her name should be known, but the child said
-it was Lovechild, and all thinking the name appropriate, it clung to
-her.
-
-She was now past thirty years of age. Always finding out where her money
-was needed the most, she gave freely. She had given it for factories, to
-help along the exchanges, to buy shares for the old who were unable to
-do for themselves. She used it to place hundreds of children in the
-society until they were old enough to earn their own living. The society
-said the name of “Princess” was none too good for her, for she had given
-in return the love of her very being. Some brought their jewels to her
-to be set in her crown that she wore on coronation days.
-
-She was not the only princess by any means, but they all had to earn
-their titles.
-
-One day she had been going the rounds to find the deserving who could be
-brought into the society, when she heard a child crying bitterly at a
-window. She walked slowly past and smiled. The little fellow looked at
-her and then called out, “I am all alone and it is getting so dark. Oh!
-I am afraid; and the door is locked. Won’t you stay here until mamma
-comes?” She did so and what was her surprise to hear the child say that
-his name was “Freddie Moberly.” Then he looked around and said, “No, it
-is Freddie Smith. I forgot.” She questioned him and found he was the
-child who had been lost for nearly two years. She told him not to be
-frightened that she would stay until his “mamma,” as he called the
-woman, returned. In a moment or two she came, and as the child drew back
-into the room, the Princess walked on, but no sooner had the door closed
-than she returned and rang the bell. As Mrs. Smith appeared, she asked
-to be allowed to go in as she wished to talk to her. The child was sent
-out of the room and the Princess started at once on the subject for
-which she had called. In a short time, Mrs. Smith told her if Mrs.
-Moberly would get a divorce from her husband that she could have the
-child. “He was a wreck from drinking and I nursed him back to life. We
-were attracted to each other and when he afterwards told me he was
-married and his wife would not live with him, I was sorry for him. I
-knew at once that it was drink, and I also knew that if left to himself
-he would be as bad as ever, for I could stop him from drinking. Well,
-you see the result. He will support himself and me, but he wouldn’t keep
-sober long enough, even if she would live with him, to support his wife.
-Now I am not all bad, as she thinks I am. I am sorry that we have the
-child; I don’t want to take him from his mother, and I certainly didn’t
-take her husband from her, as the papers said. You see we know all about
-it. It is not a case of kidnaping, either, for the law has never given
-her the child and she cannot get him until she secures a divorce. I
-cannot see my mother until I am his lawful wife. Now, madam, you see how
-it is.”
-
-The Princess had never known such a case before. That woman did not seem
-to be a thoroughly bad woman and there was evidently something in the
-man to make it worth her while to stick to him. His selfishness and
-drinking had embittered the whole of his wife’s early life and shadowed
-the childhood of his children as well as leaving them dependent.
-
-The next day the Princess drove to the Colony. She saw Tom Vivian and
-talked over what was to be done. They sent for Mira and told her.
-
-Shortly after Tom called at the house where the child had been found by
-the Princess, but as he expected, they had gone.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXIII.
-
-
-The title of Prince had been given Charley Evens because he had proved
-himself an unusually bright and shrewd as well as a liberal and
-broad-minded man; all classes liked him. He secured the first coal mine
-for the society by his clear reasoning among his friends who had money
-saved.
-
-“Invest it,” he had said to them all, “I have been to the mine; I have
-worked in it. I tell you it will pay with the society’s protection.”
-
-His manner was so forceful that they believed him and it turned out as
-he had said. The mine was the means of increasing the members to many
-thousands in the city because coal could be bought cheaper by members.
-
-Then he pushed the automobile system. Everything he did was a success
-because he gave his whole mind to it. From small beginnings, the savings
-of the members to thousands of dollars he had used to start factories.
-All trusted him; in return they were receiving dividends that were
-earning them neat little incomes. Of course he was a favorite and one
-and all said he was a prince; it is a pleasure to do business with such
-a man and they demanded that he receive the title of Prince Charley
-Evens, just to show their appreciation. He had secured a good income for
-himself besides helping others who needed assistance. He was a friend
-upon whom all relied. When he found that Geron Vivian was in danger of
-losing his property by foreclosure he went quietly to work to secure it
-to the family and presented it to Mrs. Vivian, Geron’s mother.
-
- * * * * *
-
-It had been arranged that a double wedding would take place after
-Thanksgiving day, and Prince Charley and Paul had secured apartments in
-a new building especially fitted up for young married couples. They each
-had a suite of rooms opening into the same hall and Scoris and Helen
-were giving them their finishing touches before their friends arrived.
-Beautiful presents were in each apartment, many gifts from people the
-least expected to remember them. Everywhere evidences of the love in
-which they were held in the community. All had seen the rare china, the
-silk drapery embroidered by loving hands. Everything that could make a
-home lovely and a place of rest was there. They were holding a reception
-so all their friends could see them before they left for their travels.
-It seemed as though the family could do nothing all day but walk through
-the apartments and admire it all. Each hour brought some new gift. Mrs.
-Vivian enjoyed it as much as the rest.
-
-Mira was trying hard to be cheerful amidst all the festivities that were
-going on. Her heart still yearned for her boy and now she realized all
-she had lost by her foolish infatuation. But as yet nothing had been
-heard of the child.
-
-About three o’clock in the afternoon a carriage drove up to the door and
-Princess Lovechild was announced. All came forward to express their
-pleasure in seeing her. Her manner was so constrained that they soon saw
-she had something to tell. Her eyes kept following Mira and then as
-their glances met, the Princess looked toward the door. Mira turned and
-there stood Freddie, looking rather startled at seeing so many people he
-had never seen before.
-
-“My boy, my own Freddie,” Mira cried, “at last!” Then they all wanted to
-know how she had found him.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-“Oh, it was not a case of finding him at all. I received a letter from
-Mr. Moberly that I could take him to his mother, so you may be sure I
-lost no time in going for him, and we came as fast as the ponies could
-bring us, didn’t we, Freddie?”
-
-Poor child, he couldn’t speak. Everything had been done so quickly that
-he was bewildered. Soon his sister and little brother arrived, then he
-realized that he was home once again. His mother, sister and brother
-were inseparable. The baby, seeing all the attention that Freddie was
-getting, began to feel slighted. Nellie was jumping around like a mad
-child in the midst of it all. The Princess left the room to find Tom.
-Presently they returned and Tom said:
-
-“Mira, I have your divorce papers. If you wish, you can take your maiden
-name again. Will you?”
-
-“Indeed I will,” she answered.
-
-“Then,” Tom says, “after the next coronation day, you will be known as
-the Honorable Mira Vivian.”
-
-“Yes,” she murmured, “and with the name of Moberly gone forever, I and
-my children are free. Freddie, dear, your name is Vivian.”
-
-“What,” exclaimed the child, “another name!” They all laughed. Mira and
-her children then withdrew to her apartments.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXIV.
-
-
-The wedding day dawned clear and bright and the weather was all that
-could be desired, and in the midst of a profusion of flowers the
-ceremony took place. The costumes were beautiful and two fairer brides
-were never led to the altar. The picture remained in the minds of all
-who saw them for many years. The wedding was in the morning so they
-could leave on the mid-day train for their honeymoon.
-
-A special car belonging to the society had been placed at their service
-and was fitted up with drawing room, state room and dining room
-accommodations.
-
-The guests had departed and Mrs. Vivian went alone to the apartments of
-the newly married daughters. They were so bright and had every
-convenience for comfort and rest.
-
-The pictures on the walls and the statuary were works of art, all
-showing the taste of the occupants as well as their own industry. All
-displayed the fact that their friends who had presented them with so
-many of these things were artists as well as people of wealth.
-
-“Well, I intend to enjoy these rooms while they are away,” Mrs. Vivian
-thought. “What a pleasure it is to know these apartments are secured for
-them during their lives. No mortgages can ever be placed on them to
-torment them in the years to come. What a comfort! It is certainly a
-great comparison between their newly married life and my own and yet my
-marriage was considered a good one in that day, and it was, both from a
-financial standpoint and in our affection for each other. Still all the
-wealth my husband left me did not give me an income the last few years.
-If these girls had not secured my shares I am afraid the outlook would
-not have been so bright and comforting as it is now. I suppose Geron did
-the best he could, but, oh, men risk so much! He did so differently from
-what the girls have done. Oh, girls,” she soliloquized, “you will never
-know how happy you have made me by your self-denial.”
-
-She turned and looked at a picture of her husband which Scoris had
-painted. “Yes, my dear,” she says sadly, “I wish things could have been
-different and we could have gone through life longer together. As I look
-at your dear face it is so lifelike that my heart yearns for you. Dear
-me! dear me! I do hope no one will come in until I have washed away the
-trace of these tears. Will I never get accustomed to seeing that
-picture? She painted it as she remembers him and it is not like any
-other that we have. What a wonderful talent she has! Paul Arling, you
-are a lucky man to have won her.
-
-“I am going to sit right down here so I can see them all. Why, how
-sleepy I am! I will rest just a moment. My!” she exclaimed opening her
-eyes, “it only seems a moment since I sat down and here I have slept an
-hour! These rooms are so restful and have such a soothing effect.
-Everything speaks of harmony. Well, I wish every mother I know could
-feel as contented as I do over the choice that their daughters have
-made. They have married men who are worthy of them and that is admitting
-a great deal. I really feel that I have gained two more children. Time
-will tell, but until then I am going to look upon them as such.”
-
-Next day, Paul Arling’s mother called upon Mrs. Vivian to invite her to
-go for a drive. Paul had purchased a small pony for her just before he
-was married and she knew that her old friend would enjoy it as much as
-she would. Their sympathies were very near and now that a relationship
-had been established between them it was closer than ever. Both loved to
-drive out into the open country, over the hills and along the lake
-shore, letting the pony jog along as he liked. It was so pleasant to
-breathe the balmy air as they talked over the wedding of their beloved
-children. Mrs. Arling remarked:
-
-“Paul is without doubt the best son I have ever known, for although he
-has loved Scoris all these years, yet he has stuck to me.”
-
-Mrs. Vivian replied: “Yes, but there were two in that bargain, you must
-admit. Possibly if Scoris had not had me to think of after Geron had
-lost my income, you would have had another daughter long before now.”
-
-“Well, she would have been just as welcome as she is now, bless her dear
-heart. I am as proud of her as you are.”
-
-“Did you not think Helen looked very pretty in her bridal robe?”
-
-“Oh, yes, indeed, but to tell you the truth, I hardly saw any one but
-Paul and Scoris,” Mrs. Arling answered. “They both looked so happy. I
-think Scoris the handsomest bride I ever saw.”
-
-“Isn’t that funny,” replied Lady Vivian, “Mrs. Carry, Prince Charley’s
-sister, made the same remark about Helen.”
-
-“Certainly, ‘every crow thinks his own the blackest.’”
-
-“Well, now, what do you think yourself, Mrs. Vivian?
-
-“Oh, I don’t know. They are so different,” continued their mother, “for
-to me they have always been beautiful, each in her own way, and their
-characters equally so. Did you know, Mrs. Arling, those girls turned all
-their own permanent shares over to my account before Tom knew that Geron
-had lost either his own or my income? Besides this, they gave up a
-portion of their salary for me each week. The other members of the
-family have made it up to them in the last year and I appreciate it, but
-after all, it was their self-denial that proved their affection for me.”
-
-[Illustration]
-
-Just then a scream of laughter from childish voices was heard, and the
-sound of several automobiles that were coming up on the road behind
-them.
-
-“Oh, dear!” exclaimed Lady Vivian, “I hope they will not frighten the
-pony.”
-
-Mrs. Arling turned off to one side to let them pass, and as they came
-nearer they slowed up so as not to frighten the horse. “It is hard to
-realize,” she said, “that there are fully one hundred children in those
-three cars. Doesn’t it do your heart good to see Mira with all three
-children around her at last?”
-
- * * * * *
-
-The two brides who are on their wedding trip are not happier than
-Princess Lovechild, who is the life of the party. To give happiness to
-those who would have been deprived of it without her assistance was to
-her full recompense and she was truly the happiest among them after all.
-
-“Well it is a wonder to me how the Princess and Mira can stand the
-racket those youngsters are making. It may be their way of expressing
-their joy, but I must confess that I like to be beyond their voices.”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXV.
-
-
-After the wedding party had returned home, the Vivian family met to talk
-over the gift that Prince Charley had made Lady Vivian of the mortgage
-of Geron’s property. The mother did not feel justified in giving it to
-Geron, as had been the idea at first. He had risked losing it once and
-now she thought it her duty to come to an understanding with him. If he
-would deed the property to her, she would secure for him shares that
-would keep him during his life, by turning the property over to the
-society. He could then help his boys to secure their necessary shares as
-they grew to manhood, besides giving them the advantages of the society.
-This he was willing to do, so the affair was settled.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXVI.
-
-
-Twenty-five years had passed. Tom Vivian was governor of the state and
-his son was in charge of the first Colony which had become a large town,
-or groups of towns, rather, for the many industries had settlements in
-different localities. Human beings had become as valuable as property,
-and when one part of land was built up another had been selected.
-
-“This is the era of happy reunions and grand old age,” said Tom Vivian
-to a friend as they shook hands one evening. “Everywhere we go it is the
-same and all seem to have good health. Certainly a contented mind is
-more than half the cause.”
-
-“You remember, Tom,” replied his friend, “that twenty years ago we could
-not take up a daily paper without reading about suicides and murders. In
-these days we rarely hear of such a thing, for instead of enduring
-misery, we are curing it by reasonable methods. Poverty which was in
-most cases the cause, is now only a memory. Do you know, Tom, for what
-you are admired the most of all?”
-
-“Well, no, I can’t say that I do.”
-
-“It has been the largeness of your mind in seeing the little things that
-went towards the building up of the system of this society. Take the
-apartments, houses, or hotels that are arranged so as to give those of
-small means as much comfort as those of large money interests. The
-houses having every provision made for comfort show clearly what a keen
-eye you had on the domestic situation.”
-
-“You forget it was not always I who thought out all these improvements.
-It has oftener been the men and women who occupy them. They all wanted
-front rooms, so I called them together and with their aid and
-suggestions we adopted the method of constructing the buildings that
-way.”
-
-“I consider,” continued his friend, “that one of the greatest
-improvements you have made is the one that enables us to keep our
-families together. For, after we secured a suite of rooms in the
-apartment hotel, my wife had no further care in the housekeeping for she
-objects to keeping help. Our children were young when we started and the
-kindergarten boarding apartment took them in. It was a great comfort to
-know that when we wanted them with us my wife, instead of being tired
-out, had plenty of time and felt fresh and rested so as to be able to
-enjoy them. Now that our family has been reared with less expense than
-we could have done in the old way, I have been able to secure sufficient
-shares to start every one of the children with a separate suite of rooms
-when they are married. As circumstances demanded we changed our
-apartments so as to be near each other. I have found it much more
-satisfactory than it would have been to have left any wealth I have
-accumulated or of insuring my life, leaving them thousands of dollars of
-which any one could have robbed them. What a comfort it is to be assured
-that they have a home and employment as long as they will need it and an
-allowance or pension for their remaining days.
-
-“I met an old acquaintance the other day who hadn’t been able to see
-along the lines as we did years ago. Now he has no standing or titles in
-the country. You see he couldn’t grasp the situation and ideas. The old
-ways were good enough for him. I see your sister, Mrs. Shuman, has at
-last taken an apartment.”
-
-“Yes,” replied Tom, “the Shumans were glad to come and had they done so
-before money depreciated as it necessarily had to do before the new
-order of things, they would have been better off. Why, he even blamed me
-for his losses. I didn’t quarrel with him on account of my sister, but I
-wrote in the next issue of our paper an article describing his position,
-then I saw that he got it. You know he was a very wealthy man at one
-time. Well, he came in one day and told my sister that he had made
-thirty thousand dollars through wheat advancing that he had bought on a
-margin. My sister said to him, ‘All that money on a margin and you never
-saw the wheat? Well, I think that was wonderful.’
-
-“‘Yes,’ he replied, ‘you see, money makes money. When a man has it and
-the rest of the people have not, why it is easy as rolling off a log. A
-friend gave me a tip.’
-
-“‘Lear, tell me how that sort of thing is done. How do these people know
-that wheat and all these commodities are going up? And, then, how can
-they control such an immense amount of money in their exchanges? How is
-it possible for people to make such a large amount of money just through
-a few cents profit on the bushel?’ she said.
-
-“‘Oh, I can’t explain all that to you now. I just hurried home to give
-you your third of it all. I was afraid I might be tempted to invest it
-in something else and lose it, for it is a gamble. I believe in a man
-giving his wife her third while he is alive, then both can enjoy it.’
-
-“After he had gone back to the bank Libra sat down to think it all over.
-She had everything that she actually needed, but she would like the
-diamonds he had spoken of a few days before. Well, she could have them
-now and she believed she would get them; they would add so much to her
-appearance. She had just decided this point when Scoris called to see
-her. Of course she told her of Lear’s generosity, then asked what she
-would do if any one gave her such a splendid gift.
-
-“‘Do with it?’ exclaimed Scoris. ‘Why, I should secure shares in the
-society as soon as I could get to the treasurer’s office to attend to
-it.’
-
-“‘Why, Scoris, I never thought of that,’ she answered. ‘I have a good
-mind to do it, or at least half of it. Supposing I send it to Tom and
-ask him to arrange it for me. I can sell it,’ she said in a hesitating
-way, ‘at any time I like, can’t I?’
-
-“‘Yes, to the members,’ Scoris said, ‘but I hope you never will, for if
-anything happened to Lear you would be provided for.’
-
-“‘Oh, come now, Scoris,’ she replied, ‘I don’t have to provide for my
-future, my husband will take care of that, but I would like to take some
-shares in the society. I don’t know anything about business and don’t
-know which is right, he or Lear. Of course, if Tom is right, my husband
-is wrong, so we won’t talk about it. I can do as I like with this money,
-so I will do this. I often feel ashamed to hear people talk about the
-success he is making and not to be able to tell them something about it
-myself.’
-
-“‘All right,’ Scoris had said, and that was how they happened to have
-shares. When her husband sank all they had in trying to bolster up his
-failing fortune years after, he was amazed to find that those shares
-provided him with a home and was even the means of helping him to gain a
-position in the bank after he had learned its different methods.
-
-“Libra became interested in the society after she had made an investment
-in it and often asked questions that showed she was thinking.
-
-“She asked me one day what was meant by margins on the price of wheat. I
-told her that all over the wheat belts of the country the railroads had
-immense elevators that the farmers could store their grain in them free
-from charge. This saved the farmers the expense of storage houses; they,
-of course, made use of the railroads. The railroads control it and
-possession is nine points in the law. ‘You see, Libra,’ I explained,
-‘the controlling element, which is the money power, keep themselves in
-touch with each other. The railroads are a part of that power. So is the
-stock exchange where the price of the grain is fixed. Then the price is
-telegraphed to the different points where the elevators are situated and
-the dealers announce the price to the farmers. If they have to sell at
-any price to straighten out their indebtedness at the stores or for
-hired men who help them to seed and then thresh and get it in, as many
-do, they will sell at the first chance; they can’t help themselves. The
-dealer will own it now who is living on any profits he can get out of it
-and he is usually a bright, sharp man. He in turn holds it for the city
-dealers; all have to risk something for each tries to get all they can.
-Now remember, it may never have left that elevator where it was stored
-in the first place by the farmer, still, all these men have a profit out
-of it. Now, your husband bought at a certain price and he sold his
-margin or profit to someone else. He couldn’t sell the wheat for he
-never had it, nor did he ever intend to get it. He had the money to
-invest and he was assured that he could make that amount out of it, or,
-in other words, he held or “cornered it” for a few hours or days, and
-that is perhaps what he did.’
-
-“Then she asked, ‘But how do they get the money?’ I answered, ‘From the
-banks and insurance companies usually; of course, that is only one way.
-There are many others.’
-
-“‘But how is it that the banks and insurance companies get all those
-millions that rich people can control?’
-
-“‘They come from the savings of the industrious classes.’
-
-“‘Don’t the banks and insurance companies risk more than they have a
-right to in loaning that money?’
-
-“‘No,’ I said, ‘they secure it by mortgages or in some other legal way.’
-
-“She studied for a moment, then said:
-
-“‘After all I don’t see how some people know when prices are going up.’
-
-“I answered, ‘If you had all the wheat under your control and had money
-enough to keep it there, you would soon know for the people would pay
-any price to get it. A cent or two extra on bread when millions are
-consumed each day amounts to a large sum of money,’ I told her.
-
-“‘Why, of course,’ she answered, ‘I see now.’
-
-“‘I don’t think it is honest,’ she said after a while.
-
-“‘Well, no,’ I answered, ‘that is why I started this society, so that
-the people could protect themselves from the money power.’”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXVII.
-
-
-The Honorable Thomas Vivian first started the Wealth Producing and
-Distributing Society when but a young man, and though he is only middle
-aged now, he is more honored than any other man in the country. Hundreds
-have formed societies as he did, still all looked up to him as their
-head and superior. The latter he objected to, for he claimed that every
-locality should place their best managers at the head and then conduct
-the business so that those who excelled could have the credit of their
-own ability.
-
-It only takes four or five years to show what kind of people are at the
-head of any enterprise, then after each separate colony has proved its
-standing, it should be recognized by the older branches, always in
-business and honors also. It had been proved a wonderful incentive to
-the good morals and honesty of the society, to confer titles and whole
-neighborhoods were known by their prevailing sentiments, even if they
-were peculiar regarding their ideas. If one branch found that another
-was not truthful and honest as a whole society, they declined to do
-business with them, or look upon their titled members as their equals,
-therefore all aimed to be worthy of the highest honors, each in their
-own locality.
-
-It gave women a better title than Miss or Mrs., for marriages were not
-always a mark of honor in those days. Then, besides, women did not lose
-their identity as they did before in marriage. It was considered that
-titles were a step higher for them. Each man and woman was known by
-their own merits and if the names were changed it was a combination of
-both names, or they kept their own; or if they wished to keep the old
-custom it was no one’s business. Still the wife was the Hon. Mary, etc.
-
-No society could regulate these things, but all right-living people
-lived so as to be an honor to the cause, continually keeping the
-greatest good to the largest number in view.
-
-Again we find the Vivian family assembled to honor their mother’s
-birthday. The grand-children with their husbands and wives make up a
-good-sized crowd by themselves, but they cannot outdo their parents’
-enthusiasm in making this the happiest birthday the mother and
-grandmother has had in years, and here we leave them to enjoy the fruit
-of their labors.
-
-
- THE END OF FIRST STORY.
-
-
-
-
- THE WEALTH PRODUCING AND DISTRIBUTING SOCIETY.
-
-
-We, the members of this society, consider life, liberty, and happiness
-sacred beyond all other earthly considerations.
-
-Therefore we protect life, we liberate human beings from the bondage
-that money holds over them, we make it possible for them to secure homes
-and a pension that never can be taken away from them as long as they
-live.
-
-In securing this much for them we believe that we are laying the
-foundation for their happiness.
-
-Each member, as they sign their names promising to keep the laws and
-rules of the society, must remember that they are binding themselves to
-protect the life, liberty and happiness of all members. As the society
-holds all wealth in trust for the members its laws are enforced to
-protect their interests.
-
-Each member is expected to know the value of wealth in comparison with
-money. They must recognize that money is only a medium of exchange and
-that the shares of the society represent their wealth earned by labor,
-and that the society is the only source in which labor can be protected
-sufficiently to ensure homes and a pension.
-
-In joining the society all must agree to the following rules and
-regulations and in no wise can any become members without doing so:
-
-I hereby promise to keep all rules laid down by the wealth producing and
-wealth distributing society.
-
-In using the society’s property in the pursuance of labor or pleasure,
-its waterways or conveyances, or anything in connection with said
-society, I promise to protect it from law suits or any other unnecessary
-expense or trouble. I take my own risk as to accidents and will in no
-wise injure the said society by appealing to the law of the country.
-
-I hereby agree to take the society’s shares, scrip, produce, or other
-commodities in exchange for my labor or money expended in shares, and
-will in no case exact coin from said society.
-
-I hereby take oath that all money I place with the society is legally
-mine.
-
-I also agree to give up to the society my shares either bought with
-money or labor in case of any law suit brought against me. I do this to
-protect said society.
-
-I agree to abide by the decision of the officers in charge of the
-society in all cases of disagreement.
-
-I promise that I will not employ those outside of the society to perform
-any labor for me if I can find what I need in the society and that
-whenever possible I will buy from the members of the society.
-
-Any member breaking these rules also agrees to forfeit all claim on said
-society. Members may sell their shares to other members, but cannot
-withdraw them from the society, because each share represents the
-strength in the society’s structure, in the same way as the bricks in
-the wall of a building. If bricks were taken out of the building it
-would soon fall. The same with the shares; they must remain intact
-because the money and labor that these shares represent was used to
-build the members’ home, to ensure employment and a pension when too old
-to labor.
-
-Each member pays $1.00 per year for general expenses, then agrees to buy
-at least one permanent share each year at $12.00 per share. Permanent
-shares represent all buildings on the land belonging to the Colony as
-well as improvements. When a member has sufficient permanent shares to
-entitle him to live in an apartment building or hotel he is exempt from
-paying taxes or rent, and when he has sufficient consumable shares to
-justify the society in awarding him a pension he will be independent for
-life.
-
-All money and labor is invested in permanent shares to buy materials, to
-build factories, hotels, apartment houses, land or machinery that will
-be permanent, fruit trees, etc. Members who had homes of their own could
-buy sufficient consumable shares to ensure them an income. Then as many
-permanent shares as would be required to allow them to live in an
-apartment house. It wouldn’t exempt them from paying the regular $1.00
-per year for general expenses except in cases where the whole amount had
-been paid to insure them an income for life.
-
-Scrip was issued with the consent of the officers in charge and only
-issued to the amount of their security. The signature of the president,
-secretary and cashier was necessary to make it legal.
-
-It was issued for the purpose of exchange among members. It paid for any
-kind of labor done for the society, the president having power to issue
-sufficient to satisfy the demand of its members.
-
-One benefit of scrip is that it cannot be stolen nor can it be issued by
-any one except those appointed by the society and it must be for value
-received.
-
-As nearly all members lived in the city and were paid in coin for their
-labor in the beginning of the Colony, money was as plentiful as scrip
-and could always be exchanged. This society having its central Colony
-within thirty miles of the city, made it easier to exchange either its
-scrip or produce. The city members had money to buy either shares or
-produce. The manager of the Colony having the land secured by the
-membership fee each year could secure all labor by issuing scrip. He
-could buy from the farmers in large quantities at wholesale the first
-year or until he was able to grow the food that the members needed; he
-could then sell to them in exchange for the scrip he issued for their
-labor, at retail market prices if he employed them. If he sold to the
-city members they would have money to pay; this money he could use to
-buy from outside dealers such articles as the Colony could not produce
-at first.
-
-Special apartments were used for the aged. They were quiet and restful.
-No children were allowed in the buildings. There were several parlors
-where they could meet each other when socially inclined, but their own
-rooms were private. In the beginning of the society some of these old
-people contributed the best of their furniture towards fitting up these
-parlors. The society bought them, allowing their value to go on their
-shares, besides they contributed their tables and chairs for the dining
-room. Elevators were used on all the floors so as to make it easy for
-them to go up and down. Separate sections were used for lone men and
-women. The men’s parlors were fitted up so they could smoke or rest,
-read, or talk and make themselves comfortable in their own way, only men
-were allowed in them. The women’s apartments were separated from the
-men’s by those used by the aged married couples, the married people
-using those situated in the center.
-
-As the buildings were built the length of the street, this was an easy
-matter. The public dining room was all in one, but each family or group
-of friends used tables by themselves. Their own homes and freedom to
-live as they wished was the object the majority had in view.
-
-In some instances young married people also used apartments in these
-buildings if they had no children.
-
-One large public parlor for both men and women was on the lower floor
-and was used at first for entertainments. All the parlors were furnished
-with good, comfortable chairs, rugs, pictures, draperies, etc., not
-necessarily new, but in as good order. The main object being to have
-them homelike and cozy.
-
-The society was able to reach a larger number by practicing these
-economies and it helped these old members to dispose of their things
-when they first joined the society. Five hundred dollars enabled one
-person to secure one room and a small pension for life after they were
-sixty-five years of age with all privileges allowed in the apartment
-buildings. This did not include their board, but gave them more freedom
-in their choice of food and besides they could use the scrip issued for
-clothing or any purpose. They could cook their own food if they wished
-or buy it already cooked.
-
-As the aged had no social homes provided for them the society found it
-could supply that difficulty by accepting members over 65 years of age
-for not less than $300. This amount would allow them one room, heat,
-light and their laundry done, or where two occupied one room it was $500
-for their lifetime. This included their board. They were expected to
-find their own furniture, bedding, etc., and attend to their own rooms
-and wait upon themselves unless they were ill. After their demise if any
-means was left it went to the society.
-
-Five hundred dollars was the lowest sum accepted where a pension was
-granted, and that only secured a small room. One thousand dollars
-secured a larger and better room and a larger pension. The age of the
-person made a difference also and these figures are only given to
-indicate possibilities that would suit all kinds of people. The
-apartments were also arranged so that the people could be classified.
-They could change their apartments if they wished also. This low amount
-is stated to encourage those of small means and help all to secure
-homes.
-
-The society’s apartment hotels were built to accommodate not only
-wealthy people but those of refinement, who had only a small amount of
-money. Small rooms could be found in all the buildings as well as large.
-They were built in different localities to suit the habits and tastes of
-all. The main idea being to secure the people against fraud and robbery
-by the failing of so many insurance companies, banks, and mortgages or
-where their savings had been placed, and to secure all from poverty,
-from the infant to the aged person.
-
-Men and women who had been accustomed to give a percentage of their
-wages each week in times of strikes, found that it was as easy to pay
-the same amount into the society for shares, for the money that secured
-shares was not lost even though the depositor failed to keep it up. It
-was safer than in a bank also and drew a better interest even than if it
-was on a mortgage. The small amount accepted (twenty-five cents per
-week) brought it within the reach of all industrious people. The
-advantage of free burial in case of death, besides their being able to
-sell the whole amount of shares in case of sickness, or disaster, was
-appreciated. The money so invested could not be lost to the depositor,
-because it was either invested in land, buildings, or other valuable
-properties that secured it. Never before in history had the people’s
-savings been so perfectly secured to them; no matter how large or small
-the amount. People gave up their life insurances and when they lived in
-the Colony even their fire insurance, because the society was sufficient
-assurance for everything connected with their lives. Those who were
-saving money to buy homes invested it in permanent shares because the
-shares earned for them $1.20 each year, per share, which amounted to
-$6.00 each single share in five years. In this way two shares bought one
-more in five years with its interest alone. (As it had to stand five
-years before being added to the principal it did not earn compound
-interest.) Those who wished to secure homes within a limited time and
-whose income was small could do so with less money than in any other
-way. For they could secure shares entitling them to use one room or as
-many as they could afford. Inexpensive apartment houses were built first
-so as to meet the demand of the majority who would be employed. The
-members lived in the apartments and paid rent for them when they
-couldn’t pay for them in shares; but if they lived there five years that
-rent was allowed on the shares.
-
-Apartment houses were built instead of cottages, for many reasons. They
-were cooler in summer, and could be heated better and with less expense
-in winter. They also afforded protection to lone women, as night and day
-watchmen kept guard in the halls.
-
-Some apartments had small kitchens so as to meet the demands of all the
-people, but many used the public ones, for each could have their own
-stoves, etc., and the persons in charge kept them clean. The majority,
-however, bought their food already cooked or left their orders each day
-with the cooks in charge. All apartments had large windows and porches.
-They were built the length of the street, the streets being shorter than
-usual, so as to make the gates that opened into the houses on the ground
-floor convenient to go through with the steam wagons or automobiles.
-
-This track was used to bring everything into the building, the main
-doors being kept in better order by this method. The kitchens and
-dining-rooms were on the lower floor or basement as they were called and
-were on one side of the track, the other side being used for store
-rooms. This arrangement kept everything unsightly (such as many back
-dooryards are) from the gaze of the curious and enabled the apartment
-windows to face the street with its flowers and trees on each side in
-summer.
-
-They were built facing east and west, so that all occupying them could
-benefit by the sun’s rays and yet be protected from the intense heat in
-summer from the south side, or from the severe cold in winter on the
-north side.
-
-The public parlors and library were at the end of each upper floor. The
-inexpensive apartment houses were built not only to last for ages but to
-give comfortable homes to its inmates. They were built plainly but of
-material that gave them a superior appearance. As the society owned the
-buildings, the members could secure better apartments as they increased
-their shares, or as soon as a better grade was built. Apartment hotels
-were built in modern style to accommodate those of large means and who
-wished to secure their money by investing it in the society’s shares.
-Money so invested proved to be absolutely safe besides returning a
-better interest, and whether a small amount or large it came to the
-member (without any annoyance or delay) either weekly, monthly or
-quarterly.
-
-All members had to be truthful and honest in their dealings or they
-could not receive titles. Only titled members had votes on the
-regulations and rules pertaining to the society.
-
-Members were allowed $100 on their shares for every new member they
-presented if the member thus secured remained in the society two years
-and paid all dues.
-
-This percentage was added towards the purchasing of shares for the
-member who presented the new member.
-
-Many members secured shares in this way that helped them eventually to
-have homes that they could never have in any other way.
-
-Members could build tent houses for summer use by paying rent for the
-land.
-
-Members who lived on the land controlled by the society had the benefit
-of free burial when they lived in the Colony two years, and had paid for
-two shares (these shares were used to partly pay the expense, the
-society paying the balance); this was only done when the members were
-buried in the Colony’s burying ground or cemetery.
-
-All members who intended leaving their shares after their demise to any
-one except to the society had to make a will to that effect, or the
-society claimed the right to use the value of such shares for the
-benefit of the aged members who were unable to provide all they
-required. All shares left with the society by members who dropped out
-and did not sell them was used for the same purposes in five years after
-the last payment was made.
-
-When any member left children or any one dependent upon them they were
-expected to secure their shares to them, and if the children were young
-the society held said shares until the children became members entitling
-them to the privileges, or it used the amount for their care until they
-were old enough to work. In such cases the society or some member
-adopted the children and became responsible for them.
-
-Many children were adopted by the society when their mothers had been
-left destitute. These children were provided for by a special fund for
-that purpose. It took care of them until they were old enough to provide
-for themselves, but they were then bound to return to the fund a
-percentage of their earnings each day to keep up the same advantages for
-other children situated as they had been. Children adopted by the
-society were not taken away from their parents as they were from private
-persons, for the parent could live in the Colony, but the society could
-compel the children to live in the Colony until they had repaid it for
-any expense incurred in their childhood.
-
-All young people who were employed by the society left a percentage of
-their earnings to be used for present necessities for either the aged or
-children, then they were exempt to the amount as well as the interest
-that would accrue from buying consumable shares, for the rising
-generation could do the same for them in their old age. This was one of
-the greatest advantages in the society, after the first generation of
-children were grown, for by that time the society knew the average
-expense of supporting each member.
-
-The amount each member had to pay was so small that a large number
-invested their savings in factories. The stock was five dollars. That
-gave all a chance to invest. The poor man or woman who had their savings
-in the bank or those who lived on the investment of money, all had a
-chance to secure better interest. You see there was no risk. The market
-was already secured. Every member was interested.
-
-Every dollar’s worth sold had to be by a member appointed by the
-President and approved by the members. For ten per cent on every
-dollar’s worth had to be allowed the society for securing the market.
-Ten per cent had to be allowed the member who bought from them also, but
-was not paid them in coin but added to the shares. That made it cheaper
-to them than advertising. The company had to employ the society’s
-members. Factories were started in the city, but only remained there
-until they were built in the Colony.
-
-A committee of members could build a factory on the land secured by the
-society free from ground rent if it could be done without their going in
-debt, for no materials unpaid for could be brought upon the society’s
-land. This rule was made to prevent law suits that would endanger the
-society.
-
-These members were allowed to make all they could out of it, within the
-rules, for a certain number of years, but had to sell to the society
-when the time was up, at the cost price of labor and materials, etc.
-
-One or more people would take up the different branches and were given
-the exclusive right to sell to the society as long as they kept within
-the rules. The rules were that a member was to receive ten per cent on
-every dollar’s worth of goods they bought. This percentage was to be
-added to their shares. All goods to be sold at a price regulated by a
-committee of members and those who were investing in the enterprise. Dry
-goods of all kinds were represented, hardware, crockery, etc. A general
-overseer was appointed to see that a right percentage was paid to the
-society for securing the customers.
-
-Three men started a hat factory, for both men and women’s hats. They
-were given the exclusive right to manufacture them as long as they kept
-within the rules of the society.
-
-Two women started the millinery department. Four others dressmaking.
-Three men did tailoring, others took charge of the shoe department, all
-using their own capital, each group paying their share of the rent.
-Every line of business was represented that the members required.
-
-It gave all a chance to invest their savings. As each business venture
-enlarged so that more partners were required to run it, the society took
-charge of it. In every instance those who started the business and had
-brought it to that point, were given charge of it at a percentage that
-paid them more than it would to keep on alone. The society had to pay
-cash for everything that it controlled; so did the members when they
-sold under the society’s patronage. If there was no debt there was no
-danger of the society being wrecked.
-
-In all the large department stores several salesmen and saleswomen saw
-the advantage to themselves in co-operation with the society and soon
-such stores were started in the cities. They realized their benefits and
-determined to secure homes and pensions without delay. Each department
-was represented by those that understood the business. The money that
-had been kept in the banks was withdrawn and the days of small
-beginnings had returned once more.
-
-It was a satisfaction that no one could become rich from their labor
-except those who were co-operative with them. The people lived more
-simply, the chief aim being to live honorable, truthful lives; to gain
-titles that showed friends and strangers who and what they were was
-worth more to them than all the flash and make-believes that had
-contented them in days gone by.
-
-The society found it cheaper to make good roads with the labor of
-crowded-out men than to use the old system of cars. Automobile cars that
-carried coal and grain, as well as every kind of produce, spoke loud and
-plainly as to the price they were going to pay those magnates of
-commerce.
-
-Wealth beyond what each could use was only foolishness. It was almost as
-bad as giving their labor away. They received honors when they donated
-wealth to the society for the benefit of little children, invalids, or
-the aged. Young people were given extra advantages who cheerfully helped
-those who belonged to them and who were unable to do all for themselves,
-but no member was allowed to support another if that other was better
-able to work for themselves than the one who was doing it. The society
-gave employment to all healthy men and women who were members and paid
-their dues. All being consumers, they helped to keep the scrip in
-circulation. In the beginning of the society many city members sent
-their aged parents to the colony to live. It gave them a chance to do
-light work when they were able, and their permanent shares could be
-added to those members at the old peoples’ death.
-
-Those who held highest rank were always given the best offices. They
-also controlled the councils, because they gained their titles for
-honesty and truthfulness first, then for special services to the
-society, bravery in times of danger, self-denial in giving up their
-wealth for the love of the people. Merit, not money, ruled. Often those
-who held the highest titles saw that someone besides themselves were
-better fitted for the duties that naturally came to them. In those cases
-the best person was appointed of either sex. No one could hold an
-important office that had not received a title, nor could they in any
-way be placed over members who had proved themselves superior.
-
-The object of giving titles was to place the best members in control.
-Money had ruled so long and so unjustly that it was necessary to place
-the members in positions that they would be honored for their integrity.
-So the custom was established at the beginning of the society. All knew
-what to expect when they joined and could not complain if they saw a
-certain class preferred to themselves. No person’s honesty was taken as
-a matter of course. The business of all concerned had to be constantly
-under the supervision of committees formed each month to audit the
-accounts, receive complaints, and settle disputes. It is a well-known
-fact the world over that some people are always in trouble. That kind
-know nothing else and they must be weeded out of the association,
-otherwise they will cause a dissatisfaction that no power can stop if
-let run on. They are like a small fire that can be controlled in the
-beginning. Compel such people to sell their shares if reasoning fails to
-bring them to their senses. The greatest good to the largest number must
-always prevail. There is nothing so contagious as unreasoning discontent
-among a mixed people.
-
-Patience is necessary in all walks in life, but was never needed more
-than in becoming accustomed to the new forms of government. So many
-would forget and fall back to the old ways at first, and those who were
-careless were nearly always jealous of the persevering members who
-surpassed them.
-
-The scale of wages was the same as union men and women received in
-factories outside of the society, even if the hours were less per day,
-excepting in cases of piece work that was done by old or infirm people,
-who only worked as they were able at any time.
-
-The pensions paid to members for the first ten years were according to
-dividends earned in the factories, etc., in which their money or labor
-was invested. After ten years it was increased, but at no time could it
-be decreased.
-
-Ten per cent each year was paid for interest on these shares until the
-pension was paid, but had to be left to accumulate with the society
-until then. When a member begins to draw a pension the amount will have
-to be according to the number of shares and the age of the members when
-the first allowance is paid. When a pensioner begins to draw his pension
-at forty-five years of age, it will be less than if they did not draw it
-till they were fifty-five or sixty years of age, for the amount of
-shares will have to be divided so that they will last at least until the
-member is seventy-five years old.
-
-This does not mean that the pension will cease at that age, for it will
-be paid as long as the member lives.
-
-To protect itself the society had to make rules to pay pensions,
-according to the members’ shares, but it was found by practice that such
-large amounts were donated for this purpose that their shares were much
-larger than their personal shares represented.
-
-This rule had to be made during the first generation, but after the
-first generation of children had the advantage of being provided with
-homes and an education in childhood, and regular employment in mature
-years, the society was able to pension them at forty-five years of age,
-because it had the whole benefit of their labors until that time. In
-winter we had the machinery so arranged that it could either run the
-weaving of cotton or the different kinds of materials just by adjusting
-a certain lever of machinery. In this way we kept men and women employed
-all the time, securing at least eight hours a day to all who needed it.
-At night the white materials were woven when practical and night workers
-were given shorter hours with the same pay as the day workers. In this
-way all were secured steady employment, for the same was done with every
-kind of factory work. In the summer a large percentage of these people
-were given different employment. Some went to the wheat fields, others
-to the cotton plantations, for the steam carriages made it possible, or
-the fruit farms, etc. The first few years it was necessary to work just
-as many hours in the society as out of it; as soon as all the exchanges
-were complete the hours were shortened, and those who were not able to
-work so long each day, even at the first, were given less to do, for the
-society never was a money scheme but a protection to labor. At the same
-time those who only worked three or four hours a day got that much less
-for their labor. It had to be that way at first or idle people would
-have shirked their responsibilities. This put a stop to overproduction
-in all lines of goods. All had a large field of employment to choose
-from and nearly all were satisfied, at least all were better satisfied
-than they had been before they joined the society.
-
-At the end of five years the society owned the first land that it had
-built upon and all the industries on it, besides. Then dividends were
-granted to members, either in permanent or consumable shares, according
-to the amount they had at the time. The society holding the right to
-keep in its possession sufficient money or script to increase the
-standing wealth. The dividends were secured to the first members at this
-time to reward them for trusting its management and giving the society
-its impetus. It showed the value of small beginnings and taught a lesson
-in co-operation among the members in the most practical way.
-
-
- THE END OF THE RULES.
-
-
-
-
- THE PLANET VENUS.
- SECOND STORY.
-
-
- CHAPTER I.
-
-A gentleman and his wife were sitting in their study. He was reading;
-she was doing some fancy work. In a few moments their son came in, and
-seeing his father occupied, took a seat by the window to wait until his
-father was through.
-
-These people were titled, or, rather, the father and mother were. The
-elderly gentleman was a lord and his wife a princess. They had both
-received their titles for their grand and faithful work in helping to
-restore order to the country in which they belonged. Their name was a
-combination of both their names, Just and Ring, consequently he was Lord
-Justring and she was Princess Justring. She could not raise him to her
-title, nor could he change hers, even had they desired it. Their two
-children were therefore known as the Justrings, they had received the
-title Honorable, and their parents wished them to gain greater titles
-which was the custom of the country. Their motto was: “The world is
-better for my living in it,” for when any one did a great
-self-sacrificing act, it always added to their title in some way.
-
-In a few moments Lord Justring looked up to see what it was that his son
-wanted.
-
-The young man approaching, said:
-
-“The study of worlds may be a very interesting subject, but, father, I
-am positively sick of it. There is nothing in it to reward you for all
-your trouble, that I can see. Take the planet Earth, for example. The
-missionaries have not made one beneficial change in the condition of the
-masses from what they were twenty-five years ago. The fact that we are
-able to hear as well as see them, I admit, is something to our credit,
-but what good is it to them? I thought after we had perfected those last
-instruments that we would be able to make them catch the ideas we are
-trying to convey to them.”
-
-“Your life can only be perfected by the good you do for the more
-ignorant worlds. You must be patient; but why are you discouraged?”
-
-“Because the ones I wish to reach and help don’t catch the messages.
-Instead of helping them I have found that we are actually helping the
-wealthy people to see their advantage, for they are the only ones who
-have been able to make use of the suggestions. This wealth, in turn, is
-being used to cement all the closer the bond of servitude and those who
-toil are in a worse plight today than in any time during the Earth’s
-history. Since I have taken up this work, I have no peace of mind and I
-cannot enjoy life.
-
-“It is a fearful thing to see millions upon millions of people toiling
-to sustain life, even in times of peace, besides knowing that those who
-work the hardest have the least for their labor, while the cry of those
-who are starving because they have no work to do, is unbearable. Then
-the unnecessary wars all brought about to enrich those in power and keep
-the ignorant dependent.”
-
-“Why, my son, that is the reason that we who live on the older planets
-form these societies to reach the younger ones; the planet Herschel has
-caught the messages sent to them. That should be encouraging.”
-
-“Yes, it is, but only a few in comparison with the multitude of worlds
-after all.”
-
-[Illustration]
-
-“Well, all have to make a beginning; then they can go on and perfect
-their system as we have done ours.”
-
-[Illustration]
-
-At this point of the conversation a young lady entered the room. Her
-face showed a depth of thought unusual in one so young. She looked at
-them for a second to see if she would be interfering with the
-conversation, but as they seemed to be on the same subject she
-commenced:
-
-“Father, is it necessary for me to continue my efforts to reach the
-planet Earth?”
-
-“Why, my dear, surely you are not going to complain also. Your brother
-has just told me that he would like to give it up. It would grieve me
-sorely if either of you do.”
-
-“Oh, brother, you don’t mean it? Men are so strong, they ought not to
-give in so soon.”
-
-“It is all very well to say so, but I have not had any peace since I
-took it up, sister mine. I don’t understand why I should give up so much
-of my life to what seems such a hopeless task.”
-
-“Well, children, sit down and tell me what you have accomplished.”
-
-“Father,” the young lady replied, “I have accomplished nothing,
-absolutely nothing that I can see.”
-
-“Well, tell me what you saw.”
-
-“It is so discouraging that I hate to talk about it. The last time I
-used the instrument I could not only hear all they said, but see them.
-One of the first things that I saw made me so ill that I can hardly
-sleep. I saw a woman who lived in a city, in a part of the world they
-call America, burning her children to death. You know I had asked to
-take that part of the world because I was told it was the home of
-freedom. I couldn’t see what the term ‘Freedom’ meant when little
-children could be left at the mercy of a lunatic. I tried to get away
-from the instrument, but I was fascinated. Then I directed the
-instrument to a home, not fifteen minutes’ walk away, and saw the other
-extreme. I saw women and girls dressed for a reception in beautiful
-gowns and quantities of jewels; they actually had on their persons
-enough wealth to support twenty such families for the rest of their
-lives.”
-
-“Well, I should think that is all the more reason that you should
-persevere in trying to reach those and make them hear you.”
-
-“Oh, well, father, I cannot talk any more about it today. It is too
-terrible.”
-
-Lord Justring looked at his children for a few moments and then said:
-
-“You must remember one thing, that you owe to many others besides your
-mother and I all the blessings you now enjoy. Had we become discouraged
-at seeing the terrible things all around us when we were at your age,
-you would not be enjoying all the recreation that you do now, the
-holidays or the advantages of travel that afford you so much pleasure.
-Forty years ago the government secured all the land and gave it back to
-the people, believing that everything created by nature belonged to all;
-but it did not give them a particular amount to live upon. Myself and
-others had to work very hard to convince the majority that it was the
-only just way to do. Now your income is so large that you will never use
-it all. I have never used all mine, nor do I need it. If you will read
-the history of the last fifty years you will see a wonderful difference
-in the lives of the people. They live longer because they have more time
-to take care of their bodies. They were not compelled to work so many
-hours, even forty years ago, as they had done in the ages past, but as I
-said before, there was no special income for all, as there is now.
-
-“At that time we felt justified in setting a certain sum or value for
-every individual born in our district. Strange as it may seem, humanity
-was left until the last, all kinds of property were secured to us in
-this part of the country, but human beings had not had their right value
-set. We then enforced a law that every man, woman and child had a right
-to be fed, housed and clothed. An industrial army had been a fact before
-and the proceeds of their labor enabled the government to secure to all
-the people an income.
-
-“You know that even yet those who will not work are locked up and
-deprived of the income they would have otherwise. When they have had
-enough of solitary confinement we try them again, but don’t allow them a
-choice of their occupation until they do the best in what we give them
-to do.
-
-“The people ran riot on this planet, robbing each other as they now are
-doing on other worlds. History repeats itself over and over again in
-everything. Well, after the people had gone through the struggle of
-gaining so much, they were satisfied to let results remain as they were.
-The majority could not see the dangers ahead, but we who did were
-determined to settle matters once and forever. Some wanted money given
-to each individual instead of cards representing their wants.
-
-“‘No,’ we said, ‘money was the enemy that had robbed labor at all times
-and now money must go.’
-
-“We told them that without its use we had emptied the cities of its
-criminals; we had scattered the people into the country where all could
-have sunshine as well as homes. If we still retained money it would only
-be a short time before a few people could corner the majority in the
-cities that we had built.
-
-“Children, every advantage that the people possess, the working people
-had to fight for and they did it by determination and the exacting of
-their own rights. Even the public schools had to be fought for. The rich
-were determined that the ‘common people,’ as they always termed those
-who served them, should not have them. It would raise the taxes, they
-said, and why should they pay for other people’s children? Common
-children didn’t need an education. Then many of those ignorant
-dependents, like so many parrots said, ‘Oh, no, we did without an
-education, and so can our children.’ This was all before our time. Every
-generation has its new duties to perform. We received help from older
-worlds, just as you have been appointed to do our part to the planet
-Earth. If they had done as you children wish to do, we would have been
-just where the people upon that planet are now.”
-
-“Well,” his daughter replied, “I will try it again.”
-
-The son answered: “I will not be left out of the struggle now that I see
-my duty plainer.”
-
-Their father thanked them and when they had left the room said to their
-mother:
-
-“We must encourage them more, for it is a hardship to see suffering when
-you cannot relieve it.”
-
-
- CHAPTER II.
-
-Professor Longrin had been appointed to select the missionaries in the
-different worlds. Princess and Lord Justring were talking over their
-children’s discouragement with the professor, for they were feeling
-quite badly over their desire to give it up.
-
-“The people of the Earth have my sympathy,” said the Princess, “and we
-must find some one who will be willing to devote their time to reaching
-them. Many public school children among the poor are so hungry that they
-cannot study in many of the large cities. Then you will hear a great cry
-go up, ‘A bank has failed for $400,000, or perhaps more, the savings of
-widows and orphans, all lost by speculating.’ The bank failure seems by
-far the most important to the inhabitants. Buildings are erected to keep
-and protect money in that cost more than would support all the poor
-little starving children in the world. Just consider all the labor that
-is thrown away in earning all those millions besides the amount stored
-in them. Then think of the temptation to rob by those in charge when
-money means so much to every one.”
-
-Professor Longrin told Princess Justring that she could take up work
-with her children and possibly she could encourage them by her
-experience for a time at least.
-
-In a few days she with her daughter called upon a young married friend
-who had twin babies, and while there one of the public officers called
-to present the young mother with her babies’ card entitling them to draw
-upon the government for their support. The quiet and matter-of-fact way
-that the mother accepted it recalled to Miss Justring’s mind the
-difference between the mothers on the Planet Venus and those on the
-Planet Earth, so she said to the happy mother:
-
-“You may be glad that you don’t live on the Planet Earth, with two
-babies at once to care for.”
-
-“Why, I don’t see what difference it makes whether there is one or two,
-in fact it seems to me better for them because they will always be such
-companions and I think any mother would be glad.”
-
-“Not all mothers,” replied the princess, “Gondell and her brother are
-studying the Planet Earth and are trying to civilize it.” “Oh,”
-continued Gondell, “children are born to some mothers there who have
-nothing to feed them or herself and the poor things die from neglect.”
-“Why,” exclaimed the young mother, “what are the people doing to allow
-such a thing? Why, I think we mothers are doing our part in life
-supplying the world with its men and women, without supporting them.”
-“Well,” replied Gondell, “little children are dependent upon their
-mothers and the majority of mothers on their husbands, their husbands in
-turn are dependent upon some one to employ them, who has money. In fact
-they are the worst kinds of slaves, for if the rich owned them, they
-would be sure of being fed, clothed and given a shelter.”
-
-“But why should they be slaves,” replied the friend, “haven’t the people
-any intelligence?” “Oh, dear, yes,” Gondell says, “but they allowed the
-rich to control the medium of exchange, which is money, until they have
-gained control of nearly everything. Few people realize their position
-or know that it is money that compels them to pay a tax on everything
-they consume. They don’t even know that they are slaves. Mothers are of
-no account in comparison to men. Men are given pensions in the police
-force and other public positions, such as the army where they kill other
-men, but never to women or children. Women cannot even earn as much as
-men when they do the same kind of work.”
-
-“Why, I think they are fools to marry and risk being mothers until they
-know how they are going to be protected, don’t you think so, Princess
-Justring?” “No, I don’t think they are fools, but I do think they are
-not as brave as they ought to be or they would set everything aside that
-interests them in life until they had secured to every child born, every
-woman and man an income to protect them for life.”
-
-“It certainly is wrong to become mothers when they cannot protect
-helpless infants against poverty under every circumstance,” the young
-mother said.
-
-“Money does not protect the rich either, for even the largest fortunes
-are lost in many cases. Under the present conditions no one is safe from
-poverty all their lives,” the Princess replied.
-
-Looking lovingly at her infants the mother said, “Thank God, I don’t
-have to worry about them.”
-
-“Come,” said the professor, the next time they were assembled, “I want
-you to see an ideal home in the country of America, among the working
-people. Look at that man, isn’t he a noble specimen of manhood, using
-all his energies to secure wealth to lavish upon his wife and children.
-See with what pride he gazes upon all their attainments. No exertion is
-considered where they are concerned, and the wife takes her share of
-responsibility in managing and controlling all within the home so that
-her husband may have all the rest and comfort possible after his hard
-work in the office. The children are their pride, nothing must interfere
-with their attainments, while he works to supply the means, she works to
-fit them to be an honor to their name. All the united affection these
-two can lavish upon them, is considered only justice to the little ones
-they have been instrumental in bringing into the world. With what loving
-care the mother gets up in the night to carry the little one that is
-crying beyond the ear of the father, who has to work next day. See her
-as she rocks it in her arms, then walks the floors, anything to secure
-him the rest that he must have if he is going to continue the success
-that he has had in business. The next morning the children are sitting
-on each side of the breakfast table while he is at one end and his wife
-at the other. A merry conversation ensues about the childish pleasures
-and interests that each have in the other. The husband goes to his
-employment with that picture in his memory to encourage him and to
-hasten his home coming. And yet they are living in as great an
-uncertainty as the poorest in the land. That home may be wiped out and
-the wife and children become as desolate under existing customs as any
-others. While it lasts it is fine, but nothing is certain for anyone.”
-
-The members of the class each took their turn in studying out the
-conditions, and after a while they became confident that something had
-happened to awaken or at least startle the inhabitants.
-
-“Well, Princess Justring,” says the Professor, “we may be reaching them
-after all. Come to the observatory again tomorrow and we will see what
-is going on. Good-bye, my friends, for the present.”
-
-Princess and Lord Justring with their children arrived the next day to
-find an unusual amount of excitement among the other members. Something
-had happened on a portion of the planet Earth called the United States
-of America. The money power was in an uproar. Some one in a position to
-know facts was telling the whole country how their money was being
-invested. This man was daring enough to denounce the whole system in
-sufficiently plain language that there could be no mistake. The people
-were excited. Those who had a few dollars in the banks to those who had
-invested their thousands in stocks of different kinds. The great men of
-finance were rushing to their telephones, commanding subordinates to
-appear before them, and the excitement was increasing. Was it some one
-of their associates that had fallen through to earth? Had the President
-of the country died, or what did it all mean? Something far worse than
-anything yet guessed. One of their own familiar spirits had dared to
-expose the tricks by which they had amassed their millions.
-
-“Well, why all this excitement here on the planet Venus?” asks one of
-the members.
-
-Professor Longrin answers: “After all the years that we have taken to
-perfect our instruments so we could reach the planets and suggest to
-them better management, giving them our experiences, helping them to
-originate telegraphs, telephones, everything we could imagine that would
-civilize them, when, lo and behold, the Great Ruler of the Universe
-chose a millionaire to expose the whole money scheme, chose one who
-obtained his money by the same methods that he now denounces. Nothing
-could be more convincing to the rest of the world that lets other people
-do their thinking for them, than this. I believe we can leave the
-results with those who are awakened on a part of the earth at least, and
-now friends we will direct our effort toward showing them the remedy.
-The remedy is to organize a society that will protect them from all
-dangers, poverty heading the list.”
-
-
-
-
- WE ARE GOING TO BE INSPECTED.
-
- BY GARRETT P. SERVISS.
-
-(This clipping was taken from a newspaper in the winter of 1905.)
-
-
-There is something on the cards for this winter of wider interest than
-social functions, theater parties, Wall street plunges, politics, and
-even war—it is an inspection of which the whole earth will be the
-subject. The inspector can already be seen approaching, lantern in hand
-(for it is a nocturnal job), peeping over the rim of the world at
-sunset. This inspector is the planet Venus.
-
-Venus, we have excellent reasons for thinking, is a world crowded with
-intelligent inhabitants, and as, for several months to come, it rises
-higher every night, and beams more and more brilliantly, we may almost
-feel the eyes of those inhabitants fixed curiously upon us. For if we
-think of them, can they fail to think of us?
-
-But their opportunity for observation is far better than ours. It is
-customary for us to consider other planets only as they present
-themselves to the earth. Quite as interesting, and infinitely more
-novel, is it to consider the earth as it presents itself to other
-planets, and particularly to Venus, its nearest planetary neighbor, and
-its closest counterpart.
-
-Once grant that there are intelligent beings on Venus and the conclusion
-follows with irresistible force that they must study our globe with an
-intensity of interest and application proportional to the ease with
-which their observations can be made. And this is exactly the particular
-in which they possess a great advantage over us. In fact, there is no
-place in the entire solar system where an astronomer could have so
-favorable a position for examining another world than his own as he
-would have on the planet Venus.
-
-The reason is very simple; it is because when Venus is nearest to the
-earth—about twenty-six million miles away—she lies between the earth and
-the sun. At that time we cannot see her at all, because our eyes are
-blinded by the flood of sunshine which envelops her. But, on the other
-hand, at that time the earth is in the middle of Venus’ midnight sky,
-blazing with light reflected from its continents and oceans and polar
-snows, and looming so large and splendid that the sight must be
-unutterably magnificent—such a sight as a terrestrial astronomer would
-sit up all night to gaze at, and then feel that the swift pace of time
-had robbed him.
-
-In order to comprehend how great the earth must appear from Venus when
-the two are in line with the sun, it will only be necessary the coming
-winter to look at Venus herself, shortly after sundown—at the same time
-remembering that the splendor which dazzles our eyes comes from but a
-small fraction of the illuminated surface of that planet, while the
-earth as seen from Venus will show its whole round face like a full
-moon!
-
-To my mind there is nothing, not mathematically demonstrable, more
-certain than that the astronomers of Venus are already preparing for the
-great spectacle that will adorn their heavens late in the coming winter,
-when the earth, with its attendant moon, swims in the midnight.
-
-The culmination of the earth must be one of the greatest events in their
-calendar. Studying it with powerful telescopes, they must long ago have
-familiarized themselves with the geography and the meteorology of our
-planet. Our continents and oceans, and even our groups of islands, our
-vast river valleys, our mountain chains, must all appear on their school
-globes of the earth. We have made school globes of Mars, but Mars is far
-away, and our opportunities for studying his features are insignificant
-compared with those which the people of Venus have for studying the
-earth.
-
-
-To the readers of this book I have this to say: I believe the ideas it
-contains are a prophecy. Time will prove it if it is so, and every one
-can do a part towards helping along its fulfillment.
-
- LENA JANE FRY.
-
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