THE HESPERIAN 11 lushed his horses across tho plain toward thorcof, and of tho strango builder, and of tho city. tho sin of tho king, I may not sponk, for my Of Iho groat pyramid and of tho mystery lips aro scaled. . W. Gather. The Siogle Tax Theory. Shortly before tho closo of tho eighteenth century thero arose in France a school of political economists known as the Physio crats. Their distinguishing doctrine was in regard to land. They believed that in the cultivation of tho soil was tho only source for the creation of new wealth. All occupations except agricultural were unproductive. All expenses of government must ultimately bo born by tho land owners. Hence they ad vocated tho impot unique, or a tax upon land only. They did not dispute the indi viduals title to land. Neither did they question the expediency or justness of pri vate ownership; nor did they intend to dis turb the individual in his possession. They simply proposed to appropriate the produce net, which land returns for tho enjoyment of labor and capital. The theory that the system of individual ownership of land was at the root of the miseries of society, of the pauperism and poverty that exists, had not yet been evolved. The support of such a theory -was left for an Ameri can of to-day. And perhaps it could not have been 'left to a more brilliant, ablo or forcible writer than Henry George. His "Progress and Poverty" is an eloquent book. It was written by an author who un doubtedly was animated by a pure desire for the good of mankind. An enthusiast in his work, but who could see but one side. He has pictured but the shame of civilization, and not its glory; but the grinding wants of men, and not their comforts. The peo ple cannot always afford to follow enthusi asts. Thev have suffered from their blind leadership. It has taken men too long to emerge from the morasses; too long to fight their way outward to the light, as in ages now long buried in the past. Before that class of citizens who have al ways been a nation's most patriotic defend ers, who in defending the nation protected their own homes; and before the permanent interest in those homes is destroyed, the market value of land confiscated, the state made landlord and the people tenants, it should be most carefully considered whether such is a step into the dark, or a step to wards the millennium. The far reaching effects and the highly probable injurious re sults of destroying the security of the home, leaving only chattels which a man may leave for the comforts of his family, caunot be considered too carefully. The religious argument of the single tax theorist has little weight. It is true that land is the gift of God to mankind, and that all men are entitled equally to its use and enjoyment. It is not, however, a gift in the 1 M