66. "Every Man has his Price."
Horace Walpole's cynical remark is not true now, nor was it true
even in his own corrupt era. Of what sort are the men who cannot
be bought? Examples.

67. The Scholar in Diplomacy.
Examples in American life.

68. Locks and Keys.
There is a key for every lock. No difficulty so great, no truth so
obscure, no problem so involved, but that there is a key to fit the
lock. The search for the right key, the struggle to adjust it, the
vigilance to retain it—these are some of the problems of success.

69. Right Makes Might.

70. Rooming With a Ghost.
Influence of the woman graduate of fifty years before on the college
girl who lives in the room once occupied by the distinguished "old grad."

71. No Fact is a Single Fact.
The importance of weighing facts relatively.

72. Is Classical Education Dead to Rise No More?

73. Invective Against Nietsche's Philosophy.

74. Why Have we Bosses?
A fair-minded examination of the uses and abuses of the political
"leader."

75. A Plea for Settlement Work.