An address delivered in Central Music Hall, Chicago, on September 14, 1899, before the Conference on Trusts held under the auspices of the Civic Federation.

Chicago Chronicle.—"The speech which roused the most intense degree of enthusiasm and called forth the greatest applause at yesterday's sessions of the trust conference fell in rounded periods and with polished utterance from the lips of a professed Anarchist."

Prof. Edward W. Bemis in the New York Journal.—"Benj. R. Tucker, the famous Anarchist writer, gave the most brilliant literary effort of the conference thus far."

Prof. John R. Commons in the Chicago Tribune.—"The most brilliant piece of pure logic that has yet been heard. It probably cannot be equaled. It was a marvel of audacity and cogency. The prolonged applause which followed was a magnificent tribute to pure intellect. That the undiluted doctrines of Anarchism should so transport a great gathering of all classes here in Chicago would not have been predicted."

Price, 5 cents


MUTUAL BANKING

BY
WILLIAM B. GREENE

Showing the radical deficiency of the existing circulating medium, and the advantages of a free currency; a plan whereby to abolish interest, not by State intervention, but by first abolishing State intervention itself.

A new edition, from new plates, of one of the most important works on finance in the English language, and presenting, for the first time, a portrait of the author.