r--,ff - T ' ---.,-- t1?r '7- --tf The Commoner. FEBRUARY 19, 1909 13 - fv ir-"jrr'v ' "'"' f ' "v- $13,440 Cash from 28 Acres of Onions W. A. McNeil planted 28 acres in onions at Santa MaTia, Texas, in the Gulf Coast Country. The yield av eraged 400 crates per acre, for which he received $1.20 per crate, or $480 an acre. His total receipts from the 28 acres was $13,440. Pretty good results from four months' work. Mr. McNeil is no exception. Profits of from $300 fo $1,000 an aero are of com mon occurrence in the Gulf Coast country. Are you doing this well? Why shouldn't you? Raising fruit, and vegetables in the Gulf Coast Country is simple any ono can. do it. A few acres will be all you need. You can buy it on easy terms, and the first crop, if properly cared for, should more than pay for the land. Tho Gulf Coast Country is a delightful place in which to live. Mild, sunny winters Gulf-breezo cooled summers. Investigate this proposition while the land is within your reach next year it will cost more. Let me send you some further informa tion about the big profits growers are making in tho Gulf Coast Country. Wo thisin attrmcU?oThc printed orm.fi. .rM ' Write for a free UanKl. 01 MlftCnca. copy toaay. JNO. SEBASTIAN Pass. Traffic Hgr, Rock Island-Frlsco- ' C. and E, I. Lines,- 1077 IinSalle St Clilcngro, 1077 Frisco Did.. St. Louis. THE CRISIS IN EASTERN EXCHANGE - J I VTexasAw , , jkSp 30c pels tho hottest Democratic paper in TJ. S. ono year. The Hornet, Blxby.N. O. TOBACCO FACTORY WANTS SALESMEN Gooa'pfcyi Btcaayw0rk,aiul promption. Experience unnecessary aave.-wlll glvo complot Instructions. Danvill Tobacco, Co., Box O 88, Danville, Va. OUR Bid MONEY MA.KIN CONCRt IUTF1T ITIW vLLtw Am aar r akaaak .Jar tb fammiw aaaaaar O 599.55 of :a Block consists chines, l Rrlck Ma chine,- I Adjustable Sill and Cap Ma chine. 1 SUo BJock Machine.?! Batch Mlxor.i 1 Chimney- ana 'Kier.mouiu, i complete set of Porch Column Moulds, r Outfit of Accessories and 1 set of Concrete Block Laylne Tools. The lowest prico quoted tjy otuersor a. similar outm is $380.00. Wo .. fur nish ovory tiling tor SUU.6D. uecuro this big money mak ing outut and enter tlus profitable busi ness. Many pi pur customers are oionnne rrora Sl,80O to 2,40O per year with our machines. OUR SPECIAL CATALOGUE Illustrates and describes high speed concrete block machines for $16.95: batch mixers for $24.95; brick machines tor $18.65; sower and drain tile, moulds for 50.26; fenco post moulds for $9.85; Pier and chimney moulds for $5.54; cistern and well curbing moulds for $0.15: orna mental ball moulds for $5.35; also a full assortment of the most beautiful designs of orna mental porch, pier, baluster and rail moulds, ranging In price from $2.40np "n xia.no. Wo save you half or more on every machine. Buildyourown Concrete Home OR EQUIP A PLANT COMPLETE WITH ALL NECESSARY MACHINES FOR MAKING CONCRETE LOCKS AND OTHER CONCRETE IU1LDING MATERIALS. We are the largest builders of concrete machines In the country and sell more than all other concerns combined, saving you from one-halt to two-thirds on any machme or mould you buy from us, and guarantee absolute satisfaction. Write today for our new special concrete catalogue no. oaia. To tho Editor of "The Observer," London. Sir: Will you permit a short let ter on the present position of our exchanges with Asia? That crisis, with all its affiliations in Indian un rest, is tho leading economic inci dent of our time; and'I believe that after slumbering for twelve years public opinion, however reluctantly, is about to return to its considera tion. The official blue book on "Wages and Prices," published by the gov ernment of India, shows just what we should expect, seeing that the Indian mints were closed for tho pro claimed purpose of contracting the Indjan currency, that while the gold price of silver has fallen not much short of two-thirds since 1873, yet rupee wages in India and the rupee prices of local commodities are not appreciably higher, and, indeed, in tho case of unskilled Indian labor are actually lower. And the same is truC'of wages and prices in China. Now mark what follows: In a letter I received recently from Senator Teller from Washington he sums up the yellow industrial peril bred of broken exchanges very shortly and vividly. He says: "Formerly five gold dollars purchased Ave silver taels, and five taels then paid for one day the wages of twenty-five Chinese mill hands; but today five gold dollars purchase twelve Chinese taels and twelve taels pay the wages for ono day of sixty Chinese mill hands." It was with such exchange conditions already in sight that the late Prof. Emile do Laveleye, him self a,n ardent free, trader,, in the last letter I ever received from him (I think in 1888) wrote: "Failing tho restoration of silver, the world must return to protection." Ev3ry year.it becomes more clear that the condition precedent to free exchanges (free trade) is fixed ex changes. The mere fall in the silver exchanges with Asia in the past eighteen months has cut off the pow er to purchase our goods by one half the hu'man race. The Chinaman, if offered Manchaster cottons at our sterling quotation, says: "Before I buy your cotton I must buy your sterling; a year since I bought a bill on. London for a sovereign with nine taels, but today I must pay twelve taels; therefore, you have lost my custom and I propose in future to draw any trade balance in silver which, though a 'commodity' in the west, is money here, and I will build with that money my own mill and be independent of you and your ex change convulsions caused by your own legislation." I remember in 1894 our consul general at Hakodate tending us this concrete instance of tho closing of the nominally "open door" in the far east. Such an instance is worth a stack of theories. In 1892 Hako date advertised for tenders for a new water system; she needed 1,500 tons of water mains. A Middlesbrough firm got the contract with a bid of 4 4s. per ton, each four guineas at that time requiring an exchange of twenty-eight Hakodate dollars. In 1894 Hakodate for an extension re quired 1,600" tons more of iron pipes. The same British firm tendered, this time 4 per ton, but the exchange had fallen to such a point that now forty-two dollars were required to buy each 4. Accordingly Hakodate rejected all bids, erected a foundry, manufactured her own pipes, and when last heard from was exporting pipes to China and India. It is a safo forecast that if the silver exchanges with Asia remain as low as now, in the next quarter of a century many of our staple indus tries our cotton, our steel and leath er trades will have been transferred bodily to China. The largest coal and iron field in tho world is in tho Chinese province of Shansi. I hear you, sir, say: "By all means; wo admit that tho fall in sil ver exchange has theso deplorable consequences, but so also ban lock jaw serious consequences, and it only remains for us to adopt a protective tariff against Asia and to further accept the fact that cheap silver has deprived us of the trade of eight hundred millions of people." And, such being your view, if, indeed, it is your view, I leave the issue there. I now come to tho position in In dia. India In 1897, despite the warning of every economist, had adopted a gold standard. With what happy prescience Sir Robert GIffen wrote to the Times of this nefarious experiment (May 19, 1898): "Tho highest political issues are also involved. One of the Jiost dangerous things for a government to do is to tamper with the people's money. Is it certain that tho In dian government can go on long with its present ideas regarding money without producing the gravest com plications in the government of India itself?" I fear that at that timo I and others gave great offense in official quarters by asserting that the sixth and eighth commandments were involved. For Mr. W. H. Grenfell could not The Wizard of Horticulture Mr. Luther Burbank says: ' ' The Delicious atPle is correctly named. It is the best in quality of any apple I have so far tested it is agent,' and he knows The U. S. Pomologist Col. Gcordc B. Bracked, says: "J always tola you I consider Delicious best of all varieties you have introduced" A Free Sample of this famous Delicious apple will be sent on re quest. It is the greatest quality Apple of tho ac. selling at 50? moro than Jonathan. No orchard is up-to-date without Delicious trees. Stark Trees aro always best; always bear fruit and every tree has our reputation of 84 years backing it. Our stock is complete: all lines in full assortment. Write today for the free sample apple, alio for the Stark Fruit Hook and The Apple Stark De licious" n wonderful new book showing De licious and King David in nature s own colors. Stark Bro's Box 45 Louisiana, Mo, I Snd M Cts. and tho 44r(f mt 2 ftawr-fvfns frla1 md I will lead vou in vbcw 16th Annual Cattle com' plete with all latest sad favorite flowers, hard, aertfesr ciowb, at half the usual prices, sad a packet of BURBAMK'S VoNSf POPPIES This fiae new strata of we veil kaewn Shirley Is one ef Lather But bank's Utett sad most woadcTful produc tions. Unsurpassed la tpleadorof colorvirutlooj petals A for it cents: also a copy i Address Table 137 MISS O. H. LIIfINCOTT beautifully crimped. Or I will sesd packets for 10 cents, fpr IS centti also a copy of P LORAL CULTU R K. Lddress Table 137 MISS O. H. LIPPIrlCOT 2-04 lOth Street, 8., Minneapolis, Minn. one. stomach it, stated tho case, and re signed from parliament. Enough to say that the mints were closed and half a dozen officials, not more, and Lord George Hamilton were permit ted to ride rough-shod over public opinion, which had been aroused and alarmed from every direction. The result has been what we now see. If a man in this country borrows 100 at four ner cent, the law. nermita llwt 4-r vny 4-Vi r Tif Mrtel- ?!. orvxr ereigns) with any ounce of gold, and similarly, before the closing of the Indian mints, any ryot who had bor rowed a hundred rupees at four per cent could pay the interest (Rs4) with any four tolas of silver bullion. But today he must pay his creditor eight tolas. Lord George Hamilton's currency experiments have doubled the burden of debt for tho Indian ryot. Hence an exceeding bitter cry. Hence, too, people, who, with bancles. ornaments, and other hoards representing tho very rupees they themselves years since melted down for safety, starve to death just as often as there is a famine. Mr. David Yule, president of the Bank of Calcutta', has said of this aggrandise ment of every debt: "How long will the money lenders suffer repayment of their advances to fall into arrear? The agricultural population of this country display a dogged patience at their toil, but the money lenders have the doggedness without the patience. The village grogshop harbors the result a dis solute and heart-broken peasant, once a thriving ryot." By refusing to coin their silver on demand, we have rendered useless the real famine reserve fund, their little hoards, which these poor peo ple have painfully accumulated with hundreds of years of toll. The Indian government today, on every sixteen penny rupee it coins and sells to its citizens, makes a profit of almost eightpence! It is exactly as though the government here made the coining of gold a state monopoly, and sold half-sovereigns for a pound. If Mr. Lloyd George is looking for fresh hen-roosts to plunder here, indeed, is jo. hen that lays golden eggs; and why should he fail to emulate in England the performances of Lord George Ham ilton in India? Let our chancellor of the exchequer also sell his half sovereigns for a pound to starving "out of works" in debt to local mon ey lenders. It seems incredible that under a cloud of verbiage we have really park's aoMJiiB&vjbriiS': worth Wc. All Free it yoa write me a letter, not a postal. AND WHEN WfUTfKB Why ftftt mcIm 10 eft fw I'Mrk'sKlorftlMnraxlnc, acharmlnKllIuittr'd montiiiy, briftiittwn Marigold, i yonr. wiin put uotiuio 1'ctunfa, and 1'uckAgn of 1000 kinds, for a big crazy bed. 3 tots 25c. Chib with f rl wh!s. K0. W. PARK. 35,1a Park, Pc S I "We EEDS THAT GROW Beatouallty Garden, Flower and Farm .JrJ!1 AMiUm. cWnvav. Heed 1'OtatOCH. win inrt f roe with catalog. If yon ask for "--- :--,.. -; titr-., vi.iii It, a pacxec oi new ibimiuw mat '" li.nh Haal lattnoa nvar Introduced. WNl TIB today. AIho have fall lino or nursery Btook, IiosoH, rlants, JBalbs, oto. Adjlrcsj V BUDDED PEACH TREES Ml ESrfV to bw7 i're JOo due.Ull with Uee If caUlo I rixt yXsSin StF Pflr As good M RTOwn. 4 rkts. Olajjt rrHSrotunla, Mammoth Verbena Jap UbU aneno Flro I'lant, Wonder I'opnyi also lOvarietlcs Annual Flowers, all for 10c. PLANTS. 0 Hosc,2&ct 6 Geraniums, Met 0 Bcftonlas. Jfio? 4 loIargonlums, 26c. Catalog and VUX. Olantl'ansyfrco. A.D.ANBERtOMiColUtNbUft.Heb 92,000 to 87,000 Toitrly In Itcnl Estate busi ness. Wo start you; co-opcrntlvo Plan by mall; rito for free booklet. Central jIohI rfeatitto School, 333 Central Bulldlntf, Kniwas City, Mo, We'll make a I'lreman or BraJcwusa outol you In short time oy nuii. in"Juc,"2s IS practical ancj m yuu u"' salary, uraauaica in uig w maud, oniyscnoojconuucicu, b railroad men and en dorsed oy railway M"i4;'. .!- ..!. inMi,irrarauuHr. "w " s" " .-. rz raizw 0.1.1 Dept. B-R-400, Jreeport, IU. A Home and Prosperity In tho lower Rio Orando Valley whero science has triumphed over nature. Where by Irrigation, tho fanner and plnntor can clear from $W) to 1100 per aero per year. Let 113 ten you nrjouniiisnc.. janu ir rigated by gravity. Sure ofylcld,lowln price, easy to buy, easy to cultlvnto and jrrowa about every thlnr. A delightful and healthful climate no kil ling frost. Bend for booklet. Axiia Hey wood, Box 20 San Ilenlto, Texas. Banking By Mail Made Safe in Oklahoma. Hundreds of Banks failed In 1003-thousands of DEPOSITORS had their savings Jeopar dized if not lost Avoid being among tho losers In 1000, by keeping your account In an Oklahoma State Bank. Depositors from 31 states testify to our abll- lty to handle your business sat'sfactorlly. . Booklet containing law freo on application. , Guaranty State Bank, Muskogee, - Oklahoma. J. D. BENEDICT, President. M. G. HASKELL, Cashier. KJIsilBlfrpyfr'Z