CO-OPERATION AMONG THE INDUSTRIES. 85 



Fifth. Store grain and negotiate advances, at the lowest 

 rates of interest. 



Sixth. Establish banks to be controlled by farmers. 



Seventh. Replace the credit with a cash system in all the 

 ordinary transactions of life. 



Eighth. Through co-operation, sell or hold, as circum 

 stances rendered necessary, the various products, of the na 

 tional industries, thus controlling, or entirely abolishing, the 

 present system of gambling in the prime necessaries of life. 



Ninth. Dispense with a large proportion of commission 

 and middle men. 



Tenth. Keduce railroad and water freights and fares to a 

 minimum. 



Eleventh. Break up monopolies, whether in trade, com 

 merce, manufactures, or money. 



Twelfth. Through co-operation of the farmers with me 

 chanics and other laboring classes, establish manufactures 

 at home, as near as possible to the production of the raw 

 material, so that we might gradually produce at home nearly 

 all that may be needed, in place of importing heavily from 

 foreign countries. 



Thirteenth. Encourage the breeding of superior stock. 



Fourteenth. Establish a more thorough system of cultiva 

 tion, and a greater diversity of products, thus preventing a 

 glut of any one of them, such as there has been of corn dur 

 ing the last two seasons at the West. 



Fifteenth. Promote education to the industries by insist 

 ing that every college or university which has received en 

 dowment from the State or General Government as such, 

 shall use the funds for instruction in science, and the ap 

 plication of science to art. 



Sixteenth. Through co-operation with the several indus 

 tries of the country, present and future, insist upon a just 



