658 



INDEX. 



JOURNALS, Agricultural (see Agricultural 



Journals), 72. 

 Judgments; do not differ when men agree 



upon facts, 9. 



KNOWLEDGE, If real influences action, 22. 



— Money value of, 22. 



— More required for production for the 



world's markets than for a home mar- 

 ket, 36. 



— Not s<Might except as it affects income, 22. 



— The most important for the farmer, 36. 



— Unprofitable to acquire what will not be 



used, 42. 



— not vague speculation but mastery of facts, 



27- 



LABOR, claim of that the judiciary unduly 



favors capital unfounded, 392. 

 Labor contests, arbitration in, 390. 

 Labor, demands of as to hours of work, 386. 



— Demand of that military shall not be em- 



ployed in strikes, 391. 



— Farmers' relation to, 384. 



— Organized, 385. 



— Organized, at variance with unorganized 



labor, 385. 



— Organized demands of, 385. 



Labor, physical; how it clashes with de- 

 mands of the class-room 13. 



— Physical, not possible while acquiring 



higher education, 46. 



— Purchasing power of 628. 

 Labor Question, definition of, 385. 



— Relations of farmers to, 385. 



— Short hours of not desirable, 430. 



— Socialistic, demands of, 394. 



Land, agricultural ; now as dear as it is 

 likely to be, 107. 



— Not economically cultivable by capitalistic 



methods, 431. 



— Sanction of society for ownership of, 430. 



— Speculation in, 107. 



— Unearned increment of, 429. 



— Value of ownership of, 429. 



— Values, taxation of, 340. 



— Worth less than improvements on, 429. 

 Law, judge made; ignorant legislators re- 

 sponsible for most of it, 393. 



Learning, great, no assurance of happiness, 

 430- , 



Legal tender, 348, 351. . 



Legislation, direct. (See Direct Legislation 

 and Referendum.) 



Legislators, dishonest, influence of, 418. 



Legislatures ; corporations prefer them to be 

 honest, 158. 



Life Insurance, as affected by change to sil- 

 ver standard, 375. 



Life, Law of, ii. 



— Law of; operation on man, 21. 



Loan and Trust Companies, statistics of, 578. 



MAN; conditions of survival, 21. 



— Subject to the universal law of life, 21. 



— The accumulating ; characteristics of, 130. 



— The unjust; not usually a banker, 130. 

 Marketing ; art of, not usually understood by 



farmers, 35. . , , , 



— Cooperative, highest exercise of the art of 



cooperation, 434. 

 Men; classed as owners and non-owners of 

 property, 24. 



— Those who know most have most, 22. 

 Merchandise, cost of selling from first hands, 



263, 277- 



Merchants, retail, relations with wholesalers, 

 262. 



— Commission, 152. 



Money, actual, ratio of used in transacting 

 modern business, 349. 



— Actual ; uses of, 349. 



— Actual value imparted to it by making it 



legal tender, 351. 



— As a measure of value, 350. 



— As a measure of value ; essential qualities 



of, 351- 



— As a medium of exchange not a question 



of the day, 342. 



— Bad; can not be forced to circulate with 



good, 352. 



— Bad, may do the work of good, 343. 



— Coined gold and silver the best, 353. 



— Depreciated ; poor suffer most by it, 348. 



— Fiat, results of use of, 346. 



— Fiat, use of not desirable, 348. 



— Gold and silver always used for, 356. 



— Good, one essential quality of, 342. 



— Government paper, objects of issue of, 347. 



— Gresham's law of, 354, 



— Ideal, 347. 



— Increase of raises prices, 352. 



— International, 343. 



— Irredeemable; theoretically may be made 



satisfactory, but practically never has 

 been, 353. 



— Loans of by government to the people, 148. 



— Made scarce and dear by overtaxation, 150. 



— Necessity of, 137, 345. 



— Non-exportable, 348, 353. 



— Of the world must be considered as one 



stock, 353. 



— Per capita, 349. 



— Power, control of our gravest problem, 149. 



— Relations of supply of to prices, 354. 



— Representative, 343. 



— Representative not international, 343. 



— Standard of deferred payments, 367. 



— Stocks of in world, 625. 



— Substitutes for, 345. 



— Supply of, as affecting prices, 367. 



— Use of in elections, 118. 



— Usual definition of, 350. 



— Will always be found where desired pro- 



ducts are for sale, 344. 

 Monetary Systems of the world, 624. 

 Monopolies; how they affect the farmer, 126. 

 Morrill, J. S., introduces Agricultural College 



Bill, 539- 



— Introduces second act for endowment of 



Agricultural Colleges, 541. 

 Mortgages ; banks dislike to foreclose them, 

 III. 



NAFTZGER, A. H., Letter from, 514. 

 Nature ; does not consider abuses but condi- 

 tions, 20. 



— Law of, 127. 



— Man can conquer only by cooperation, 128. 



— Phenomena of, 42. 



— Relentless and remorseless, 20. 



— Study (see agriculture in common schools), 



60, 553. 560- 



— What she requires of man, 23. 

 Nelson, N. O., letter from, 606. 

 Nominations, improper; how best prevented, 



116. 



OFFICIALS, Public; can not practice private 

 economy, 190. 



— Usually personally honest, 113. 

 Offii-es, appointive, 118. 



— The most important to a farmer, 115. 





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