People's Pilot, Volume 4, Number 47, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 16 May 1895 — Page 7 Advertisements Column 1 [ADVERTISEMENT]

•» ij»bj£ book is creating a sensation throughout the # United States. It is a revelation on the money S question, and is changing the views of millions 5 on oe- 5 {M OREL - ! f | I I # i § Anglo-Wail Street Administration- S £ 1 S Is now endeavoring to precipitate upon the nation ® | A Gold Debt of Five Hundred | | Million Dollars, I m % \ f Which will entail 50 years of added labor, self-denial and privation. Had Coin’s a Is Financial School been studied more generally some years ago the wise men of # A finance could not to.day hope to carry their audacious and infamous measure. ¥ | Coin's Financial sehool I | Is Wakirfg Up the People. I | BEAD IT! STUDY IT! RECOMMEND IT! |

This book, which is sold everywhere for 25c., and is being printed from four rapid presses at the rate of 10,000 a day, than which no other book has been so warmly defended by the masses of the people or so bitterly opposed by the banks and wealthy classes through the single-gold-standard press; this book, which is more extensively read and commented upon than any other book of recent years, can be had free by the payment of SI.OO on subscription to The People’s Pilot, either for what is now due or for a year in advance.

W. W. Cooke, Mino'cqua, Wis.: “Never since reading ‘Uncle Tom’s Cabin’ when a boy, have I been so stirred wirh indignatiou at a great national wrong, as I have been while reading ‘Coin’s Financial School’ and ‘A Tale of Two Nations.’ ” M. M. Keller. Loan Broker. Cambridge. Iowa: “I have been on the fence for some time, but after reading ‘Coin’s Financial School’ I have become so thoroughly convinced that I do not think any fair minded man. after carefully reading this valuable work, can hesitate for one minute to openly declare for free coinage of silver.” A; L Sparks. Bushnell, Ill.: “I have just finished reading the Little Giant on Free Coinage of Silver. ‘Coin’s Financial School.’, I thought I was well versed on the finance of my country, but truth and candor compels me to sav that it is the most comprehensive work on finance that has ever been my pleasure to read.” A. J. Lovejov. banker. Litchfield. Mich.: “We have quite a school started here and it is surprising how interested the people are. That a matter of such importance should be so little understood is the wonder of all. Inclosed find draft for 100 ‘gchoojs.’ ”