The Ego and His Own

Part 37

Chapter 37275 wordsPublic domain

An examination of the special jury law passed by the New York legislature in 1896. A speech delivered by the editor of Liberty at a mass meeting held in Cooper Union, New York, June 25, 1897, under the auspices of the Central Labor Union, Typographical Union No. 6, and other labor organizations. Distribution of this pamphlet among lawyers and legislators will tend indirectly to interest them in Anarchism.

_Price, 5 cents_

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Instead of a Book

BY A MAN TOO BUSY TO WRITE ONE

A FRAGMENTARY EXPOSITION OF PHILOSOPHICAL ANARCHISM

_Culled from the writings of_ BENJ. R. TUCKER EDITOR OF LIBERTY

_With a Full-Page Half-Tone Portrait of the Author_

A large, well-printed, and excessively cheap volume of 524 pages, consisting of articles selected from Liberty and classified under the following headings: (1) State Socialism and Anarchism: How Far They Agree, and Wherein They Differ; (2) The Individual, Society, and the State; (3) Money and Interest; (4) Land and Rent; (5) Socialism; (6) Communism; (7) Methods; (8) Miscellaneous. The whole elaborately indexed.

_Cloth, One Dollar; Paper, Fifty cents_

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MAILED, POST-PAID, BY

BENJ. R. TUCKER, P. O. Box 1312, NEW YORK CITY

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TRANSCRIBER'S NOTES:

1. Passages in italics are surrounded by _underscores_.

2. The original text includes Greek characters. For this text version these letters have been replaced with transliterations.

3. Certain words use oe ligature in the original text.

4. The following misprints have been corrected: "p." corrected to "p. 7," (page 96) "aristotocratic" corrected to "aristocratic" (page 143) "woful" corrected to "woeful" (page 222) "peoplet" corrected to "people" (page 277) "heiling" corrected to "heilig" (footnote 20)

5. Other than the corrections listed above, printer's inconsistencies in spelling, punctuation, hyphenation, and ligature usage have been retained.