Published by Harvard University' Books, periodicals, and manuscript to be addressed, EDITORS of QUARTERLY JOURNAL OF ECONOMICS, Cambridge, Mass. Business letters to be addressed, HARVARD UNIVERSITY PRESS, 2 University Hall, Cambridge, Mass. Subscription, $3.00 a year. II. THE BRITISH SUPER-TAX AND THE DISTRIBUTION OF O. M. W. Sprague III. THE DEVELOPMENT BY COMMISSIONS OF THE PRINCI- . IV. THE SOCIAL POINT OF VIEW IN ECONOMICS. I V. SOME ECONOMIC ASPECTS OF THE NEW LONG AND VI. INDUSTRY IN PISA IN THE EARLY FOURTEENTH CENTURY REVIEW: Keynes' Indian Currency and Finance CONTENTS FOR MAY, 1914 I. THE TRUST PROBLEM I. The Necessity of Prohibition or Regulation II. DAVENPORT'S ECONOMICS AND THE PRESENT PROB- III. FIRE INSURANCE RATES AND STATE REGULATION VI. THE LITERATURE OF SCIENTIFIC MANAGEMENT REVIEWS: Elsas' Ausnahmetarife Bernhard's Unerwünschte Folgen der deutschen Sozialpolitik and NOTES AND MEMORANDA: The German Potash Law of 1910. Public Ownership of Telegraphs and Telephones The Development of Alaska by Government Railroads COPYRIGHT, 1914, BY HARVARD UNIVERSITY. [Entered as Second-class Mail Matter. JUST PUBLISHED PROBLEMS IN POLITICAL BY RAYMOND G. GETTELL, Trinity College, Hartford, Conn. 8vo, 400 pages, $2.00 This volume is an attempt to formulate, and to trace the evolution of, the fundamental problems of government. Drawing material from many sources and applying scientific methods of treatment, the author brings out clearly the evolutionary nature of political progress, the connection between institutions and environment, and the constant need for adjustment and compromise in political development. Among the questions considered are the nature of the state; the leading factors in political development; the relations of the state to the family, the church, industrial organizations, and military organizations; the relations of state to state and of state to individual; and present political conditions and tendencies. At a time when social, economic, and political questions are arousing so great an interest, this discussion of the basic principles of political organization, its past development, its present conditions, and its future needs will prove of great practical value. BY THE SAME AUTHOR INTRODUCTION TO POLITICAL 8vo, xx +421 pages, $2.00 Part One traces the rise and growth of political institutions; Part Two is a study of the existing government in leading modern states; and Part Three deals with the theoretical questions of the proper sphere of governmental activity. The treatment throughout is concise, clear, and teachable. The book will be found particularly illuminating upon the important questions with which, in modern democracies, all good citizens should be familiar. READINGS IN POLITICAL SCIENCE 8vo, xlii + 525 pages, $2.25 This is the first book of readings in political science to be published. It comprises extracts from official documents, contemporary sources, and leading modern authorities and affords a comprehensive survey of the whole subject. It is intended to supplement any regular textbook in political science and to serve as a basis for classroom investigation and futher reading and study. THE NORTH AMERICAN REVIEW will be pleased to send a four THE QUARTERLY JOURNAL OF ECONOMICS on receipt of one dollar. The THE NORTH AMERICAN REVIEW FRANKLIN SQUARE NEW YORK CITY MATERIALS FOR THE STUDY OF ELEMENTARY ECONOMICS EDITED BY LEON CARROLL MARSHALL, CHESTER WHITNEY OF THE DEPARTMENT OF POLITICAL ECONOMY OF THE This volume of nearly a thousand pages is intended to supply to students of elementary economics a collection of readings, illustrating the working of economic principles in actual life. The material is drawn from the most various sources books, magazines, newspapers, commission reports, court decisions, corporation charters, government circulars, etc. In not a few cases, original articles and diagrams have been prepared especially for this book. The selections have been carefully edited, so as to eliminate unsuitable material and present the documents in the most usable form. It is not intended that the book shall take the place of the systematic text on economics. On the contrary, it is designed as a companion to any standard text. Of the various materials collected in the volume a few extracts, primarily theoretical, have been chosen to present important aspects of contemporary or historic economic thought. A number of passages, descriptive of existing economic conditions, are intended to afford a background of information which the systematic treatises on economics can hardly give and which the teacher is certainly not warranted in expecting his students to possess. Most frequently the selections offer documentary or case material in which economic laws are embodied in concrete facts. The material is thus very diverse in character, but it is all bound together by the single purpose of helping the student to come, by his own thinking, to an understanding of economic principles. To this end expository writing, news reports, official statements of government or private organizations, statistical tables, schematic analyses, maps, charts, and diagrams are all intended to contribute. 946 pages, 8vo, cloth. 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