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RAILWAY ORGANIZATION AND WORKING

Edited by

ERNEST R. DEWSNUP

A score of prominent railroad men have contributed to this volume the condensed results of their experience.

The practical workings of the various departments-traffic, auditing, operating, etc. are described in vigorous, non-technical language. It is the only manual of the railroad business of moderate size and price.

510 Pages, small 800, cloth; net $2.00 Postpaid $2.16

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The University of Chicago Press

CHICAGO AND NEW YORK

VALUE

By RUFUS F. SPRAGUE

Mr. Rufus F. Sprague, a manufacturer of Michigan, presents herewith his life-long studies on the subject of exchange value. In political discussions upon money he has taken an important part, and in the campaign of 1896 he was the gubernatorial candidate of the Gold Democrats in Michigan.

It is interesting to note that from Mr. Sprague's practical experience he was led to develop a service theory of value, quite apart from any knowledge of Bastiat's work.

The study furnishes an interesting combination of the service rendered with the costs and expenses of production. In this respect the book travels over new ground, and is fresh and original.

New, also, is his adjustment of the principles regulating coined and paper money to the treatment of the service theory of value. In his whole discussion, Mr. Sprague presents what he regards as the only defensible principles of value upon which the friends of sound money can base our currency system. 192 pages, ramo, cloth; net $1.00, postpaid $1.10 Address Dept. P

The University of Chicago Press

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Adam Smith and Modern Sociology

A STUDY IN THE METHODOLOGY OF THE SOCIAL SCIENCES

THE

By

ALBION W. SMALL

HE volume is the first of a series which the author will edit on the preparations for sociology in the fragmentary work of the nineteenthcentury social sciences. The main argument of the book is that modern sociology is virtually an attempt to take up the larger program of social analysis and interpretation which was implicit in Adam Smith's moral philosophy, but which was suppressed for a century by prevailing interest in the technique of the production of wealth. It is both a plea for revision of the methods of the social sciences, and a symptom of the reconstruction that is already in progress. 260 pages, 12mo, cloth; net $1.25, postpaid $1.36

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The University of Chicago Press. Chicago and New York

GENERAL SOCIOLOGY

An Exposition of the Main Development in Sociological Theory, from Spencer to Ratzenhofer

By ALBION W. SMALL

Professor and Head of the Department of Sociology in the University of Chicago

IN this important book Professor Small brings his wide reading and keen analytical powers to bear on the history of sociology and its present claims to be regarded as a science. These claims have often been disputed, on the ground that the material of sociology has already been pre-empted by the recognized social sciences-ethnology, history, economics, etc. Professor Small's answer is that the work of co-ordinating these various groups, of surveying the process of human association as a whole, is a task distinct from that of a worker in one of the special fields, and that the body of knowledge so gained legitimately ranks as a science. In other words, sociology is to social science in general what neurology is to medicine. It is addressed to historians, economists, political scientists, psychologists, and moralists, quite as much as to sociologists.

xiv+739 pp., 8vo, cloth, net, $4.00; postpaid, $4.23.

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SOCIAL ORGANIZATION: A Study of the Larger Mind

By CHARLES HORTON COOLEY

Professor of Sociology in the University of Michigan. Author of "Human Nature
and the Social Order," etc.

$1.50 Net.

SOME OF THE CHAPTER HEADINGS

Postpaid $1.60

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A remarkably elaborate and systematic exposition of the relations as distinguished from the individual constitution of man and of their effect on his conduct and activities, moral and material. Professor Cooley declares that he apprehends the subject on the mental rather than the material side, and this, in fact, is definitely characteristic of his work. But the latter is not neglected. He has for many years been a first-hand investigator of social phenomena of a very wide range, and his observations have been as acute as his use of them has been scientific and suggestive. The present book is one of marked interest, even fascination, for the lay reader as well as for the economic student.

THE PROBLEM OF HUMAN LIFE: As viewed by the Great Thinkers from Plato to the present time.

By RUDOLF EUCKEN

Professor of Philosophy at the University of Jena

Translated by

WILLISTON S. HOUGH and W. R. BOYCE-GIBSON

$3.00 Net

Postpaid $3.30

An able and brilliant presentation of the various philosophies of life as they have taken shape in the minds of the Great Thinkers. The book is in three parts: Hellenism, Christianity and the Modern World, concluding with a suggestive and profoundly interesting chapter on the "Present Situation." Professor Eucken was this year awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature.

CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS

NEW YORK

5

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A History of Matrimonial Institutions

By

George Elliott Howard

Professor of Institutional History in the
University of Nebraska

It

His work, based on the investigations of all accessible literature, historical, scientific, and legal, touches upon every problem involved in marriage and divorce, and its optimistic conclusions are quite in harmony with the true interpretation of evolutionary facts concerning the social development of mankind. would be well if the extreme advocates of "divorce reform" and the Mormonopnobiacs could give it careful perusal. For even the general public Professor Howard's volumes cannot fail to be both interesting and instructive, for they deal attractively with the most human of all institutions, and contain a mass of facts nowhere else obtainable - The Nation.

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THE

HE author's choice of subject does not indicate a belief that Noricum and Raetia formed a political or military unit. In what is local, social, and commercial the two adjacent provinces offer interesting contrasts; in their relation to the Empire they were alike, and from their likeness one may gather much information when the evidence for either alone is fragmentary. It is believed that this method is likely to yield a truer picture of the Roman world than is obtained when the investigation is arbitrarily limited by the boundaries of a modern state.

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12

REFERENCE TO SEX

EIGHTH YEARBOOK OF THE NATIONAL SOCIETY
FOR THE SCIENTIFIC STUDY OF EDUCATION

By CHARLES RICHMOND HENDERSON

HIS study, which was made at the request Tof the Executive Committee of the Society,

and published after their critical examination, and upon the approval of three medical advisers who have read it, is divided into two parts. The first part is chiefly medical and economic, and seeks to prove the necessity for social control of some kind.

This argument demonstrates the necessity for education with reference to sex-the theme of the second part of the work. In this part is found a careful discussion of educational aims, the scope of educational activities, the co-operating agencies in education, the care of infancy, personal hygiene and training, the influence of ideal interests, the principles of formal instruction in relation to sex-its necessity, difficulties and methods.

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CHRISTIAN CHURCH

A Textbook for Adult Classes in Sunday
Schools, and for Colleges, by Williston
Walker, Professor of Ecclesiastical His-
tory in Yale University. (Constructive
Bible Studies.)

From the Preface

"This brief series of biographies is designed for the reader or student without technical training in church history. For this reason considerable attention has been paid to the general condition of the church, or of religious thought in the periods in which the leaders here described did their work, in order that the reader may appreciate their relations to their times. The number of biographies might well have been increased, and the selection may easily be criticized; but the writer believes that none have been chosen who were not really representative men, and his aim has been to illustrate the manifold variety of Christian service, life, and experience. Missions will have their separate treatment in another volume from a different pen.

In mentioning additional reading the aim has been to present a few only of the most accessible works in the English language. Questions have been appended to facilitate review or to aid possible instructors who have made no special study of church history."

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The University of Chicago Press

CHICAGO

The Silver Age of the Greek World

To students of ancient life and thought, Professor Mahaffy's scholarly volumes on

the history of Greek civilization need no introduction. For this particular
period, no modern authority ranks above him in the estimation of scholars. Indeed,
in the minds of thousands of readers, the ancient world is a world recreated by this
delightful writer-a world with a clear air and a serene sky. The subtle charm of
his style will be found to have in no wise diminished in this, his latest book.

The author's purpose is well stated in the following extract from the preface:
"This book is intended to replace my Greek World under Roman Sway, now out of
print, in a maturer and better form, and with much new material superadded. There
has grown up, since its appearance, a wider and more intelligent view of Greek life,
and people are not satisfied with knowing the Golden Age only, without caring for
what came before and followed after. In this Silver Age of Hellenism many splendid
things were produced, and the world was moulded by the teaching which went out
from Greek lands. If this teaching diminished in quality, it certainly increased
greatly in influence, and led its higher pupils back to the great masters of the
earlier age."

485 pages, small 8bo, cloth; net $3.00. Postpaid $3.17

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