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BRADFORD. — The Lesson of Popular Government. By Gamaliel Bradford. 2 vols., ^4.00. A constructive and critical attempt to show that Democracy is the best form of government so far developed.
" Luminous and exhaustive and instructive at every point." — The Tran- script (Boston).
PATTEN. — The Development of English Thought. A study in the economic interpretation of history, .By Slmon N. Patten, Professor of Political Economy at the-University of Pennsylva- nia. Cloth, 8vo, ^3.00.
■_ " Full of interest and suggestion; usually clearly, often cleverly, ^i'ritten;
P at once the evidence of and the incitment to thought." — The Chiirchtian.
" Marked by fresh thinking and striking generalization." — The Outlook.
VEBLEN. — The Theory of the Leisure Class. An economic study in the evolution of institutions. By Thorstein B. V .blen, Ph.D., Instructor in PoHtical Economy and Managing litor ' I of the Journal of Political Economy, Universitv of Chicago. Cloth, 8vo, $2.00.
- ' Unique in its kind . . . valuable both for its theory . . . and for the
fascinating materials grouped with admirable skill . . . immensely educative." — The Criterion.
FORD. — The Rise and Growth of American Politics. A sketch of constitutional development. By Henry Jones Ford. Cloth, i2mo, $1.50. The purpose of this work is to tell the story of
11 our politics so as to explain their nature and interpret their
V characteristics.
- "This acute and able book." — Hon. James Bryce, author of The Ameri-
can Covunomuealth.
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