CHAPTERS 



RURAL PROGRESS 



BY KENYON L. BUTTERFIELD 



President of the Massachusetts Agricultural College 



The increasing interest in rural matters, 

 which began with the generally growing 

 love of outdoor life and which has already 

 included the technical aspects of modern 

 agriculture, is gradually being broadened 

 to embrace the field of economic and social 

 investigations. At present the literature 

 regarding the sociological phases of rural 

 life is particularly meager. 



President Butterfield emphasizes in his book 

 the importance of the social aspects of the ru- 

 ral community and describes some of the newer 

 movements resulting in the expansion of rural 

 me. There are chapters on the work of the 

 vanous agencies for rural development, such 

 as the agricultural coUeges, the farmers' insti- 



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The Tragedies of Seneca 



Translated by FRANK JUSTIS MIIIER 



This IS a new translation of the ten trag- 

 edies which have come down under the name 

 of Seneca, rendered into English blank 

 verse, with appropriate lyric meters for the 

 choruses. The work is enriched and its 



and English students, as well as for the 

 general reader, by an introduction on tL n 



En TV^ '"' '"^^''^^ °^ Seneca upon ea ly 



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Value and Distribution 



BY HERBERT J. DAVENPORT 



The author thus defines his position 

 in his preface: "Since the time of Adam 

 Smith, economic theory 



doctrines enough for a 

 reasonably complete, consistent, and 

 logical system of thought — if only those 

 doctrines had been, with a wise eclecti- 

 cism, properly combined and articulated. 

 The emphasis in the present volume 

 upon the entrepreneur point of view in 

 the computation of costs and in the 

 analysis of the process by which distrib- 

 utive shares are assigned, has nothing 

 new in it; it was necessary only that the 

 point of view be clearly distinguished. 

 consistently held, and fully developed." 



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By Arthur F. Bentley 

 This book is a technical study of the methods 

 which must be used in the scientific interpreta- 

 tion of the phenomena of government. Ine 

 author holds that the manner in which ideas ana 

 beliefs are made to do service in most present 

 interpretations is artificial and unsatisfactorv'. 

 He has endeavored to resolve the customary 

 dualism, not in the manner commonly caliea 

 philosophical, but by a dirtct analysis oi social 

 processes. His position is that the concrete use 

 of leelings and ideas as causes should be aban- 

 doned, and replaced with something more em- 

 cient for scientific purposes. He seeks to nna 

 values or practical meanings for all social ne^ 

 ries and discussions in terms of underlying 

 group interests of the population. While sonie 

 of these interests may be easily located, ^^^y* 

 he believes, can be detected only by protractea 

 investigation. This is but one side of this ^^orK. 

 On the other side he strives to make a similar 

 analysis of the various institutions ororgamzation 

 forms of government, reducing them likewise 

 to terms of underlying group interests, ana 

 showing how they are created and maintainea 

 by the pressures exerted by such interests. 



The book mav perhaps best be (^^scnbea^ 

 an attempt to attain a non-dualistic e-^'Pl^"^""" 

 of the interactions of public opinion in its many 



forms with the institutions of go^^^"T^[l mnt 

 may safely be said that no such detailed attempi 

 to grapple with the intricacies of pubhc opinio" 

 on a strictly social basis has hitherto been niaae. 

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