Industrial Insurance 



in the United States 



HIS book, revised and enlarged for the English- 

 speaking public, has already been published in a 

 German series. The introduction contains a 

 summary of the European laws on workingmen's in- 

 surance against accident, sickness, invalidism, and old 

 age, with statistics to 1908. The text describes the 

 various forms of social insurance known in the United 

 States and Canada; local clubs and associations, fra- 

 ternal societies, trade union benefit funds, schemes of 

 large firms, corporations, and railways. One chapter 

 is directed to labor legislation and another to employ- 

 er's liability laws. Illustrations of the movement are 

 given in chapters on municipal pension plans for 

 policemen, firemen, and teachers; also the military 

 pensions of the federal government and southern states. 

 The appendix supplies bibliography, forms used by 

 firms and corporations, text of bills, and laws on the 

 subject. 



448 pages. 8vo cloth. Price, $2.00 net; postpaid, $2.19 



OUTDOOR LABOR FOR 



CONVICTS 



By CHARLES RICHMOND HENDERSON 



Published by 



The University of Chicago Press 



CHICAGO 



NEW YORK 



A SMALL volume which presents- an English 

 translation of all the reports made to 

 the last International Prison Congress at Buda- 

 pest, together with accounts of various farm 

 colonies in Belgium and Switzerland, and of out- 

 door work of prisoners in the United States. 

 The book contains the largest body of expert 

 opinion and of fact to be found anywhere on 

 this subject, and the conclusions offered are 

 based on the results of experiments made in 

 nearly all civilized countries. The editor sums 

 up the argument and recommendations, with 

 special reference to American conditions. 1 he 

 topic is of burning interest to all business men, 

 trade-unions, and legislators who wish to study 

 the problem of prison labor in the light of all 

 the facts. 



170 pages, 8vo, paper; net 75 cents, postpaid 

 83 cents. 



ADDRESS DEPT. P 



The University 



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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 has been 

 possession of doctrines enough for a 

 reasonably complete, consistent, 



THE 



PROCESS OF GOVERNMENT 



By Arthur F. Bentley 



This book is a technical study *&*%*££ 

 which must be used in the scientific *terpre» 



tion of the phenomena of &? v XKeas and 

 author holds that the manner in * h £j»^„, 

 beliefs are made to do service in m * PJ 

 interpretations is artificial and uwausja ^ 

 He has endeavored to resolve > the cos 

 dualism, not in the manner commonly 

 philosophical, but by a direct a nalysis ot ^ 

 processes. His position is that the cone 

 of feelings and ideas as causes should 



reasonably complete, consistent, and of feelings and ideas as a aus» . ^ effi 



values or practical meamngsi" under iying 

 ries and discussions in terms of^u ^ 



group interests of the POP^Xlocated. many. 

 of these interests may b f J^Kf^otracted 



he believes, can be 4 et « c * e i° n s Se of this work. 

 investigation. This is but one side ,m Ur 



On the other side he strives i « make ^ 

 analysis of the various »snmoons or j ^ 

 iorms of government, reducing interests, and 

 ,o terms of ""^"f Jffand maintained 

 showing how they are createa ^ 



by the pressures exerted by sucn ^ ibed as 



The book may perhaps . bes t* lanaU on 

 an attempt to attair , a J^jjffi, /its many 

 of the interactions of public op ment . I 



forms with the «sUWtions * g d att? inpt 

 may safely be said that no sucn l0D 



,0 grapple with the jm £•££«&£, been made, 

 on a strictly social basis has n ^ 



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." 



500 pages 

 $3 



cloth 



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THE UNIVERSITY Of CHKAGO rttSS. Chlc«o 



