Tum E UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO PRESS 
Outlines of Economics. Prepared by Members of the Department of 
Political Economy of the University of Chicago. 
120 pages, interleaved, r2mo, boards; postpaid $1.35 
This inductive course in economics has proved so successful 
in classes at the University of Chicago that a preliminary edi- 
tion is now issued in a form available for use elsewhere. While 
it covers more ground than is usual with an elementary course, 
it is so logical and at the same time connected so closely with 
the student’s previous knowledge, that the average Class should 
have no difficulty in mastering it. The course is arranged as 
follows: (A) Introductory; (B) Economic Wants, Motives, and 
Choices; (C) The Productive Process (Meaning of Production, 
Natural Agents, Labor, Capital, Organization); (D) Exchange 
(Markets, Value, Mechanism of Exchange, International Trade); 
(E) The Distributive Process (Rent, Wages, and Trade Unionism, 
Interest, Profits); (F) Public Finance and Taxations (Public 
Expenditure, Public Revenue); (G) Social Reform (The Present 
Order, Remedies, Ideals). 
Bibliography of Economics for 1909: A Cumulation of the Bibli- 
ography ern in the Journal of Political Economy from 
1909, to January, 1910, Inclusive. Edited by the 
Fooly of the Department oa Political Economy of the Univer- 
sity of Chicago. 
296 pages, 8vo, cloth; postpaid $2.69; with the Pian of Political Economy for one 
year, postpaid $4. 25 
The Bibliography covers books in English, French, Geran, 
and Italian; the government publications of the United States 
and Great Britain; articles i in one hundred periodicals; and im- 
portant state and a _ The subjects covered — 
are as follows: accounting and business methods; agriculture Se 
and the land problem; colonies and dependencies; combina- _ 
_ tions and corporations; commerce and trade; communication; — 
_ economic history; industries; insurance; labor problems; race 
_ problem; migration and population; money, banking, and credit; 
_ Fesources; social economics; socialism, communism, and anarch- 
ism; 3. Statistics; stock exchange and i investment; taxation, ier 
nan eeand tarif “gk : 
