FOUR NEW BOOKS 



INDUSTRY AND TRADE. A Study of Industrial Technique 

 and Business Organization; and of their Influences on the 

 Conditions of various Classes and Nations. 



By Alfred Marshall. Second Edition. 8vo. 1 8s. net. 



" Every thoughtful employer and workman and every politician ought to 

 read it carefully. It abounds in information, it is full of ideas, and it displays 

 the judicial temper which is most sorely needed in the general discussion of 

 industrial questions." — Spectator. 



THE ECONOMIC CONSEQUENCES OF THE PEACE. 



By John Maynard Keynes, C.B. 8vo. 8s. 6d. net. 



" Mr. Keynes's very remarkable book betrays a grasp of the subject which 

 could only have been derived from personal experience at the Conference 

 itself." — Westminster Gazette. 



" The best picture of the Great Four at work yet penned. ... A book 

 which all men may read with intense interest." — Daily Express. 



INDIAN FINANCE AND BANKING. 



By G. Findlay Shirras. 8vo. i8s. net. 



" Mr. Shirras has had to face the difficulty inseparable from composing a 

 book upon a technical subject which shall be at once acceptable as a lucid 

 and entertaining exposition to the general reader and as a storehouse of 

 statistical reference to the specialised student. He has succeeded well, and 

 will certainly earn the gratitude of the latter." — The Times. 



STABILIZING THE DOLLAR. A Plan to Stabilize the General 

 Price Level without Fixing Individual Prices. 



By Irving Fisher, Professor of Political Economy in Yale 

 University. 8vo. i8s. net. 



"At the present time, when the question of the exchanges is exercisin-r 

 the mmds of busmess men and politicians in all parts of the world. Professor 

 Fisher's book is certain to arouse interest; and deservedly so, as it' deals in a 

 lucid and comprehensive way with a subject upon which a great deal of ignor- 

 ance exists." — Accountant. ° 



LONDON: MACMILLAN AND CO., Ltd. 



