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H. A. BLANKENSHIP, A.B., Marietta, 1914. The Georgian Bay ship canal. 1918. Chicago.

ALBERT BRADLEY, B.S., Dartmouth, 1915; A.M., Michigan, 1916. The separation of freight and passenger expenses: A study in the cost theory of railroad rates. 1917. Michigan.

CHARLES CLOYD CREEKPAUM, A.B., Nebraska, 1912. Financial results of state railways. Harvard.

HOWARD DOUGLAS DOZIER, B.A., Vanderbilt, 1908; M.A., Yale, 1916. History of the Atlantic Coast Line System. 1918. Yale.

ROBERT CRAIG EFFINGER, A.B., Virginia, 1914. Railways and business cycles. 1917. Columbia.

M. B. GLAESER, B.A., Wisconsin, 1912. The cost of service principle in railroad rate-making. Wisconsin.

ROBERT LEE HALE, A.B., Harvard, 1906; A.M., 1907; LL.B., 1909. Rate making valuation: its constitutional ambiguity and its misapplication in Wisconsin. 1917. Columbia.

C. Y. Hsu, A.B., Nanking, 1905; A.M., Illinois, 1915. Parliamentary regulation of railway rates in England. 1917. Illinois.

PAUL WESLEY IVEY, A.B., Lawrence, 1912; A.M., Illinois, 1913. History of the Pere Marquette Railroad Company. 1917. Michigan.

LEONARD B. KRUEGER, Ph.B., Wisconsin, 1914; M.A., Pennsylvania, 1915. The regulation of ocean traffic. 1918. Wisconsin.

R. R. Pawar, A.B., Bombay, 1905; LL.B., 1908; A.M., New York University, 1915. The history of railways in British India. 1918. Columbia.

WESLEY EVEREtt Rich, A.B., Wesleyan, 1911; A.M., 1912. The history of the post office in the United States. Harvard.

CHARLES WESLEY SARGENT, A.B., Dartmouth, 1915; A.M., 1916. The trend of federal regulation of railroads. 1918. Michigan.

W. M. W. SPLAWN, A.B., Baylor, 1906; A.B., Yale, 1908; A.M., 1914. A study of the railroad commission of Texas. 1917. Chicago.

RALPH BYRON WILSON, A.B., Ohio State, 1908; A.M., 1910. problems of railroad operation. Harvard.

Trade, Commerce, and Commercial Crises

The practical

RALPH EASTMAN Badger, B.A., Dartmouth, 1913; M.C.S., 1914. A study in the marketing of raw silk and silk products in the United States. 1918. Yale.

O. G. CARTWRIGHT, A.B., Yale, 1893; A.M., 1901. A history of the American consular system. 1917. Columbia.

WILLIAM H. DREESEN, A.B., Greenville, 1907; A.M., Illinois, 1916. Legislation regulating mercantile business in Illinois from 1860 to date. 1918. Illinois.

WILFRED ELDRED, A.B., Washington and Lee, 1909; A.M., Harvard, 1911. Wheat production and the wheat and flour trade in the United States since 1860. Harvard.

MARJORIE LORNE FRANKLIN, A.B., Barnard, 1913; A.M., Columbia, 1916. The most favored nation clause in commercial treaties. 1918. Columbia. LORAIN FORTNEY, LL.B., West Virginia, 1900; A.B., 1900. Warehousing. 1918. Chicago.

ALVIN HANSEN, B.A., Youngston, 1910; M.A., Wisconsin, 1915. Some phases of the business cycle. Wisconsin.

HARRY JEROME, B.A., Omaha, 1912; M.A., Wisconsin, 1915. The development of the concept of unfair competition. 1918. Wisconsin.

ROBERT ALLEN LESHER, B.S., Lafayette, 1908; S.B., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1914. A comparative study of American port revenues and expenditures. 1917. Columbia.

FREDERICK R. Macaulay, A.B., Colorado, 1911; LL.B., 1911; A.M., 1911. The credit features of business cycles. 1917. Columbia.

REID LAGE MCCLUNG, A.B., Morris Harvey, 1904. Unfair methods of competition. 1918. Cornell.

WILLIAM CHARLES SCHLUTER, A.B., Iowa State, 1915; A.M., Columbia, 1916. A study in business cycles: the industrial conditions of Germany, France, England, and the United States from 1907 to July, 1914. 1918. Columbia. CHONG SU SEE, B.S., Columbia, 1915; A.M., 1916. The foreign trade of China. 1918. Columbia.

LILLIAN SOSKIN, A.B., Barnard, 1915. Panic of 1907. 1917. Columbia.

REXFORD G. TUGWELL, B.S., Pennsylvania, 1915; A.M., 1916. The public interest and the price for milk. 1918. Pennsylvania.

JACOB VINER, A.B., McGill, 1914; A.M., Harvard, 1915. Trade balances and their significance. Harvard.

HAROLD B. WARD, S.B., Chicago, 1914. Geographic influences in the trade between the United States and South America. 1917. Chicago.

JOHN HENRY WILLIAMS, A.B., Brown University, 1912. Argentine trade.

Harvard.

KWEEU E. YANG, A.B., St. John's College (China), 1909; A.M., Columbia, 1913. The commercial relations between China and the West. 1917. Columbia.

Accounting, Business Methods, Investments, and the Exchanges JAMES CUNNINGHAM BONBRIGHT, A.B., Northwestern, 1913. Commission regulation of public utility securities. 1917. Columbia.

GEORGE EVERITT GILL, A.B., Indiana, 1912. Trade and technical journals as factors in modern business. 1917. Columbia.

EDGAR H. GUSTAFSON, B.A., North Dakota, 1915; M.A., 1916. Economic principles in the valuation of public service corporations. Wisconsin.

GOULD L. HARRIS, B.A., Ohio State, 1914; A.M., 1916.

accounting. Ohio State.

Department store

ROY BERNARD KESTER, A.B., Missouri Wesleyan, 1902; B.C.S., Denver, 1911; A.M., 1912. A study in the valuation of a commercial balance sheet. 1917. Columbia.

CLAUDE T. MURCHISON, A.B., Wake Forest, 1911. Resale price maintenance. 1917. Columbia.

WILLIAM ANDREW PATON, A.B., Michigan, 1915; A.M., 1916. The theory of accounts. 1917. Michigan.

JACOB HYMAN SCHMUCKLER, B.S., Columbia, 1914; A.M., 1915. Essays in corporation finance. 1918. Columbia.

JONAS WARREN STEHMAN, A.B., Lebanon Valley, 1909; A.M., Pennsylvania, 1910. Government regulation of the securities of public utilities. Harvard. CHARLES DEDERER THOMPSON, A.B., Princeton, 1905. Land value and land speculation. 1918. Columbia.

Capital and Capitalistic Organizations

MARY LOUISE BARRON, B.S., California, 1911; M.S., 1913. Public regulation of securities of railroad and public service companies. 1917. Pennsylvania. BERT C. FULLER, A.B., Cornell, 1894; LL.B., 1895. Restraint of trade at common law and under the Sherman anti-trust law. 1917. Columbia.

GEORGE E. GEphart, B.A., Ohio State, 1915. The holding company. Ohio

State.

O. H. LUKEN, A.M., New York University, 1915. German kartels and the policy of the German government toward them. 1917. Columbia.

KEMPER SIMPSON, B.A., Johns Hopkins, 1914. Industrial flotations in United States. 1917. Johns Hopkins.

L. C. SORRELL, A.B., Colgate, 1911. State anti-trust legislation and its results. 1917. Chicago.

MERLE RAYMOND THOMPSON, A.B., Western Union, 1913; M.A., Iowa, 1915. Trust dissolution. 1917. Iowa.

FLOYD L. VAUGHAN, B.A., Texas, 1913; M.A., 1914. Relation of patents to industrial monopolies. 1918. Wisconsin.

Labor and Labor Organizations

JOSHUA BERNHARDT, B.A., Rochester, 1916. The influence of the immigrant upon American labor organizations. 1919. Johns Hopkins.

F. H. BIRD, B.A., Dartmouth, 1909; M.A., 1910. The Belgium superior council of labor and American analogies. Wisconsin.

CLARENCE E. BONNETT, S.B., Missouri, 1908. Employers' associations. 1917. Chicago.

CLYDE ELMORE BURGEE, B.A., Western Maryland College, 1914. Social aspects of trade unionism. 1919. Johns Hopkins.

WARREN B. CATLIN, A.B., Nebraska, 1903. The labor movement; its roots and branches. 1917. Columbia.

PAUL HOWARD DOUGLAS, A.B., Bowdoin, 1913. The apprenticeship system in American industry. 1917. Columbia.

CLYDE OLIN FISHER, A.B., Trinity College (N. C.), 1911; A.M., Columbia, 1916. Federal power in railway labor disputes. 1918. Cornell. ALEXANDER FLEISHER, A.B., Pennsylvania, 1908; A.M., Wisconsin, 1911. The enforcement of labor laws with special reference to child labor. 1917. Columbia.

PHILIP SARGENT FLORENCE, A.B., Cambridge, 1913; A.M., 1916. Industrial fatigue and its business significance. 1917. Columbia.

BENJAMIN GLASSBERG, A.B., College of the City of New York, 1910; A.M., Columbia, 1914. Federal labor legislation of the twentieth century. 1917. Columbia.

ETHEL LIZZIE GOODWIN, A.B., Barnard, 1909; A.M., Columbia, 1910. The regulation of wages through boards as a remedy for the sweating system. 1917. Columbia.

E. T. HILLER, S.B., Northwestern, 1912; A.M., 1913. The technique of the strike a social psychological study. 1917. Chicago.

HENRY ELMER HOAGLAND, A.B., Illinois, 1910; A.M., 1910. Collective bargaining in the lithographic industry. 1917. Columbia.

STANLEY EDWIN HOWARD, A.B., Bates, 1910; A.M., Princeton, 1913. Wages in the New England cotton industry. 1917. Princeton.

C. ROLAND HUGINS, A.B., Cornell, 1911. The use of armed force in labor disputes. 1918. Cornell.

EMILIE JOSEPHINE HUTCHINSON, A.B., Barnard, 1905; A.M., Columbia, 1908. Women's wages in the United States. 1917. Columbia.

RICHARD HINES LANSBURGH, B.S., Pennsylvania, 1915; A.M., 1916. Labor turnover. 1918. Pennsylvania.

THOMAS ERNEST LARKIN, A.B., St. Mary's College (Kansas), 1915. Apprenticeship and trade agreements. 1918. Catholic University.

E. D. LUCAS, A.B., Wooster, 1903; A.M., Columbia, 1908; B.D., Union, 1907. Industrial development in the Punjab, India. 1919. Columbia.

JAMES HUGH MCKEAN, B.A., Michigan, 1916. Trade unions and the working day. 1919. Johns Hopkins.

ROBERT LOUIS MASSON, B.A., Iowa, 1912; M.A., 1915. History of federal labor legislation. 1917. Harvard.

EDITH M. MILLER, B.L., Ohio Wesleyan, 1907. The organization of the labor market in Columbus, Ohio. 1918. Columbia.

FRIEDA SEGELKE MILLER, A.B., Milwaukee-Downer, 1911. A theory of the development of trade unionism in the United States. 1917. Chicago.

CHARLES REITELL, B.S., Pennsylvania, 1910; A.M., 1916. Machinery and its

benefits to labor in the crude iron and steel industries. 1917. Pennsylvania.

JESSE SQUIBB ROBINSON, B.A., Alleghany, 1911. The iron, steel, and tin workers: a study in trade unionism. 1917. Johns Hopkins.

ALEXANDER ROSEN, A.B., College of the City of New York, 1904; A.M., Columbia, 1909. The influences of recent economic changes upon the development of the American trade union movement. 1917. Columbia.

JACOB B. SALUTSKY, Gymnasium (Russia), 1904. The Jewish labor movement in the United States. 1917. Columbia.

SUMNER SLICHTER, B.A., Wisconsin, 1913; M.A., 1914. The turnover of labor and industry. Chicago.

MARGARET LOOMIS STECKER, A.B., Cornell, 1906. The National Founders' Association. 1917. Cornell.

CHARLES J. STOWELL, B.S., Illinois Wesleyan, 1911; A.M., Illinois, 1912. The Journeyman Tailors' Union of America: a study in trade union policy. 1917. Illinois.

DONALD REED TAFT, A.B., Clark, 1914. The rôle of sympathy in labor organizations. 1918. Columbia.

JOHN ARCHIBALD WALKER, A.B., St. Francis Xavier's College (Antigonish, Nova Scotia), 1910. Conciliation and compulsory investigation of labor disputes in Canada. 1918. Catholic University.

EDWIN EMIL WITTE, B.A., Wisconsin, 1909. Courts and labor disputes. Wisconsin.

Money, Prices, Credit, and Banking

GORDON BLYTHE ANDERSON, B.S., Pennsylvania, 1913; A.M., 1915. Clearing and collection of checks in the United States. 1917. Pennsylvania. CARL MARTIN BURKE, A.B., Bethany, 1912; A.M., Kansas, 1913. A study of discount policies. 1918. Cornell.

NEIL CAROTHERS, B.A., Arkansas; diploma in economics, Oxford (England), 1907. Fractional currency in the United States. 1917. Princeton. CHARLES DICE, B.A., Ohio Northwestern, 1905; M.A., Northwestern University, 1913. New factors affecting the motive to save. Wisconsin.

JOHN F. EBERSOLE, Ph.B., Chicago, 1907; A.M., Harvard, 1909. The history of the national banking system, 1864-1874. 1917. Chicago.

FRANK DUNSTONE GRAHAM, A.B., Dalhousie, 1913; LL.B., 1915. Period of suspension of specie payments in the United States 1862-1879. Harvard. LUTHER H. GULICK, A.B., Oberlin, 1914; A.M., 1915. Municipal pawnshops. 1917. Columbia.

R. MILTON MCISAAC, A.B., Geneva, 1915; A.M., Princeton, 1916. The development of commercial paper in relation to American banking. 1918. Princeton.

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