POLITICS, POLITICAL AND SOCIAL ECONOMY, LAW; AND KINDRED SUBJECTS. Baxter.-NATIONAL INCOME: The United Kingdom. By R. DUDLEY BAXTER, M.A. 8vo. 3s. 6d. The present work endeavours to answer systematically such questions as the following:— What are the means and aggregate wages of our labouring population; what are the numbers and aggregate profits of the middle classes; what the revenues of our great proprietors and capitalists; and what the pecuniary strength of the nation to bear the burdens annually falling upon us? What capital in land and goods and money is stored up for our subsistence, and for carrying out our enterprises? The author has collected his facts from every quarter and tested them in various ways, in order to make his statements and deductions valuable and trustworthy. Part I. of the work deals with the Classification of the Population into-Chap. I. The Income Classes; Chap. II. The Upper and Middle and Manual Labour Classes. Part II. treats of the Income of the United Kingdom, divided into—Chap. III. Upper and Middle Incomes; Chap. IV. Wages of the Manual Labour Classes England and Wales; Chap. V. Income of Scotland; Chap. VI. Income of Ireland; Chap. VII. Income of the United Kingdom. In the Appendix will be found many valuable and carefully compiled tables, illustrating in detail the subjects discussed in the text. Bernard.-FOUR LECTURES ON SUBJECTS CONNECTED WITH DIPLOMACY. By MOUNTAGUE BERNARD, M.A., Chichele Professor of International Law and Diplomacy, Oxford. 8vo. 9s. 30 MACMILLAN'S CATALOGUE OF 66 "The These four Lectures deal with—I. “The Congress of Westphalia;" Bright (John, M.P.)-SPEECHES ON QUESTIONS OF The speeches which have been selected for publication in these volumes possess a value, as examples of the art of public speaking, which no person will be likely to underrate. The speeches have been selected with a view of supplying the public with the evidence on which Mr. Bright's friends assert his right to a place in the front rank of English statesmen. They are divided into groups, according to their subjects. The editor has naturally given prominence to those subjects with which Mr. Bright has been specially identified, as, for example, India, America, Ireland, and Parliamentary Reform. But nearly every topic of great public interest on which Mr. Bright has spoken is represented in these volumes. “Mr. Bright's speeches will always deserve to be studied, as an apprenticeship to popular and parliamentary oratory; they will form materials for the history of our time, and many brilliant passages, perhaps some entire speeches, will really become a part of the living literature of England."-DAILY NEWS. LIBRARY EDITION. Two Vols. 8vo. With Portrait. 25s. Christie. THE BALLOT AND CORRUPTION AND EXPENDITURE AT ELECTIONS, a Collection of Essays and Addresses of different dates. By W. D. CHRISTIE, C. B., formerly Her Majesty's Minister to the Argentine Confederation and to Brazil; Author of "Life of the First Earl of Shaftesbury." Crown 8vo. 4s. 6d. Mr. Christie has been well known for upwards of thirty years as a strenuous and able advocate for the Ballot, both in his place in Parliament and elsewhere. The papers and speeches here collected WORKS IN POLITICS, ETC. 31 are six in number, exclusive of the Preface and Dedication to Professor Maurice, which contains many interesting historical details concerning the Ballot. "You have thought to greater purpose on the means of preventing electoral corruption, and are likely to be of more service in passing measures for that highly important end, than any other person that I could name."-J. S. Mill, in a published letter to the Author, May 1868. Corfield (Professor W. H.)—A DIGEST OF FACTS RELATING TO THE TREATMENT AND UTILIZATION In this edition the author has revised and corrected the entire work, Dutton (Amy).—STREETS AND LANES OF A CITY: being the Reminiscences of AMY DUTTON. With a Preface by the BISHOP OF SALISBURY. Pp. viii. 159. Globe 8vo. 3s. 6d. This little volume records "a portion of the experience, selected out of overflowing materials, of two ladies, during several years of devoted work as district parochial visitors in a large population in the North of England.” The “Reminiscences of Amy Dutton” serve 32 MACMILLAN'S CATALOGUE OF to illustrate the line of argument adopted by Miss Stephen in her work on the "Service of the Poor," because they show that as in one aspect the lady visitor may be said to be a link between rich and poor, in another she helps to blend the "religious" life with the "secular," and in both does service of extreme value to the Church and Nation. "A record only too brief of some of the real portraits of humanity, painted by a pencil, tender indeed and sympathetic, but with too clear a sight, too ready a sense of humour, and too conscientious a spirit ever to exaggerate, extenuate, or aught set down in malice."-GUARDIAN. Fawcett.-Works by HENRY FAWCETT, M.A., M. P., Fellow of Trinity Hall, and Professor of Political Economy in the University of Cambridge :: THE ECONOMIC POSITION OF THE BRITISH This work formed a portion of a course of Lectures delivered by the 66 Third and Cheaper MANUAL OF POLITICAL ECONOMY. IOS. 6d. In this treatise no important branch of the subject has been omitted, and the author believes that the principles which are therein explained will enable the reader to obtain a tolerably complete view of the whole science. Mr. Fawcett has endeavoured to show how intimately Political Economy is connected with the practical questions of life. For the convenience of the ordinary reader, and especially for those who may use the book to prepare themselves for WORKS IN POLITICS, ETC. Fawcett (H.)—continued. 33 The new examinations, he has prefixed a very detailed summary of Contents, PAUPERISM: ITS CAUSES AND REMEDIES. Crown 8vo. 5s. 6d. In its number for March 11th, 1871, the SPECTATOR said: "We wish Professor Fawcett would devote a little more of his time and energy to the practical consideration of that monster problem of Pauperism, for the treatment of which his economic knowledge and popular sympathies so eminently fit him." The volume now published may be regarded as an answer to the above challenge. The seven chapters it comprises discuss the following subjects:—I. “Pauperism and the old Poor Law." II. "The present Poor Law System." III. "The Increase of Population." IV. "National Education; its Economic and Social Effects." V. "Co-partnership and Co operation." VI. "The English System of Land Tenure." VII. "The Inclosure of Commons." The ATHENÆUM calls the work “a repertory of interesting and well-digested information.” ESSAYS ON POLITICAL AND SOCIAL SUBJECTS. By PROFESSOR FAWCETT, M.P., and MILLICENT GARRETT FAWCETT, 8vo. 10s. 6d. This volume contains fourteen papers, some of which have appeared in various journals and periodicals; others have not before been published. They are all on subjects of great importance and universal interest, and the names of the two authors are a sufficient guarantee that each topic is discussed with full knowledge, great ability, clearness, and earnestness. The following are some of the titles:-"Modern Socialism" "Free Education in its Economic Aspects;""Pauperism, Charity, and the Poor Law;" "Nationel Debt and National Prosperity," "What can be done for the C |