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III; accidents, III; national
ownership of, 248–253.

Recent tendencies in industrial
evolution, 87 et seq.

421; international, 442; defini-
tion, 467; and social reform,
461 et seq.

Socialization of consumption, 320.

Religion, a bond of union in Mid-Sound public life, conditions of,

dle Ages, 439; and the eco-
nomic interpretation of history,

447.

485.

Sound currency and diffusion of
wealth, 482.

Rivalry and success in economic Spahr, Dr. Charles B., 263, 264,

life, 152 et seq.

Savigny, F. K. von, 22.

265, 267, 473.

Spencer, Herbert, 6, 7, 21, 23, 44,

99, 130, 401.

Savings institutions and diffusion of Spinning wheel, recency of, 14.

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Transition from one stage to an- | Wage-earners, fraternal feeling

other, 57, 60–61.

Trusts, 96, 204, 475, 476.
Turner, F. J., quoted, 42.

Unearned increment of land, 474-
475.

Unemployment, 341, 344-345.
Unfit, not increasing, 167-168.
United States Industrial Commis-
sion, Report of, reviewed with
respect to labor, 331 et seq., final
recommendations, 359-363.
United States Steel Corporation,
64, 94, 206 et seq.
Unity in industry, 91–92, 94.
Urban population of the United
States, IOI.

Veblen, T., 80.

Vigor in modern nations, 138-139,
164.

among, 440-442.

Wages movement, 112, 113, 338-

339, 340-342; fair, 384; the-
ories of, 385.

Wagner's law of increasing public
expenditures, 320.

Wallace, Alfred, 5, 131, 132, 133,
164, 168, 172, 180.
War, and expenditures, 329; in-
dustrial, 376; and concentra-
tion of wealth, 476.

Ward, Lester F., 131, 141-143.
Wealth, increase of, in United
States, 103; and well-being,
102; see also Concentration and
Diffusion of wealth.
Weismannism, 131-132.
Wisconsin State Tax Commission,
294.

Women, as toilers, 30-31, 72; and
selection, 172; employment of,
357; hours of, 413–414.

Village communities, ties within, Words, changes in meaning, 19-20.

427.

World economy, 440.

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