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Page 28 text:
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A word may not be out of place here, suggested by this varied activity of Professor Adams. It seems to us that it represents new and happy features in both American scholarship and American government. It indicates that the government is learning to utilize trained and expert men in the investigations of its problems. Is it not safe at any rate to say that these labors of Professor Adams and such brilliant work as Professor Burr ' s in the Venezuelan boundary investigation suggest an answer to the familiar charge that in this country scholars are growing out of touch with practical affairs. Of the two so-called schools of Political Economy, Professor Adams has identified himself with the Historical school. He was one of the founders of the American Economic Association, 1885, and contributed on the side of the new school, to the considerations of method and prin- ciple in Science Economic Discussion, 1886. Cossa classifies him as inter- mediate between the two groups of the German- American economists; one, the Historical group, being represented by Professor Ely; and the other Pure Science group, being represented by Professor Patten. We would not be justified in attempting to classify him here. We know from what has been presented in these pages that he was not carried away by the German influence, and that he does not give too high a value to the German theory of the state. On the other hand, he insists that the indi- divualistic theory as represented in English jurisprudence has reached the limits of its evolution. He is the representative of such an economy as he once prophesied must be established in the United States: an economy that rests on history, that is motived by a passion for liberty, and that is directed and limited by a knowledge of jurisprudence. Upon his personal characteristics it would be out of place for us to dwell here. His lovable disposition, his charming modesty before classes and his kindness to his students, are facts of happy memory to those who no longer work with him, and of pleasant realizaton to those who are so fortunate as to be now sitting at his feet. HARLOW S. PERSON.
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Page 27 text:
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ing these years many articles to magazines and reviews. Finally in 1887, appeared Public Debt a: An Essay in the Science of Finance, the first compre- hensive work on the subject to appear in the United States. One of the important lessons of the civil war was that the finances of a government in such crises cannot be administered in an empirical way without sore disaster. This work was one of the scientific treatises brought forth by this lesson, and is considered an authority on the administration of public debts. The chapter on the management of finances in time of war was translated for the use of the Japanese Government at the outbreak of the late war with China, and during the past year the entire work has been translated. The Science of Finance, An Investigation oj Public Expenditures and Public Revenues appeared in the fall of 1898. This is Professor Adams ' greatest contribution to scholarship. It is a work of such magnitude and of such aspirations that it would be impossible to attempt an analysis of it here. It was awaited by scholars with great expectations, and these expectations were not disappointed. At once recognized as a lasting contribution, and as marking a turning point in the history of Ameri- can political literature and an epoch in the discussions of fiscal prob- lems. The chief merit of the work has been declared to be the masterly power of analysis in the representation of the newer and saner views. Professor Seligman, of Columbia, than whom no one is more competent to speak, said: It is perhaps no exaggeration to say that Professor Adams is at the head of those American scholars who have grasped the essential spirit of modern industrial life; and it is likewise no exaggera- tion to claim for this volume the distinction of being one of the most original, the most suggestive and the most brilliant productions that have made their appearance in recent decades. We have found the exposition of Professor Adams literary work so interesting that our space is nearly exhausted and half has not been told. His life has been devoted to many other activities than writing and teaching. He is one of the ed itorial committee of the International Journal of Ethics. He was chairman of the transportation department of the eleventh census. He has been since 1888 statistician of the Inter- State Commerce Commission, and for the past year or more has been conducting a statistical investigation, for the use of a committee of Con- gress, of the decrease in the cost to the railroads of carrying United States mail. During the past summer he had at work under him in this investigation some twelve or fifteen students and four college professors.
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Page 29 text:
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JAMBS B. ANGELL, LL.D., PRESIDENT. HON. HERMAN KIEPER, HON. FRANK W. FLETCHER, HON. ROGER W. BUTTERFIELD, HON. GEORGE A. FARR, HON. WILLIAM J. COCKER. HON. CHARLES D. LAWTON, HON. HENRY S. DEAN, HON. ELI R. SUTTON, Detroit, Alpena, Grand Itm iilx. Grnnil I Inn n. Adrian, Lawton, Ann Arbor, . Detroit, TERM EXPIRES December 31, 1901 1901 1903 1903 1905 1905 1907 1907 JAMES H. WADE, SECRETARY. HARRISON SOULE, TREASURER. HON. JASON E. HAMMOND, SUPERINTENDENT OF PUBLIC INSTRUCTION. (Office at Lansing.)
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