EDWARD H. SCHULZE’S Making Letters Pay covers business letters from the viewpoint of “better results, in less time, at lower cost”; while CARL A. NAETHER’S The Business Letter offers thoroughgoing practice in making good business letters a habit. SALLIE B. TANNAHILL’S Ps and Qs: A Book on the Art of Letter Arrangement is concerned with personal letters.

Funds and Their Uses, by FREDERICK A. CLEVELAND. Now available in a revised edition. Methods, instruments and institutions of modern financial transactions. The revision adds chapters on the United States Treasury, commercial banks, the Federal Reserve system, trust companies, investment bankers and agricultural credit institutions.

Cotton and the Cotton Market, by W. HUSTACE HUBBARD. Production, marketing, the future contract system, the speculative factor; a pretty complete survey.

Reminiscences of a Stock Operator, by EDWIN LEFEVRE. The chief appeal of this book is the appeal of fiction, although it is obviously founded on the facts of one or more Wall Street careers. Much market wisdom.

Co-operative Marketing, by HERMAN STEEN.

Historic Textile Fabrics, by RICHARD GLAZIER. More than 200 varieties are illustrated.

The Business of Writing, by ROBERT CORTES HOLLIDAY and ALEXANDER VAN RENSSELAER. A trustworthy book on marketing the writer’s product.

Writing to Sell, by EDWIN WILDMAN. What will be marketable and why, from short pieces for household periodicals to special feature articles for monthly magazines.

The Community Newspaper, by EMERSON P. HARRIS and FLORENCE HARRIS HOOKE. Developing the newspaper to the community’s benefit and the owners’ profit.

Readers interested in the subject of JAMES HARVEY ROBINSON’S The Humanizing of Knowledge will be interested in ABRAHAM FLEXNER’S new book, A Modern College and a Modern School.