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 SH£RRATT & HUGHES MANCHESTER UNIVERSITY PUBLICATIONS. CLASSICAL SERIES. A STUDY OF THE BACCHAE OF EURIPIDES (continued), piece of work, displaying erudition and insight beyond the ordinary, lies in the way in which, by applying Dr. Verrall's methods .... he first shows up difficulties and inconsistencies, some of which have hardly been noticed before. . . and then produces his own startling theory, which he claims is the great solvent of all the perplexities." — Saturday Review. " Unless very strong evidence can be produced against Mr. Norwood's view, it must be accepted as the true solution of the problem. . . . Mr. Norwood is generally clear, and abounds in illuminating thoughts. He has added a full bibliography (running to twenty-three pages) of writings on Euripides, and for this every scholar will offer his sincere thanks. . . . He has done a very good piece of work." — Athenmum. "This volume forms the first of a Classical Series projected by the Manchester University, who are to be congratulated on having begun with a book so original and full of interest. ... It is admirably argued, and is instinct with a sympathetic imagination. It is, at the very least, an extremely able attempt to solve a very complex problem." — Manchester Guardian. " Mr. Norwood's book has even in the eyes of a sceptic the considerable merit of stating the hypothesis in a very thoroughgoing and able manner, and at least giving it its full chance of being believed.'" — Professor Gilbert Murray in the Nation. " L'interpretation de M. Norwood est certainement tres ingenieuse; elle est meme trfes seduisante." — Eevue Critique. ECONOMIC SERIES. No. I. THE LANCASHIRE COTTON INDUSTRY. By S. J. Chapman, M.A., M. Com., Stanley Jevons Professor of Political Economy and Dean of the Faculty of Commerce. Demy 8vo, pp. vii. 309. 7s. 6d. net. (Publication No. 4, 1904.) " Such a book as this ought to ba, and will be, read far beyond the bounds of the trade." — Manchester Ouardian. "There have been books dealing with various phases of the subject, but no other has so ably treated it from the economic as well as from the historical point of view." — Manchttttr Courier. " The story of the evolution of the industry from small and insignificant beginnings up to its present imposing proportions and highly developed and specialised forms, is told in a way to rivet the attention of the reader the book is a valuable and instructive treatise on a fascinating yet important subject." — Ccftton factory Times., Soho Square, London, W- 3