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United States. Treasury department. Bureau of statistics. First annual report on the internal commerce of the United States, by Joseph Nimmo, jr. For the year ending June 30, 1876. Washington: Government printing office, 1877. 215, (3), iv, 257 PP. Folded maps. Folded charts. 8°.

Issued as "Part second of the annual report of the Chief of the Bureau of statistics on the commerce and navigation of the United States."

Contains reports of investigations of economy of transport by rail; The competitive forces which exert a controlling influence over the commerce between the West and the seaboard with respect to the commercial interests of Boston, New York, Philadelphia, and Baltimore; The regulation of the railroads by the state; The regulation of rail rates through the competition of water-lines; The regulation of railroads through the competition of one or more railroads owned and controlled by the national government or by cities or states; and The railroad question in foreign countries.

Same. Annual report. December 1, 1879. Washington: Government printing office, 1879. xi, (1), 250 pp. Folded map. 8°.

Contains reports on The commerce of the cities of Saint Louis, Louisville, and Cincinnati with the states south of the Ohio river and south of the state of Missouri; Comparative growth of traffic on railroads and on the Erie canal in the commerce between the west and the seaboard; and The relations of the railroads to the public interests.

Same. July 1, 1881.

Washington: Government printing office, 1881. viii, 239 pp.
Folded maps. 8°.

Contains reports on Railroad confederations or pooling organizations;
Governmental regulations of railroads; The competition between
water lines and railroads and the competition of commercial forces;
The commercial, industrial, and transportation interests of Cincin-
nati, Chicago, Saint Louis, Louisville, and Kansas City.

Same. For the fiscal year 1881-82.

Washington: Government printing office, 1884. vi, (2), 309 pp. Folded maps. 8°.

Principally devoted to the commercial, industrial, and transportation interests of Saint Louis.

Same. December 31, 1884.

Washington: Government printing office, 1885. vii, (3), 172 pp. Folded maps. 8°.

"The present report relates especially to the transcontinental railroads of the United States and the railroads of the contiguous countries, the Dominion of Canada and the Republic of Mexico."

United States. Treasury department. Bureau of statistics. Annual report. May 6, 1885.

Washington: Government printing office, 1885.
Folded maps. 8°.

562 PP.

"The present report relates especially to the commercial, industrial, and transportation interests of the Pacific coast, to the movement of the cotton crop, and to the range and ranch cattle business of the United States.'

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Same. Report by Wm. F. Switzler. December 20, 1886. The commercial, industrial, transportation, and other interests of the Southern states.

Washington: Government printing office, 1886. xcii, 738
Folded map. Folded diagrams. 8°.

pp.

Same. January 30, 1888. Special report on the commerce of the Mississippi, Ohio, and other rivers, and of the bridges which cross them.

Washington: Government printing office, 1888. vii, 591 pp.
Maps. 8°.

Same. For the fiscal year 1889. The commercial, industrial, transportation, and other interests of Arkansas, Colorado, Dakota, Indian Territory, Kansas, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, New Mexico, Texas, and Wyoming. Washington: Government printing office, 1889. xxxii, 897 pp. 8°.

Same. Report for the year 1890, by S. G. Brock.
The commercial, industrial, transportation, and other
interests of Alaska, Arizona, California, Idaho, Nevada,
Oregon, Utah, and Washington.

Washington: Government printing office, 1891. xcix, 1174
Pp. Folded map. Folded tables. 8°.

Same. For the year 1891. The commerce of the
Great Lakes, the Mississippi river and its tributaries.
Washington: Government printing office, 1892. (2), iii, (1),
lai, (1), 96 pp. Folded map.

8°.

Van Oss, S. F. American railroads as investments. A handbook for investors in American railroad securities.

New York: G. P. Putnam's sons, 1898.

pp. Colored maps. 8°.

Virtue, George Ole. The anthracite combinations.

xv, (1), 815, (2), vii

(In Quarterly journal of economics, vol. 10, April, 1896, pp. 296-323.)

Voorhees, Theodore. High speed railroad travel.

(In Compendium of transportation theories, pp. 148–152. Washington, D. C., 1893. 8°.)

Walker, Aldace F. The amendment of the interstate commerce law. (In Compendium of transportation theories, pp. 112-120. Washington, D. C., 1893. 8°.)

The pooling of railway earnings.

(In Railway magazine, vol. 2, Feb., 1897, pp. 113-123.)

Railway associations.

(In Compendium of transportation theories, pp. 277-295. Washington, D. C., 1893. 8°.)

The Western traffic association.

(In The Forum, vol. 13, Aug., 1892, pp. 743-756.)

Weyl, Walter E. The passenger traffic of railways.

Published for the University, Philadelphia, 1901. 249 pp. 8°. (Publications of the University of Pennsylvania. Series in political economy and public law, no. 16.)

White, Henry Kirke. History of the Union Pacific railway. Chicago: The University of Chicago press, 1895. (4), 129 pp. Diagrams. Folded tables. 8°. (Economic studies of the University of Chicago, no. 2.)

Wilson, James F. Extract from the argument of James F. Wilson, on the Reagan inter-state commerce bill, delivered before the Committee on commerce of the House of Representatives, January 20, 1880. A western view of the question. Washington, D. C.: National Republican printing house, 1880. 10 pp. 8°.

Wilson, S. Otho. Minority report [of the Committee on government ownership, control, and regulation of railways].

Proceed

(In United States. Interstate commerce commission.
ings of a national convention of railroad commissioners, May 19
and 20, 1896, pp. 78-82. Washington, 1896. 8°.)

Wilson, William Bender. History of the Pennsylvania railroad company; with plan of organization, portraits of officials, and biographical sketches.

Philadelphia: Henry T. Coates & company, 1899. 2 vols.
Plates. Portraits. 8°.

RAILROADS IN THEIR RELATION TO THE GOVERNMENT, ETC.: ARTICLES

IN PERIODICALS

[Principally in reference to interstate commerce.]

1879. Congress and interstate commerce. J. D. Potts. Nation, vol. 28 (Jan. 30, 1879): 79-80.

1884. Popular and legal views of traffic pooling. T. M. Cooley. Railway review, vol. 24 (Apr. 26, 1884): 211–213.

1884. The necessity for a classification of freight, and the principles upon which it is based. Edward P. Vining. Railway review, vol. 24 (Oct. 18, 1884): 537–538.

1886. The inter-state commerce bill. H. White.

Nation, vol. 43 (Dec. 23, 1886): 516-517.

1887. Text of the interstate commerce bill. An act to regulate

commerce.

American law review, vol. 21 (Jan.-Feb., 1887): 89–103.

1887. The inter-state commerce bill.

Charles S. Ashley.

Nation, vol. 44 (Jan. 20, 1887): 52.

1887. The interstate commerce bill.

Public opinion, vol. 21, (Jan. 8, 1887): 249–252.

Press comments.

1887. The inter-state commerce act.

American law record, vol. 15 (Apr., 1887): 618–627.

1887. The interstate commerce commission.

Public opinion, vol. 2 (Apr. 2, 1887): 537–540.

Press comments.

1887. The interstate commerce law on trial.

Public opinion, vol. 3 (Apr. 23, 1887): 25-29.

Press comments.

1887. The inter-state commerce act and the obligation of contracts. Charles Henry Phelps.

Railway and corporation law journal, vol. 1 (Apr. 16, 1887):

362-366.

1887. Railway tariffs and the interstate commerce law. Edwin R.

A. Seligman.

Political science quarterly, vol. 2 (June, 1887): 223–264; (Sept., 1887): 369–413.

1887. Is the railroad problem solved? W. A. Crafts. Atlantic monthly, vol. 60 (July, 1887): 76–84.

1887. The inter-state railway solvent. John C. Welch. North American review, vol. 145 (July, 1887): 86-93.

1887. The inter-state commerce report. H. White. Nation, vol. 45 (Dec. 8, 1887): 454.

1888. Inter-state commerce.

James W. Craig.

Illinois state bar association. Proceedings, 11th annual meeting (1888): 41-43.

1888. Inter-state commerce as affected by the late Wabash decision. John W. Smith.

Chicago law times, vol. 2 (Jan., 1888): 73-78.

1888. The workings of the interstate commerce law. Arthur T. Hadley.

Quarterly journal of economics, vol. 2 (Jan., 1888): 162–187.

1888. The interstate "long and short haul." Henry Wood. Popular science monthly, vol. 32 (Feb., 1888): 537–541.

1889. The interstate commerce law. Horace Stringfellow.

American law review, vol. 23 (Jan.-Feb., 1889): 84-99.

1889. Railroad business under the interstate commerce act. Arthur T. Hadley.

Quarterly journal of economics, vol. 3 (Jan., 1889): 170–187.

1889. The Interstate commerce commission. John Totyl.

Overland monthly, n. s., vol. 13 (Feb., 1889): 184–191.

1889. The social and economic effects of railroads. Charles Barnard. Chautauquan, vol. 9 (May, 1889): 455-457.

1890. Inter-state commerce law. Some of its practical workings. John McNulta.

Illinois state bar association. Proceedings, 13th annual meeting (1890): 67-79.

1890. The Supreme court and interstate commerce. Charles A. Culberson.

American law review, vol. 24 (Jan.-Feb., 1890): 25–63.

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