e ) BANKING STANDARDS from district levels. Part III has to do with a study of the rela- tions between district series with respect to their variation and changes, the purpose of the analysis being to discover the manner in which the series are related, to measure the relations, and to record and illustrate them. Much of the text is concerned with a discussion of the probable occasion for those discovered, and with their causal order. This latter phase is best illustrated in Chap- ter XIII, in which the conditions making for relatively high or low net earnings are considered in detail. Part IV utilizes the series of gross earnings, expense, and net earnings in the individual banks in the First and Second districts. The plan of discussion, while embodying the techniques of both Part II and Part III, altered to suit the peculiarities of the data, has the purposes of isolating the uniformities, trends, and cor- relations for the banks in each of the districts; of comparing them in the two districts; and of observing the degree to which they characterize banks within and by districts. It is here that fuller analysis is accorded a study of the causal order in the relations disclosed, Chapter XVII! having to do with ratios of net earnings, being especially addressed to this topic. It is here, also, that the evidence tending cumulatively to verify the hypotheses back of the study is woven together, reviewed, and recapitulated. Part V summarizes broadly the conclusions, and presents briefly and generally the conditions in the economic, financial, and banking system in which an explanation of the phenomena discovered is found. Such in outline are the plan of study and the methods by which it is made. 4. THE CONCLUSIONS, THEIR NATURE AND SIGNIFICANCE It is unnecessary, at this place, to summarize the net results of the study in respect to their specific and general character. To do the former would be to repeat what is said from time to time as the discussion proceeds; to do the latter would be to restate material found in Part V. It is sufficient for our present purposes to say that the truth of the hypotheses with which the study was begun has, it is believed, been demonstrated. There are conclu- 1 And Appendix I