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that the greatest possible variety of books will be appreciated.

General Pershing, in a recent appeal from France for books and magazines, particularly asked well-disposed donors not to rake over their attics for grandfather's books and periodicals and send The soldiers are them to the front. just as keen as other people to read the latest news, and the best of the new books. Old magazines are not worth the cost of cartage.

While the larger plans for creating libraries for recruits, for men in training, in mobilization, in garrisons and outposts, for men in their rest periods while on march, for men on leave and for men on the front are maturing, the librarians in most cities are already cooperating with the War Council of the Young Men's Christian Association in assembling immediately as large as possible a collection of good books for the training camps and cantonments. Readers of the SURVEY are asked to look through their shelves and if they have seemingly suitable books which they can spare to send them to the nearest public library marked "For "For Soldiers' Camps," or the like.

It will have been noticed also that the SURVEY and other periodicals recently carried a notice to the reader by the postmaster-general requesting that copies which it is not intended to keep be placed in the hands of any postal employe with a one cent stamp in the upper right-hand corner which, without any further indication, will ensure its transmission to soldiers or sailors at the front.

A "federal committee for the distribution of reading matter in the field and in the hospitals," representing the joint effort of many societies in Germany, has, since the beginning of the war, collected and distributed without charge no less than ten million books.

PERIODICALS

Fifty cents a line per month; four weekly inser tions; copy unchanged throughout the month. A. L. A. Book List; monthly; $1; annotated magazine on book selection; valuable guide to best books; American Library Association, 78 East Washington St.. Chicago.

American Red Cross Magazine; monthly; $2 a year; Doubleday, Page & Co., publishers, New York.

American Journal of Public Health; monthly; $3 a year; 3 months' triai (4 months to SURVEY readers), 50 cents; American Public Health Association, 126 Massachusetts Ave., Boston. The Child Labor Bulletin; quarterly; $2 a year; National Child Labor Committee, 105 East 22 street, New York.

The Club Worker; monthly; 30 cents a year; National League of Women Workers, 35 East 30 St.. New York.

The Crisis; monthly; $1; National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, publisher, 70 Fifth Ave., New York.

The Journal of Home Economics; monthly; $2 a year; foreign postage, 35c. extra; Canadian, 20c.; American Home Economics Association, 1211 Cathedral St., Baltimore, Md. The Journal of Negro History; quarterly; $1 a year: foreign subscriptions 25 cents extra: con. cerned with facts not with opinions: Association for Study of Negro Life and History, 1216 You St., N. W., Washington, D. C.

Life and Labor; $1 a year; a spirited record of the organized struggle of women, by women, for women in the economic world. Published by The National Women's Trade Union League, Room 703, 139 North Clark street, Chicago.

Mental Hygiene; quarterly; $2 a year; National Committee for Mental Hygiene, 50 Union Square, New York.

National Municipal Review; monthly: $5 a year; authoritative, public spirited, constructive; National Municipal League; North American Bldg., Philadelphia

The Negro Year Book; an annual; 35c. postpaid; permanent record of current events. An encyclopedia of 41 pages of historical and sociological facts relating to the Negro. General and special bibliographies; full index. Published under the auspices of Tuskegee Institute, Tuskegee, Ala.

The Playground Magazine; monthly; $2; Recreation in Industries and Vocational Recreation are discussed in the August Playground. Problems involved in laying out playgrounds are taken up in detail by A. E. Metzdorf, of Springfield, Mass. Price of this issue $.50. Playground and Recreation Association of America, I Madison Ave., New York.

Proportional Representation Review; quarterly; 40 cents a year. American Proportional Representation League, 802 Franklin Bank Bldg., Philadelphia.

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Public Health Nurse Quarterly, $1 a year; tional organ for Public Health Nursing, 500 Lexington Ave., New York.

Social Hygiene; a quarterly magazine; $2 per year; The Social Hygiene Bulletin; monthly; $.25 per year; both free to members; published by the American Social Hygiene Association, 105 W. 40 St., New York.

Southern Workman; monthly; illustrated; folk song, and corn club, and the great tidal movements of racial progress; all in a very human vein; $1 a year; Hampton Institute, Hampton, Va.

The Survey; once a week, $3; once a month, $2; a transcript of social work and forces: Survey Associates, Inc., 112 East 19 St., New York.

CURRENT PAMPHLETS [Listings fifty cents a line, four weekly insertions, copy unchanged throughout the month] ATHLETICS FOR ELEMENTARY SCHOOL GIRLS. By Ethel Rockwell, Supervisor and Director Girls' Gymnasium, Public Schools, Kalamazoo, Michigan. Price Fifteen Cents. Playground and Recreation Association of America, 1 Madison avenue, New York city.

COMPLETE SET OF LAWS FOR THE WELFARE OF ALL
MISSOURI CHILDREN, A. Prepared by the Mis-
souri Children's Code Commission. Manley O.
Hudson, sec'y, State University, Columbus, Mo.
CRIME PREVENTION: THE STUDY OF CAUSES.
Dr. Thomas H. Haines, 1194 Oak street, Colum-
bus, Ohio. Bulletin No. 5 of the Bureau of
Juvenile Research.

By

HART, SCHAFFNER & MARX LABOR AGREEMENT. By J. E. Williams, Sidney Hillman and Earl Dean Howard. Hart, Schaffner & Marx, Chicago. HOSPITAL AID FOR SCHOOL CHILDREN. Facilities and Procedure for Tonsil and Adenoid Operations in New York City Hospitals and Dispen. saries. By J. H. Berkowitz. Bureau of Welfare of School Children, Association for Improving the condition of the Poor, 105 East 22 St., N. Y. INTEREST OF THE COMMUNITY IN CANCER, By Louis I. Dublin. Metropolitan Life Insurance Company, New York.

LIVING WAGE BY LEGISLATION, A. The Oregon Experience. By Edwin V. O'Hara, chairman Industrial Welfare Coinmission. State Printing Department, Salem, Oregon.

PAMPHLETS ON TUBERCULOSIS TUBERCULOSIS DISPENSARY METHOD AND PROCEDure. By F. Elisabeth Crowell. A pamphlet showing how to establish and conduct a tuberculosis clinic. Price twenty-five cents.

TUBERCULOSIS HOSPITAL AND SANATORIUM CON-. STRUCTION. By Thomas S. Carrington, M.D.. An illustrated handbook with detailed plans for architects and others interested in the construc-. tion of tuberculosis hospitals and sanatoria.. Price sixty-two cents postpaid. WORKINGMEN'S ORGANIZATIONS IN THE ANTITUBERCULOSIS CAMPAIGN. A study, with suggestions on the utilization of workingmen in the Price twentycampaign against tuberculosis.

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If you know the name of the agency or organization, turn direct to the listings (3d column) for address, corresponding officer, etc. [They are arranged alphabetically.]

If you seek an unknown source of information, turn to the subject index, following. The initialings correspond to capital letters in names of agencies.

If you want to know the agencies at work in any great field of social concern, turn also to this index. [They are grouped under major subject classifications, as "HEALTH," printed in capitals.]

Correspondence is invited by the agencies listed; questions answered (enclose postage for reply) and pamphlets supplied free or at nominal charges. Membership is not required of those seeking information, but offers an opportunity for you to share spiritedly and seriously in your community or profession in an organized movement which is grappling with some country-wide need or cause.

If you are uncertain where to turn, address the SURVEY, and we shall endeavor to get your inquiry into the right hands.

WARTIME service

"How the SURVEY can serve"

was the subject of an informal conference held early in April, in our library, to which we asked the executives of perhaps twenty national social service organizations. The conference was a unit in feeling that as a link between organized efforts, as a means for letting people throughout the country know promptly of needs and national programs-how, when and where they can count locally-the SURVEY was at the threshold of an opportunity for service such as has seldom come to an educational enterprise.

The development of this directory is one of several steps in carrying out this commission. The executives of these organizations will answer questions or offer counsel to individuals and local organizations in adjusting their work to emergent wartime demands.

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RECREATION

Playground and Rec. Assn. of Amer. Russell Sage Fdn., Dept. of Rec. REMEDIAL LOANS

Russell Sage Fdn., Div. of Rem. Loans. Sanatoria, NASPT.

Self-Government, NLww.

SETTLEMENTS

Natl. Fed. of Settlements.
Sex Education, ASHA, NYSHS.
Schools, АHEA, HI, TI.
Short Ballot, SBO.

Short Working Hours, NCL.

Social Agencies, Surveys of, AAOC.
Social Hygiene, ASHA, NYSHS.

SOCIAL SERVICE

Amer. Inst. of Soc. Service.

Com. on Ch. and Soc. Service, FCCCA. Dept. of Soc. and Public Service, AUA. Joint Com. on Soc. Service, Pac.

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ALPHABETICAL LIST

AMERICAN ASSOCIATION FOR LABOR LEGISLATION-John B. Andrews, sec'y; 131 E. 23 St.. New York. Workmen's compensation; health insurance; industrial hygiene; unemployment; one day-rest-in-seven; administration of labor laws. AMERICAN ASSOCIATION FOR ORGANIZING CHARITY-Mrs. W. H. Lothrop, ch'n; Francis H. McLean, gen. sec'y; 130 E. 22 St., New York. Correspondence and active field work in the or ganization, and solution of problems confronting charity organization societies and councils of social agencies; surveys of social agencies; plans for proper coordination of effort between different social agencies.

AMERICAN ASSOC. FOR STUDY AND PREVENTION OF INFANT MORTALITY-Gertrude B. Knipp, exec. sec'y; 1211 Cathedral St., Baltimore. Literature on request. Traveling exhibit. Urges prenatal instruction; adequate obstetrical care; birth registration; maternal nursing; infant welfare consultations

ASSOCIATION FOR THE STUDY OF NEGRO LIFE AND HISTORY-Carter G. Woodson, director of research; 1216 You St., N. W., Wash ington, D. C. To popularize the Negro and his contributions to civilization that he may not become a negligible factor in the thought of the world.

AMERICAN HOME ECONOMICS ASSOCIATION-Mrs. Alice P. Norton, sec'y; 1326 E. 58 St., Chicago. Information supplied on any thing that pertains to food, shelter, clothing or management in school, institution or home. AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF SOCIAL SERV. ICE-Founded by Dr. Josiah Strong. Nathaniel M. Pratt, gen. sec'y. Edward W. Bemis, Robert A. Woods, dept. directors, Bible House, Astor Place, New York. Welcomes inquiries as to all matters of community organization and progress. Members of its staff glad to enter into consulta. tion by correspondence about given conditions or particular projects. Assists in bringing to individual new undertakings the combined results and lessons of the best productive achievement Ready to aid in securing publications, speakers, temporary or permanent leadership. Particular attention given to requests from communities in which all such effort is at an early stage. Seeks to bring about better cooperation among specialized national organizations, toward securing the more comprehensive local application of their types of service. Promotes the fullest extension of principles and methods which on a limited scale have conclusively shown their power for the upbuilding of the nation.

AMERICAN LIBRARY ASSOCIATION-George B. Utley, exec. sec'y; 78 E. Washington St., Chicago. Furnishes information about organizing libraries, planning library buildings, training librarians, cataloging libraries, etc. List of publisations on request.

AMERICAN PROPORTIONAL REPRESENTATION LEAGUE-C. G. Hoag, sec'y; 802 Franklin Bank Building, Philadelphia. Advocates a rational and fundamental reform in electing representatives. Literature free. Membership $1.

AMERICAN PUBLIC HEALTH ASSOCIATION -Dr. W. A. Evans, pres., Chicago; A. W. Hedrich, acting sec'y; 1039 Boylston St., Boston. Object: to promote public and personal health. Health Employment Bureau lists health officers, public health nurses, industrial hygienists, etc.

AMERICAN RED CROSS-Woodrow Wilson, pres.; Robert W. de Forest, vice-pres.; John Skelton Williams, treas.; John W. Davis, counselor; Charles L. McLee, sec'y.

Central Committee: Wm. Howard Taft, ch'n; Eliot Wadsworth, v. ch'n; Harvey V. Gibson, gen'l mgr.

War

Council: Henry P. Davidson, ch'n; Charles D. Norton, Grayson M.-P. Murphy, Edward N. Hurley, Cornelius N. Bliss, Jr., William Howard Taft, Eliot Wadsworth. Department of Military Relief: John D. Ryan, dir.; Major Kirby Smith, Medical Reserve Corps, U. S. A., asst. dir.

Department of Civilian Relief: W. Frank Persons, dir.

Bureau of Medical Service: Lieutenant-Colonel C. H. Connor, Medical Corps, U. S. A., dir. Bureau of Nursing Service: Clara D. Noyes, dir.

Town and Country Nursing Service: Fannie F. Clement, dir.

ASSO

Woman's Bureau: Florence Marshall, dir. Supply Service: Frank B. Gifford, dir. THE AMERICAN SOCIAL HYGIENE CIATION-William F. Snow, M. D., gen. sec'y; 105 W. 40 St., New York. For the repression of prostitution, the reduction of venereal diseases, and the promotion of sound sex education; pamphlets upon request; membership $5; sustaining $10.

AMERICAN

SOCIETY FOR THE CONTROL

OF CANCER-Curtis E. Lakeman, exec. sec'y; 25 W. 45 St., New York. To disseminate knowledge concerning symptoms, diagnosis, treatment Publications free and prevention. on request. Annual membership dues $5.

COMMITTEE OF ONE HUNDRED ON NATIONAL HEALTH-E. F. Robbins, exec. sec'y; 203 E. 27 St., New York. To unite all government health agencies into a National Department of Health to inform the people how to prevent disease.

COMMITTEE ON PROVISION FOR THE FEEBLEMINDED-Joseph P. Byers, ex. sec'y; Empire Bldg., Phila. Object to spread knowledge concerning extent and menace of feeblemindedness; initiate methods for control and eradication. COUNCIL OF JEWISH WOMEN (NATIONAL) -Department of Immigrant Aid, with headquar ters, 242 E. Broadway, New York. Miss Helen Winkler, ch'n; gives friendly aid to immigrant girls; meets, visits, advises, guides; has international system of safeguarding. Invites membership.

PUBLIC

DEPARTMENT OF SOCIAL AND
SERVICE, AMERICAN UNITARIAN ASSOCIA
TION-Elmer S. Forbes, sec'y; 25 Beacon St..
Boston. Reports and bulletins free; lecture bu-
reau; social service committees.

EUGENICS' REGISTRY-Battle Creek, Mich. Board of Registration: Chancellor David Starr Jordan, pres.; Dr. J. H. Kellogg, sec'y; Prof. Irving Fisher, Dr. Chas. B. Davenport, Luther Burbank, Prof. O. C. Glaser, exec. sec'y. A public service conducted by the Race Betterment Foundation and Eugenics' Record Office for knowledge about human inheritance and eugenics. Literature free. Registration blanks for those who desire an inventory, and wherever possible. an estimate of their hereditary possibilities. FEDERAL COUNCIL OF THE CHURCHES OF CHRIST IN AMERICA-Constituted by 30 Protestant denominations. Rev. Charles S. Macfarland, genl. sec'y; 105 E. 22 St., New York.

Commission on the Church and Social Service;

Rev. Worth M. Tippy, exec. sec'y; Rev.
Clyde F. Armitage, asso. sec'y; Herbert M.
Shenton, special sec'y; Miss Grace M. Sims,
office sec'y.

Commission on International Justice and Good-
will; Rev. Sidney L. Gulick, sec'y.
Commission on Inter-Church Federations; Rev..
Roy B. Guild, exec. sec'y.
Commission on Church and Country Life; Rev.
Charles O. Gill, sec'y; 104 N. Third St.,
Columbus, Ohio.

Campaign for the Conservation of Human Life;
Charles Stelzle, sec'y.

HAMPTON INSTITUTE-G. P. Phenix, viceprin.; F. K. Rogers, treas.; W. H. Scoville, sec': Hampton, Va. "Hampton is a war measure" (H. B Frissell). Trains Indian and Negro youth. Neither a State nor a Government school. Supported by voluntary contributions. Free literature on race adjustment, Hampton aims and methods.

JOINT COMMISSION ON SOCIAL SERVICE OF THE PROTESTANT EPISCOPAL CHURCHAddress Rev. F. M. Crouch, exec. sec'y; Church Missions House. 281 Fourth Ave., New York. NATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR THE AD. VANCEMENT OF COLORED PEOPLE-Pres.. Moorefield Storey; chairman, Board of Directors,

Dr. J. E. Spingarn; treas., Oswald Garrison Villard; dir. of pub. and research, Dr. W. E. B. Du Bois; act'g sec'y, James Welden Johnson; 70 Fifth Ave., New York. Membership 8,500 with 90 branches.

NATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR THE STUDY AND PREVENTION OF TUBERCULOSISCharles J. Hatfield, M. D., exec. sec'y; Philip P. Jacobs, Ph.D., ass't sec'y; 105 E. 22 St., New York. Organization of tuberculosis campaigns; tuberculosis hospitals, clinics, nurses, etc.; open air schools; Red Cross seals, educational methods,

etc.

NATIONAL CHILD LABOR COMMITTEEOwen R. Lovejoy, sec'y; 105 East 22 st., New York.

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NATIONAL MUNICIPAL LEAGUE- - Lawson Purdy, pres.; Clinton Rogers Woodruff, sec'y; North American Bldg., Phila.; charters; commission government; taxation; police; liquor; electoral reform; finances; accounting; efficiency; civic education; franchises; school extension. NATIONAL ORGANIZATION FOR PUBLIC NURSING Ella Phillips Crandall, R. N., exec. sec'y; 600 Lexington Ave., New York. Object: To stimulate the extension of public health nursing; to develop standards of technique; to maintain a central bureau of information. Bulletins sent to members.

HEALTH 35 state branches. Industrial and agricultural investigations; legislation; studies of administration; education; mothers' pensions; juvenile delinquency; health; recreation; children's codes. Publishes quarterly Child Labor Bulletin. Photograph, slides, and exhibits.

NATIONAL CHILD WELFARE ASSOCIATION. -Chas. F. Powlison, gen. sec'y; 70 Fifth Ave., New York. Cooperates with hundreds of social agencies. Headquarters for child welfare material and information, exhibits, posters, charts, lantern slides, pamphlets, bulletins, lecturers. Inquiries, invited. Publications free to members. Dues: active, $10; associate, $5. Will you help us build a better generation?

NATIONAL COMMITTEE FOR MENTAL HYGIENE-Clifford W. Beers, sec'y; 50 Union Sq., New York. Write for pamphlets on mental hy giene, prevention of insanity and mental deficiency. care of insane and feebleminded, surveys, social service in mental hygiene, state societies for mental hygiene.

NATIONAL COMMITTEE FOR THE PREVENTION OF BLINDNESS Edward M. Van Cleve, man. dir.; Gordon L. Berry, fld. sec'y; Mrs. Winifred Hathaway, sec'y; 130 E. 22 St., New York. Objects: To furnish information for associations, commissions and persons working to conserve vision; to publish literature of movement; to furnish exhibits, lantern slides, lectures. matter: samples free; quantities at cost. membership. Field, United States. N. Y. State Com.

Printed Invites Includes

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The Local Community, Charles C. Cooper. Mental Hygiene, Frankwood E. Williams. Organization of Social Forces, Allen T. Burns. Social Problems of the War and Reconstruction, V. Everit Macy.

NATIONAL CONSUMERS' LEAGUE-Mrs. Florence Kelley, gen. sec'y; 289 Fourth Ave., New York. 87 branch leagues. 15,000 members. War program: To help our industrial army by promoting clinics for treatment of new diseases (incident to munitions work and to fatigue and strain); reasonable working hours; safe and sanitary working conditions; decent standards of liv ing; safeguards for women taking men's places in industry; protection for children. Minimum membership, $2.

NATIONAL FEDERATION OF SETTLEMENTS -Robert A. Woods, sec'y, 20 Union Park, Boston, Mass. Develops broad forms of comparative study and concerted action in city, state, and nation, for meeting the fundamental problems disclosed by settlement work; seeks the higher and more democratic organization of neighborhood life. NATIONAL KINDERGARTEN ASSOCIATION -250 Madison Ave., New York. Object: To have the kindergarten established in every public school. Four million children in the United States are now without this training. Furnishes bulletins, exhibits, lecturers, advice and information. In cooperation with United States Bureau of Education, works for adequate legislation and for a wider interest in this method of increasing intelligence and reducing crime. Supported by volun tary contributions.

NATIONAL LEAGUE OF WOMEN WORKERS -Jean Hamilton, org. sec'y; 35 E. 30 St., New York. Evening clubs for girls; recreation and instruction in self-governing and supporting groups for girls over working age.

CHARLES FRANCIS PRESS, NEW YORK

NATIONAL WOMAN'S PEACE PARTY. Section for the United States of the International Committee of Women for Permanent Peace-Mrs. Eleanor Daggett Karsten, office sec'y; Jane Addams, ch'n; 116 S. Michigan Ave., Chicago. The purpose of this organization is to enlist all American women in arousing the nations to respect the sacredness of human life and to abolish war.

NATIONAL WOMAN'S TRADE UNION LEAGUE-Mrs. Raymond Robins, pres.; 139 N. Clark St. [room 703], Chicago. Stands for selfgovernment in the work shop through organization and also for the enactment of protective legislation. Information given. Official organ, Life and Labor. NEW YORK SOCIAL HYGIENE SOCIETY (Formerly Society of Sanitary and Moral Prophylaxis)-Dr. James Pederson, sec'y; 105 W. 40 St., New York. Seven educational pamphlets. 10c. each. Four reprints, 5c. each. Dues-Ac tive, $2; Contributing, $5; sustaining, $10. Membership includes current and subsequent literature; selected bibliographies. Maintains lecture bureau and health exhibit.

PLAYGROUND AND RECREATION ASSOCIATION OF AMERICA-Howard Braucher, sec'y; 1 Madison Ave., New York. Playground activities, equipment and administration; community centers; field work in communities; rural recreation; physi cal efficiency tests for boys and girls; cooperating with War Department Commission on Training Camp Activities.

RUSSELL SAGE FOUNDATION-For the Improvement of Living Conditions-John M. Glenn, dir., 130 E. 22 St., New York.

Charity Organization Department; Mary E. Richmond, dir.; Fred S. Hall, associate dir. Department of Child-Helping; Hastings H. Hart, dir.; C. Spencer Richardson, assistant. Division of Education; Leonard P. Ayres, dir, Division of Statistics; Leonard P. Ayres, dir.; Earle Clark, statistician.

Department of Recreation; Lee F. Hanmer, dir.; Clarence Arthur Perry, associate director. Division of Remedial Loans; Arthur H. Ham, dir.

Department of Surveys and Exhibits; Shelby M. Harrison, dir.; E. G. Routzahn, associate dir. Division of Industrial Studies; Mary Van Kleeck, sec'y. Library; open free to the public; one of the best working collections in the United States on sociology and social work; Frederick Warren Jenkins, librarian.

The Southern Highland Division; John C. Campbell, sec'y; headquarters, 412 Legal Bldg., Asheville, N. C.

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SHORT BALLOT ORGANIZATION Woodrow Wilson, pres.; Richard S. Childs, sec'y; 383 Fourth Ave., New York. National clearing house for information on short ballot and commission government, city manager plan, county government. Pamphlets free.

SURVEY ASSOCIATES, INC.-Robert W. de Forest, pres.; Arthur P. Kellogg, sec'y; publishers of the SURVEY; Paul U. Kellogg, editor; Edward T. Devine, Graham Taylor, Jane Addams, associate editors; departments: Civics, Graham R. Taylor; Industry, John A. Fitch; Health, Alice Hamilton, M. D.. Gertrude Seymour; Education, Crime, Winthrop D. Lane; Foreign Service, Bruno Lasker.

TRAVELERS' AID SOCIETY-Orin C. Baker, gen'l sec'y; 465 Lexington Ave., New York. Provides advice, guidance and protection to travelers, especially women and girls, who need assistance. It is non-sectarian and its services are free irrespective of race, creed, class or sex.

TUSKEGEE INSTITUTE-Robert R. Moton, prin.; Warren Logan, treas.; Emmett J. Scott, sec'y; Tuskegee, Ala. An institution for the training of Negro youth; an experiment in race adjustment in the Black Belt of the South; furnishes information on all phases of the race problem and on the Tuskegee Idea and methods.

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MAZDA

"Not the name of a thing, but the mark of a service"

No lamps can ever be marked MAZDA unless they embody MAZDA Service standards of excellence

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The Meaning of MAZDA

MAZDA is the trademark of a world-wide service to certain lamp manufacturers. Its purpose is to collect and select scientific and practical information concerning progress and developments in the art of incandescent lamp manufacturing and to distribute this information to the companies entitled to receive this Service. MAZDA Service is centered in the Research Laboratories of the General Electric Company at Schenectady, New York. The mark MAZDA can appear only on lamps which meet the standards of MAZDA Service. It is thus an assurance of quality. This trademark is the property of the General Electric Company.

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RESEARCH LABORATORIES OF
GENERAL ELECTRIC COMPANY

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Here, where the emperor worshipped yearly at the religious center of Confucianism, the first constitution
of the new republic was drafted, and the temple grounds are now used as a government agricultural
experiment station. The first national athletic meet of China was held on these grounds

CHINA'S SOCIAL CHALLENGE
Beginning a Series of Four Articles

By J. S. Burgess

Price, 10 Cents

September 8, 1917

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