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10 cents.

No. 23. Food for school boys and girls. By Mary S. Rose. 10 cents.
A survey of household finances. By B. R. Andrews. 16 p.
A syllabus of physiological chemistry. In preparation.

Chart showing correlation of the textile phases of industrial work in the elementary school. Speyer school. 20 cents.

Comparative study of homemade and bakers' bread. In preparation.

Floor plans of household arts building. 4 p. free.

Technology of cookery. By May B. Van Arsdale, ass't professor, School of practical arts, Teachers college. In preparation.

Cooking of tough meats.

Food for children.

UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS, AUSTIN, TEX.

(School of Domestic Economy.)

Rich, Jessie P. Cleanliness and health.

The problem of the school luncheon. I and II.

The uses of foods and the proper balancing of the diet.

Richardson, Anne. The principles of menu making. I and II.
Rural series: No. 1. The potato; No. 2. Seasonable fruits; No. 3. Meats.

TUSKEGEE NORMAL AND INDUSTRIAL INSTITUTE, TUSKEGEE, Ala.

Carver, George W. Canning and preserving fruits and vegetables in the home.
The pickling and curing of meat in hot weather.

Some possibilities of the cowpea in Macon County, Alabama.

White and color washing with native clays from Macon County, Alabama.

WINTHROP NORMAL AND INDUSTRIAL COLLEge of South CAROLINA, ROCK HILL, S. C.

Frayser, Mary E. A plan for homekeepers' clubs in South Carolina. (Homekeepers' club bulletin, part 2.)

Infant care. In preparation.

Women's club programs in home economics.

UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN, MADISON, WIS.

Agricultural experiment station. Sewage disposal for country homes. (Circular of information, 34.)

MISCELLANEOUS BULLETINS.

AMERICAN HOME ECONOMICS ASSOCIATION, ROLAND PARK BRANCH, BALTIMORE, MD.

(Publications.)

Lake Placid conference on home economics, Proceedings, 1899-1908. $8.

Journal of home economics. Monthly. $2 a year.

Syllabuses. On home economics, food and shelter, 10 cents each.

Syllabus of home economics. 69 p. 50 cents. cloth.

Report of household aid co. An experiment in domestic service. 25 cents.
Reprints, 10 cents each:

An Adirondack home institute. By Mrs. Melvil Dewey...
Report of teaching-section conference..

1902

1907

Report of progress of food and nutrition. By C. F. Langworthy.
Study of textiles. By Nellie Crooks..

1907

1907

Report of progress in food and nutrition. By C. F. Langworthy.
College homes. By Martha Van Rensselaer..

1908

1908

Reprints, 10 cents each-Continued.

The college table as an educational factor. By Miriam N. Loomis......
Government publications on home economics. By C. F. Langworthy...
School feeding in Europe. By Louise Stevens Bryant...
Standardizing the home. By J. R. Commons...

1908

1909

1910

1910

Physiology and courses in home economics. By Percy C. Stiles........
Chemistry for students of home economics. By James F. Norris.

1910

1910

The amount of edible meat in the various cuts. By Flora H. Greene..... 1910
A review of recent investigations on domestic art. By C. F. Langworthy.
Relation of biological chemistry to home economics. By. W. J. Gies.....
Courses in bacteriology for home economics. By H. W. Conn........
Teaching bacteriology to mothers. By H. W. Hill..

1910

1910 1910

1910

What courses in sociology, pure and applied, should be included in college
departments of household science? By G. E. Howard; Courses in sociol-
ogy. By C. A. Ellwood. 20 cents..

Household service as a labor problem. By I. M. Rubinow..
The home and the machine. By J. Lebowitz.

1911

1911

1911

Plan, cost, and organization of kitchens and dining rooms. By Mrs. Dewey. 1912 Control of insect pests in institutions. By E. P. Felt..

1912

Purchasing and handling supplies for public institutions. By H. C. Wright
Uniform accounting for institutions. By William Morse Cole.......
State and municipal documents as sources of information on home econom-
ics. By C. F. Langworthy........

1912

1912

1912

A plea for the introduction of historical courses on the home into higher schools and colleges for young women. By Willystine Goodsell....... 1912 A course in household economics. By B. R. Andrews..... 1913 Refrigerators. By Hermann T. Vulte. 5 cents.

Papers presented at administration section meeting, Lake Placid, N. Y., June, 1912, including reports of the committees; school lunch; laundry; uniform accounting for institutions; papers on practice fields for students; diet kitchen, etc. 50 cents.

Portrait of Ellen H. Richards. $0.25, $2, $3, $6, $8.

HEALTH-EDUCAtion League, 8 Beacon Street, Boston, Mass.

(Health Booklets.)

Hints for health in hot weather, 2¢, $1.50 per 100.

Milk, 3¢, $2.50 per 100.

"Colds" and their prevention, 2¢, $1.50 per 100. Meat and drink, 3¢, $2.50 per 100.

Healthful homes, 4¢, $3.00 per 100.

The successful woman, 4¢, $2.50 per 100.

The boy and the cigarette, 5¢, $3.00 per 100.

The care of little children, 4¢, $3.00 per 100.

The plague of mosquitoes and flies, 4¢, $3.00 per 100.
Tonics and stimulants, 2¢, $1.50 per 100.

Emergencies, 10¢, $6.00 per 100.

Microbes good and bad, 4¢, $3.00 per 100.
The efficient worker, 44, $2.75 per 100.
Sexual hygiene, 4¢, $2.50 per 100.

Health in labor camps, 3¢, $1.75 per 100.

Tuberculosis (consumption), 5¢, $3.00 per 100.
When to call the physician, 4¢, $2.50 per 100.
Habits of health, 4¢, $2.50 per 100.

Wastes and their disposal, 4¢, $2.50 per 100.

Typhoid fever, infection and prevention, 5¢, $3.00 per 100.
The observance of Health Day in schools, 4¢, $2.50 per 100.
Industrial hygiene, 7¢, $4.50 per 100.

Hygiene for workers, 6¢, $4.00 per 100.
Hygiene of exercise.

Nerve waste.

Health of the school child.

One dollar membership fee brings copies of all past bulletins and new ones issued during current year.

AMERICAN SCHOOL OF HOME ECONOMICS, CHICAGO, ILL.

I. Books on home economics for correspondence study and for schools. Published in twelve volumes, also in four volumes. Prices on application: The house:-its plan, decoration, and care, by Isabel Bevier, University of Illinois; Household bacteriology, by S. Maria Elliott, Simmons College; Household hygiene, by S. Maria Elliott; Chemistry of the household, by Margaret E. Dodd; Principles of cookery, by Anna Barrows, Teachers College, Columbia University and Chautauqua School of Cookery; Food and dietetics, by Alice P. Norton, formerly of University of Chicago; Household management, by Bertha M. Terrill, University of Vermont; Personal hygiene, by M. Le Bosquet; Home care of the sick, by Amy E. Pope; Textiles and clothing, by Kate H. Watson, formerly of Lewis Institute and University of Chicago; Study of child life, by Marion Foster Washburne, editor Mothers' magazine; Care of children, by Dr. A. C. Cotton, Rush Medical College, University of Chicago.

II. Bulletin: Freehand cooking on scientific principles, 10 cents; Food values. 10 cents; The up-to-date home-money and labor saving appliances, 15 cents.

HOUSEKEEPING EXPERIMENT STATION.

(Address: Mr. and Mrs. A. T. Child, 28 Hoyt St., Stamford, Conn.) Bulletins (10 cents each): No. 1, Cooking and lighting with denatured alcohol; No. 2, Comfort in the kitchen; No. 3, Time and money savers; No. 4, The new housekeeping; No. 5, The country cooking school; No. 6, Cooking the cheaper cuts of meat; No. 7, The country kitchen; No. 8, The new house cleaning; No. 9, The new lamps; No. 10, The kitchenette.

Four bulletins on Housekeeping efficiency bound in pamphlet form $1.00: No. 11, Prevention of lost motions in housework; No. 12, Applied efficiency; No. 13, Serving dish cookery; No. 14, Utensil efficiency.

PROFESSOR MCKEEVER'S HOME TRAINING BULLETINS.

(Address: Professor William A. McKeever, University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kans. Price, 2 cents each; $1.00 per hundred.)

1. The cigarette smoking boy; 2. Teaching the boy to save; 3. Training the girls to help in the home; 4. Assisting the boy in the choice of a vocation; 5. A better crop of boys and girls; 6. Training the boy to work; 7. Teaching the girl to save; 8. Instructing the young in regard to sex.

NATIONAL CHILD WELFARE EXHIBITION COMMITTEE, 200 FIFTH AVE. NEW YORK CITY.

I. Bulletins: Sample set, 25 cents, special price in quantities: 1. The history of the Child welfare exhibition movement. 2. Organization of a child welfare exhibit. 3. The cost. 4. The construction. 5. The floor plan. 6. Twelve good screens and

why. 7. Screen plans (for use in preparing wall exhibits). 8. Screen plans as filled out by exhibitors. 9. Publicity committee. 10. Organization of explainers. 11. The program (living exhibits, entertainments, motion pictures, etc.). 12. After the child welfare exhibit what? 13. Neighborhood child welfare exhibits.

II. Exhibits for loan. The committee loans the following exhibit sections, at $5 and transportation charges per section, with reduced prices for larger quantities: Sex education and hygiene; Waste humanity (feeble-mindedness); Children's diseases (2 sections); Medical inspection; The school building; Open air schools; Vocational education; The education of the immigrant; The dependent child; Children's institutions; The child's food; Play; Public recreation; Social centers; Boy scouts of America; Camp fire girls; Infant mortality and care of babies (3 units from Russell Sage Foundation); School feeding (2 units from American home economics association); Psychological clinic of University of Pennsylvania (2 units).

CITIES AND TOWNS TEACHING HOUSEHOLD ARTS.

The following list gives, by States, the names of cities and towns in which the household arts are taught in the elementary or secondary schools. There are included 3,082 towns and cities and 2,440 high schools. The list was compiled from returns to an inquiry sent to local superintendents of schools in September, 1914, supplemented by the replies to earlier schedules sent out in connection with this study and by a special inquiry to State superintendents of public instruction in October, 1914. Complete returns are lacking from certain States, and there is not entire uniformity in the data presented.

The letters following the names of places have the following significance: "c" indicates that cooking is taught in the elementary grades; "s" that sewing is similarly taught in the elementary grades; "e" that either cooking or sewing is taught in the elementary grades, definite information not being available; "h" indicates that household arts is taught in the high school; the name of a town without any index letter indicates that household arts is taught in the public schools, but that definite information was not secured as to whether in the elementary school or high school, or in both; the presence of an index letter indicates that work was definitely reported of the type indicated, but the absence of either index letters does not indicate that such other work is not given (for example, in some States facts could be secured as to high-school work only, and many towns thereby entered for "h" only are doubtless also offering work in the grades; in another case exact data as to high schools may be lacking).

A list of 159 State normal schools that teach household arts is given in Part II of this report (Bulletin, 1914, No. 37, p. 127), and a list of 252 colleges teaching home economics is given in Part III (Bulletin, 1914, No. 38, p. 68).

Almond-h
Anniston-sh
Attalla-sh

Birmingham-c sh

CITIES AND TOWNS TEACHING HOUSEHOLD arts.

ALABAMA.

Birmingham (Ensley H. S.)-h
Dothan-c sh

Florence-csh

Huntsville-h

Mobile High School-h

Mobile, Owens Academy-h

Montgomery-h

Selma-sh

Union Springs-h

County high schools.

Autauga Co. H. S., Prattville-h

Barbour Co. H. S., Cio-h

Bibb Co. H. S., Centerville-h
Blount Co. H. S., Oneonta-h
Calhoun Co., H. S., Oxford-h
Chambers Co. H. S., Milltown-h
Cherokee Co. H. S., Senter-h
Choctaw Co. H. S., Butler-h
Clarke Co. H. S., Groove Hill-h
Clay Co. H. S., Ashland-h
Cleburne Co. H. S., Heflin-h
Coffee Co. H. S., Enterprise-h
Colbert Co. H. S., Leighton-h
Conecuh Co. H. S., Castleberry-h
Coosa Co. H. S., Rockford-h

Covington Co. H. S., Florala-h
Cullman Co. H. S., Cullman-h
Dale Co. H. S., Ozark-h

Dallas Co. H. S., Plantersville-h
DeKalb Co. H. S., Fort Payne-h

Elmore Co. H. S., Eclectic-h

Escambia Co. H. S., Atmore-h
Etowah Co. H. S., Attalla-h

Franklin Co. H. S., Russellville-h

Geneva Co. H. S., Hartford-b

Henry Co. H. S., Headland-h

Houston Co. H. S., Columbia-h

Jackson Co. H. S., Scottsboro-h

Lamar Co. H. S., Vernon-h

Lauderdale Co. H. S., Rogersville-h
Lawrence Co. H. S., Moulton-h

Lee Co. H. S., Auburn-h

Limestone Co. H. S., Elkmont-h

Lowndes Co. H. S., Ft. Deposit-h

Macon Co. H. S., Notasulga-h

Madison Co. H. S., Gurley-h

Marengo Co. H. S., Thomaston-h

Marion Co. H. S., Guin-h

Marshall Co. H. S., Guntersville-h

Monroe Co. H. S., Monroeville-h
Morgan Co. H. S., Hartselle-h
Perry Co. H. S., Marion-h
Pickens Co. H. S., Reform-h
Pike Co. H. S., Brundidge-h
Randolph Co. H. S., Wedowee-h
Shelby Co. H. S., Columbiana-h
St. Clair Co. H. S., Odenville-b

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