Page:The Cambridge History of American Literature, v2.djvu/623

 The New South 607 The Agricultural Negro. Arena, xxviii, 461-3, Nov., 1902. The American Negro and his Economic Value. International Quarterly, ii, 672- 86, Dec., 1900. The American Negro of Today. Putnam's, iii, 67-70, Oct., 1907. Bert Williams. American Magazine, Ixx, 600-4, Sept., 1910. Black and White in the South. Outlook cvi, 590-3, 14 Mar., 1914. Boley, a Negro Town in the West. Outlook, Ixxxviii, 28-31, 4 Jan., 1908. The Census and the Negro. Independent, Ixxii, 785-6, 1 1 Apr., 1912. Charles Banks. American Magazine, Ixxi, 731-3, Apr., 1911. A Cheerful Journey through Mississippi. World's Work, xvii, 11278-82, Feb 1909. Chickens, Pigs, and People. Outlook, Ixviii, 291-300, i June, 1901. ChUd Labor and the Sulphur Mines. Outlook, xcviii, 21-6, 342-9, 6 May, 17 June, 1911. Cruelty in the Congo Country. Outlook, Ixxviii, 375-7,8 Oct., 1904. Durham, North Carolina. A City of Negro Enterprises. Independent, kx, 642- 50, 30 Mar., 191 1. Educate Six Million Negro ChQdren. World's Work, xx, 13087-8, June, 1910. Education, Industrial Schools, Colleges, Universities, and their Relationship to the Race Problem. A New Negro for a New Century; an Accurate and Up-to-dateRecordof the upward Struggles of the Negro Race. . . . Chi- cago, 1900. The Education of the Man behind the Plow. Independent, kiv, 918-920, 23 Apr., 1908. Education of the Negro. Monographs on Education in the United States. De- partment of Education for the United States Commission to the Paris Exposition of 1900. Albany, N. Y., 1900, 1904. Education will solve the Race Problem. North American Review, ckxi, 221-232, Aug., 1900. Educational Engineers. Outlook, xcv, 266-7, 4 Jime, 1910. A Farmer's College on Wheels. World's Work, xiii, 8352-4, Dec., 1906. Fifty Years of Negro Progress. Some Indisputable Evidence. Forum, Iv, 269- 279, Mar., 1916. A Forward Step for the South. Independent, li, 2934-5, 2 Nov., 1899. The Free Negro in Slavery Days. Outlook, xciii, 107-1 14, 18 Sept., 1909. Fruits of Industrial Training. Atlantic Monthly, xcii, 453-62, Oct., 1903. The Golden Rule in Atlanta. Outlook, kxxiv, 913-6, 15 Dec, 1906. Haiti and the United States. Outlook, cxi, 681, 17 Nov., 1915. Henson, Matthew A. Negro Explorer at the North P.ole. With a Foreword by Robert E. Peary and an introduction by Booker T. Washington. [1912.] Heroes in Black Skins, kvi, 724-9, Sept., 1903. Holtzclaw, William H. The Black Man's Burden. With an Introduction by Booker T. Washington. 1915. How Denmark has taught itself Prosperity and Happiness. World's Work, xxii, 14486-94, June, 191 1. How the Colored People of Washington raised $25,000 in Twenty-six Days. In- dependent, kiii, 1115-6, 7 Nov., 1907. Industrial Education for the Negro. Negro Problem; a Series of Articles by Re- presentative American Negroes of Today. 1903. Industrial Education in Africa. Independent, Ix, 616-9, 15 Mar., 1906. Industrial Education, Public Schools, and the Negroes. Annals of the American Academy, xlix, 219-32, Sept., 1913.