Page:The Cambridge History of American Literature, v2.djvu/625

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The New South 609 The Race Problem. Harding, S. B., Select Orations. Pp. 501-7, 1909. The Race Problem in Arizona. Independent, Ixxi, 909-13, 26 Oct., 191 1. Races and Politics. Outlook, xcviii, 260-4, 3 June, 191 1 . The Relation of Industrial Education to National Progress. Annals of the American Academy, xxxiii, 1-12, Jan., 1909. The Religious Life of the Negro. North American Review, clxxxi, 20-3, July, 1905- A Remarkable Triple Alliance. Outlook, cviii, 485-92, 28 Oct., 1914. A Report of Friendly Relations. Outlook, xcii, 22-3, i May, 1909. A Rural Negro Community. Annals of the American Academy, xl, 81-9, Mar., 1912. The Salvation of the Negro. World's Work, ii, 961-71, July, 1901. Signs of Progress among the Negroes. Century, lix, 472-8, Jan., 1900. Solving the Negro Problem in Detail. Independent, Ixxiv, 695-7, 27 Mar., 1913. Some Reports of a Trip made by Booker T. Washington of Tuskegee Institute through the State of Tennessee, November 18-28, 1909. Reprinted from the New York Evening Post. 1909. The Story of the Negro. Outlook, xciii, 19-26, 4 Sept., 1909. The Successful Training of the Negro. The Results of such Teaching as is given at Tuskegee Institute — Schools founded on the Tuskegee Plan. World's Work, vi, 3731-51. Aug., 1903. Teaching Domestic Economy at Tuskegee. Good Housekeeping, li, 623-4, Nov., 1910. A Town owned by Negroes. World's Work, xiv, 9125-34, July, 1907. Tuskegee: a Retrospect and a Prospect. North American Review, clxxxii, 513-23, Apr., 1906. Tuskegee and its People: their Ideals and Achievements. Edited by Booker T. Washington. 1905, 1906. Thrasher, Max Bennett: Tuskegee, its Story and its Work. With an Introduc- tion by Booker T. Washington. Boston, 1900, 1901. Twenty-five Years of Tuskegee. The Building-up of the Negro, as shown by the Growth and Work of this School managed wholly by Negroes — The Record of its Graduates. World's Work, xi, 7433-50, Apr., 1906. Two Generations under Freedom. Outlook, Ixxiii, 292-305, 7 Feb., 1903. University Education for Negroes. Independent, Ixviii, 613-8, 24 Mar., 1910. What I am Trying to do. World's Work, xxvii, 101-7, Nov., 1913. What the Negro is doing for the Negro in America. Missionary Review of the World, xxvii, 833-5, Nov., 1904. Why should Negro Business Men go South? Charities and the Commons, xv, 17-9. 7 Oct., 1905. William Henry Lewis. American Magazine, Ixxv, 34-5, June, 1913. Women who Work in Europe. Outlook, xcviii, 493-9, i July, 191 1. The Work and Influence of Hampton. [Address at a meeting held in New York. City, 12 Feb., 1904, under the direction of the Armstrong Association.] Report of the Commissioner of Education, 1905, pp. 573-79. III. Biographical and Critical Bacon, Alice M[abel]. The Negro and the Atlanta Exposition. Baltimore, 1896. The Trustees of the John F. Slater Fund Occasional Papers No. 7. Baker, Ray Stannard. Rise of Booker T. Washington. American Magazine, kvi, 63-5, May, 1908. VOL. II — 39