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THE AMERICAN JOURNAL OF SOCIOLOGY

Hull House stands not so much for a solution of problems as a place of exchange. The demands which are brought to it are varied enough. One man wants to be "shown the sense of poetry," another wants his wife "converted to the evangelical religion" for the sake of a peaceful fireside, and a third wants—just the patrol wagon. One mother leaves her baby "while she goes to the matinee," and another hopes to find her boy, arrested she knows not where, for what, or by whom. Often the effort put forth in return is unwise or inadequate, but the exchange is the vital thing. This is the heart of the movement. This is the reason of the settlement; the rest is pure façade. This only can destroy the artificial, and justify its life. It must help that direct human touch of richer with poorer, wise with simple, learned with untaught, dynamic with static which has for its aim the realization by all the children of their kinship with the great family. Dorothea Moore.


BIBLIOGRAPHY.

Syllabi, programmes, pamphlets, Art Exhibition Catalogues, etc. All to be obtained at Hull House.

A Chicago Toynbee Hall, Leila G. Bedell, Woman's Journal, Boston, May 5, 1889.

A Home on Halsted Street, Mary H. Porter, Advance, Chicago, July 11, 1889.

They Help the Poor, Chicago Times, March 23, 1890.

Two Women's Work, Chicago Tribune, May 19, 1890.

Art for the Masses, Chicago Journal, May 27, 1890.

Hull House, Altruistic Review, Springfield, Ohio, October 1890.

Hull House, Emily A. Kellogg, Union Signal, Chicago, January 22, 1891.

Art for Poor People, Chicago Herald, June 21, 1891.

Lectures for the Poor, Chicago Inter-Ocean, June 21, 1891.

Hull House, Mary Lloyd, Ledger, Philadelphia, August 5, 1891.

What Two Women Did, New York Evening Telegram, August 8, 1891.

The Working Girls of Chicago, Katharine A. Jones, Review of Reviews, New York, September 1891.

Hull House, Alice Miller, The Charities Review, New York, February 1892.

Hull House Bureau, Chicago Post, January 23, 1892.

With the Masses, Miss Jane Addams, Advance, Chicago, February 18, 1892.

Hull House Art Exhibit, Chicago Inter-Ocean, April 24, 1892.

Hull House, The Interior, Chicago, April 28, 1892.

Hull House in Chicago, Republican, Springfield, Mass., June 3, 1892.

Nineteenth Ward Ill Provided, Chicago Herald, June 9, 1892.

Among the Poor of Chicago, Joseph Kirkland, Scribner's Magazine, July 1892.

An Outlet for Faculties, Boston Herald, July 9, 1892.

A Glimpse into Hull House Life. The Churchman, New York, July 30, 1892.