A publication may also be divided into parts. The cited 

 material may be part of a larger work, as Part 27, or it 

 may be divided within itself, as part 2. (See the citation of 

 Cobb (1902), p. 9.) 



Volume, number, and page.— Cite the volume, number of the 

 issue, and pagination in Arabic (since Arabic numerals are 

 ordinarily read with greater ease than Ronnan numerals). 

 Give these item.s in full (as vol. 1, no. 10, p. 5-10). Do not 

 onnit the number of the publication when available, as some 

 readers may have unbound copies, and the number mate- 

 rially aids them in locating the reference. 



If the serial has no distinctive numerical designation of 

 the volume, use the year followed by the number of the 

 issue and pagination. (See the Breder (1949) citation, p. 14.) 



When citing references in Germanic, Scandinavian, 

 Romance, and Russian languages use their equivalent for 

 volume and number. In other languages, such as Japanese, 

 Chinese, Hebrew, Arabic, et cetera, use the English abbre- 

 viations, "vol." and "no." 



If the paging is continuous in the volume, give the first 

 and last page numbers as, p. 5-10; if the publication is 

 independently paged, give total pagination as, 510 p.; if the 

 paging is scattered, indicate by use of a comma as, p. 

 1-10, 45. In giving the pagination omit the introductory 

 section (as indicated by Roman numerals), unless that 

 section is a part of the reference material. The writer 

 should always be sure that he covers all cited material in 

 the paging. 



Illustrations.— Citations in technical papers need not in- 

 clude the number of illustrations (figures, plates, nnaps, 

 charts). In nontechnical papers, listing the figures is often 

 of value in informing the reader that the illustrations are 

 an important part of the reference naaterial. 



Lists of suggested readings often include mention of 

 photographs, drawings, maps, and other supplennental in- 

 formation. 



Name of publisher.— The name should be spelled as indicated 

 on the title page or elsewhere in the publication. Correct 

 spelling of publishers' nannes is found in the Directory of 

 Publishers in the Cunnulative Book Index, , published by 

 H. W. Wilson, New York, or in other trade catalogs. Punc- 

 tuation is peculiar to a name and should follow the pub- 

 lisher's preference. Indicate private printing. 



