80 Juvenile Literature in the Farm Home 



1. Periodicals on Child-rearing 



The American Baby. American Publishing Company, 1 Madison Ave., 

 New York City. $1 per year, 10 cents per copy. Contains much 

 detailed and most helpful instruction on the care of the child. 



American Motherhood. Coopertown, N.Y. $1 per year, 10 cents 

 per copy. Helpful and sympathetic. Especially strong in respect 

 to health and sanitation and in methods of instructing children in 

 regard to the secrets of life. 



The Child-Welfare Magazine. Official organ of the National Congress 

 of Mothers, 147 North 10th Street, Philadelphia. 50 cents per 

 year, 10 cents per copy. 



The educational pamphlets published by the Society of Sanitary and 

 Moral Prophylaxis, 9 E 2d Street, New York City. Excellent mono- 

 graphs, each treating some urgent child problem in relation to morals, 

 sanitation, and the like. 



The Home-training Bulletins, prepared and issued by William A. 

 McKeever, Professor of Philosophy, State Agricultural College, 

 Manhattan, Kan. 5 cents each. Each of these pamphlets con- 

 tains about sixteen pages and covers a particular home-training 

 problem. The numbers thus far issued are : 



1. The Cigarette Smoking Boy. 



2. Teaching the Boy to Save. 



3. Training the Girl 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. 

 Others are in course of preparation. 



2. Books on Child-rearing 



HOLT. Care and Feeding of Children. $1. Appleton. Most helpful 

 and practical. 



CUELET. Short Talks with Young Mothers. $1.50. Putnams. Help- 

 ful from the medical side. 



