By JANE ADDAMS 



The Newer Ideals of Peace 



Miss Addams points out that in the growth of the moral sense of 

 the nations the goal of universal peace will be reached through the 

 cooperation of the very elements now regarded as disturbers the 

 immigrant population in the large cities. She discusses the Labor 

 Movement ; the Protection of Women and Children ; " Women in 

 City Government," etc. 



The editor of Collier's writes : " To us it seems the most compre- 

 hensive talk yet given about how to help humanity in America 

 to-day." 



"A clean and consistent setting forth of the utility of labor as 

 against the waste of war, and an exposition of the alteration of 

 standards that must ensue when labor and the spirit of militarism 

 are relegated to their right places in the minds of men. . . . Back 

 of it lies illimitable sympathy, immeasurable pity, a spirit as free as 

 that of St. Francis, a sense of social order and ritness that Marcus 

 Aurelius might have found similar to his own." Chicago Tribune. 



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Democracy and Social Ethics 



" Its pages are remarkably we were about to say refreshingly 

 free from the customary academic limitations . . .; in fact, are the 

 result of actual experience in hand-to-hand contact with social 

 problems. . . . No more truthful description, for example, of the 

 'boss' as he thrives to-day in our great cities has ever been written 

 than is contained in Miss Addams's chapter on ' Political Reform.' 

 . . . The same thing may be said of the book in regard to the 

 presentation of social and economic facts." Review of Reviews. 



"Too much emphasis cannot be laid upon the efficiency and in- 

 spiration afforded by these essays. . . . The book is startling, 

 stimulating, and intelligent." Philadelphia Ledger. 



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Twenty Years at Hull House 



Ready in October, 1910 



PUBLISHED BY 



THE MACMILLAN COMPANY 



64-66 Fifth Avenue, New York 



