1 82 Bibliography 



Evans, Maurice S. : White and Black in the Southern 

 States. L,ondon: L,ongmans Green & Co., 1915. Writ- 

 ten by an Englishman with intimate knowledge of con- 

 ditions in South Africa. Gives useful comparisons be- 

 tween the South and South Africa, based on first hand 

 observation. 



Hammond, Mrs. L,. H. : In Black and White. New York : 

 Fleming H. Revell, 1914. A sympathetic account of 

 race relations as seen by a Southern woman. 



Southern Women and Race Adjustment. L,ynchburg, 



Va.: J. P. Bell & Co., 1917. 



Hart, A. B. : The Southern South. New York : D. Apple- 

 ton & Co., 1912. A stimulating book full of intimate 

 knowledge of the section. 



Hoffman, F. L,. : Race Traits and Tendencies of the Amer- 

 ican Negro. American Economics Assn., 1896. Vol. 

 XI, Nos. 1-3. A study in vital statistics. 



Jones, Thomas Jesse : The Negro and the Census of 1910. 

 Hampton, Va. : Hampton Institute Press, 1912. 



Negro Population in the U. S. Annals Am. Acad., 



September, 1913. 



et al : Negro Education in the United States. Bulletins 



38, 39, U. S. Bureau of Education, 1917. Authorita- 

 tive and comprehensive. 



Kerlin, Robt. T. The Voice of the Negro. New York : 

 E. P. Dutton and Co., 1920. A keen analysis of recent 

 trends in Negro public opinion through a study of the 

 colored press. 



Mecklin, J. M. : Democracy and Race Friction. New 

 York : The McMillan Company, 1914. Excellent dis- 

 cussion of the philosophy of race relations. 



Miller, Kelly: Race Adjustment. New York: Neale 

 Publishing Co., 1908. An illustration of the attitude 

 of the cooperative group of colored thinkers. 



Moton, Robert Russa : Finding a Way Out. New York : 

 Doubleday Page & Co., 1920. Autobiographical account 

 of the life of the successor to Booker Washington. Full 

 of the cooperative spirit of race relations. Well worth 

 while. 



Murphy, Edgar Gardner: The Basis of Ascendancy. 

 New York : The MacMillan Company, 1909. 



