628 



INDEX 



Fiske, G. Walter. 



The Development of Rural Lead- 

 ership, 589-601. 

 The Social Value of the Telephone, 



280-281. 

 Foght, Harold W. 



The Change from Amateur to 

 Professional Teaching, 347-348. 

 Forbes, Elmer S. 



Rural Housing, 327-329. 

 Free delivery, rural mail, 273-274. 

 Frontier: passing of, 35-3G; sig- 

 nificance of in American his- 

 tory, 29-34. 



Galpin, C. J. 



A Method of Making a Social Sur- 

 vey of a Rural Community, 

 484-490. 



Social Privileges of a Village or 

 Small City, 464-467. 



The Social Anatomy of an Agri- 

 cultural Community, 490-497. 

 Gill, Charles O. 



Social Effects of Cooperation in 

 Europe, 131-137. 



The Church Situation in Ohio, 



431-435. 

 Gillette, John M. 



Mitigating Rural Isolation, 266- 

 274. 



Rural Child Labor, 155-156. 



Tenant Farming, 137-142. 



The Scope of Rural Sociology, 

 615-620. 



Training for Rural Leadership, 



585-587. 



Grange, see Patrons of Husbandry. 

 Great men, from rural environment, 



168-172. 

 Groves, Ernest R. 



Suggestion and City-drift, 172- 

 175. 



The Mind of the Farmer, 175- 

 181. 



Hatch Act, 386. 

 Hayes, E. C. 



Agrarian Aristocracy and Popu- 

 lation Pressure. 145-147. 



Leadership, 583. 



Health, physical: Chap. VIII, 185- 

 202; bibliography, 223-224; for 

 rural community, 185-103; for 

 rural schools, 195-196; inspec- 

 tion, 188; lack of information 

 and aids, 186-187; legislation, 

 188-189; on prison farms, 289- 

 290; teaching of, 191-192; 

 work in schools of U. S., 197. 



Health, mental, 203-225; bibliogra- 

 phy, 225. 



Hedrick, W. 0. 



Some Advantages of Tenancy, 142- 

 144. 



Henderson, Charles R. 

 Rural Police, 303-306. 



Hill, Laurence S. 



Physical Education in Rural 

 Schools, 229-235. 



Hine, Lewis H. 



Children or Cotton, 158-159. 



Home demonstration, 535. 



Home economics, under Smith- 

 Lever Act, 389-391. 



Home, rural: Chap. XII, 313-326; 

 bibliography, 334-335; chang- 

 ing, 316-317, 324-326; conveni- 

 ences in, 333. 



Homer, Wm. J. 



The Prison Farm, 289 



Hospital, rural, 190-191. 



Housing, rural: Chap XII, 327-333; 

 bibliography, 335-336 ; in New 

 York State, 331-333; over- 

 crowded and defective, 329-331. 



Hunter, W. H. 



Why League (Non-Partisan) is 

 Opposed, 564-567. 



Ideals, in rural life, 181-182. 

 Illiteracy: among mountain whites, 



61 ; war against in Kentucky, 



360-363. 

 Immigrants, in agriculture: Chap. 



IV, 75-94 ; bibliography, 93-94 ; 



as source of farm laborers, 88- 



93; migration to cities, 86-88. 

 Insanity: farming as cure for, 295- 



297; urban and rural, 218-219. 

 Intemperance: in colonial days, 13- 



16; effect of cooperation upon, 



133. 



