XXXVIII. 



AGRICULTURE IN RECONSTRUCTION. 



1. Bailey, L. H. — Country Living in the Next Gen- 



eration, in The Independent, Vol. 85 (^March 

 6, 1916), pp. 336-338. 

 The Forthcoming Situation in Agricultural 

 Worh, in Science, Vol. 4.1 (February 26, 

 1915), pp. 297-306; Vol. 43 (January 21, 

 1916), pp. 44-87. 



2. Boyle, J. E. — The Agrarian Movement in the 



Xorthzvest, in The American Economic Re- 

 view, Vol. VIII (September, 1918), pp. 505- 

 521. 



3. Brand, C. J. — Distribution of Agricultural 



Products, in Friedman, E. H.: American 

 Problems of Reconstruction, 1918. 

 The J^ital Concern of Agrictdture in Foreign 

 Trade, in Annals of the American Academy of 

 Political and Social Science, Vol. 83 (May, 

 1919), pp. 35-47. 



4. Bickerdike, C. J. — Economics and the Xexv Agri- 



cultural Policy, in The Economic Journal, 

 Vol. XXVII (December, 1917), pp. 471-485. 



5. Camp, W. R. — The North Carolina Credit 



Union, in The American Economic Review, 

 Vol. VI (September, 1916), pp. 689-693. 



6. Carver, T. N. — The Farmer's Interest in For- 



eign Trade, in Report of National Foreign 

 Trade Convention, 1917. 



7. Davenport, E. — The Outlook for Agricultural 



Science. Science (New Series), Vol. 45 

 (February 16, 1917), pp. 149-160. 

 Wanted: A National Policy in Agricidture. 

 Proceedings of the Association of American 

 Agricultural Colleges and Experiment Sta- 

 tions, 1919, pp. 52-68. Also printed sepa- 

 rately (Urbana, Illinois, 1919). 



90 



