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oks Added to the Library during the Year, by Classes—continued.<br />

General Works 163, 228, 368, 444, 504<br />

Geology 174, 283, 390, 515<br />

German Fiction 163<br />

Heraldry. Flags 410<br />

History 41, 86, 137, 190, 246, 297, 345, 412, 472, 530<br />

Humor. Satire 293, 340, 408, 468, 526<br />

Immigration 116, 508<br />

Insurance. Pensions 328, 382, 453<br />

International Law 453<br />

Japanese Art 337<br />

Jews and Judaism 37 2<br />

Labor 450<br />

Language 24, 75, 119, 172, 234, 282, 330, 386,456, 513<br />

Law 22, 73, 117, 232, 279, 381, 452, 510<br />

Libraries 273, 368<br />

Literature 36, 81, 132, 186, 240, 292, 340, 404, 466, 525<br />

Maps 245, 410<br />

Mathematics 77, 173, 330<br />

Mechanical Drawing 338<br />

Medicine, Physiology, Hygiene. .27, 78, 122, 175, 285, 332, 3g2, 458, 517<br />

Mental Tests 323<br />

Military and Naval Science i6g, 280, 382<br />

Mines and Mining 237<br />

Miscellaneous 44. 88, 193, 299<br />

Money. Finance 451, 510<br />

Municipal art 238<br />

Music 32, 81, 128, 184, 239, 291, 338, 403, 465, 524<br />

Philosophy 18, 67, 113. 164, 228, 273, 368, 445, 505<br />

Photography 338, 464, 524<br />

Physics 388<br />

Poetry 37, 82, 133, 186, 241, 294, 341, 405, 467, 525<br />

Politics and Government 20, 71. 116, 167, 231, 276, 325, 374, 448<br />

Printing 126<br />

Public Health 236<br />

Public Utilities 24<br />

Railroads 385<br />

Recreation 35, 239, 404, 465, 525<br />

Religion 19, 69, 114, 165, 229, 274, 323, 371, 446, 505<br />

Science 25, 76, 120, 173, 234, 282, 330, 387, 456, 514<br />

Sociology 70, 115, 167, 230, 275, 324, 372, 448, 506<br />

Spanish Fiction 18, 67, 163, 272, 323, 367, 444<br />

Taxation 38o, 452<br />

Travel and Description. .. .40, 85,137,188,244,296,344,411,471,528<br />

Useful Arts 27, 77, 122, 175, 235, 284, 332, 391, 458, 516<br />

Women 74, 119,234,281,329,386<br />

Young People's Books 45, 88,139,194,248,300,348,421,478,533<br />

Zoology r-


ecial Articles and Reading Lists:<br />

After-War Problems 15<br />

Alice Cary 155<br />

Business Information in Print 309<br />

Current Terms Defined 54, 104, 153<br />

Easter<br />

I06<br />

Florence Nightingale Centenary 216<br />

The Hudson's Bay Company 266<br />

Indian Origin of Local Names 314<br />

Industrial Fatigue 223<br />

John A. Brashear 215<br />

Maintaining the Independence of the United States 265<br />

Marbles Used in the Interior of the Central<br />

Building of the Carnegie Library and Carnegie<br />

Institute 497<br />

Maurice Maeterlinck 6<br />

Names of Pittsburgh Streets and Suburbs 11<br />

The "New Hope Group" in the Carnegie Institute<br />

Exhibition of Paintings 212<br />

New Year Customs 489<br />

The Origin of Commencement 267<br />

Origin of St. Valentine Customs 57<br />

The Origin of the Term "Indian Summer" 359<br />

Pageants 208<br />

The Pilgrim Compact 439<br />

The Pilgrim Tercentenary 150<br />

The Pilgrims 357<br />

Present Day Problems 62,110,159,222,269,319<br />

Shakespeare's Birthday<br />

20 5<br />

Slosson's "Creative Chemistry" as a Factor in the<br />

Chemical Independence of America 494<br />

Twenty-five Years 436<br />

William Dean Howells 261<br />

ibrary News and Notices:<br />

v<br />

Apprentice Class<br />

: 3, 5oo<br />

Bulletin Title-Page, Contents and Index<br />

uo<br />

Carnegie Library School 3 11<br />

Central Building, Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh 5<br />

East Liberty Branch<br />

3l8<br />

Exhibition for Secondary School Students 221<br />

Exhibition of Bookplates<br />

X S 8<br />

Exhibition of French Posters<br />

221<br />

Hazelwood Branch<br />

2(5 °<br />

Homewood Branch<br />

49<br />

Lawrenceville Branch<br />

53<br />

Mount Washington Branch '""/' 22 °<br />

New Periodicals<br />

6l - '59. 269, 363. 499


Library News and Notices—continued.<br />

New Publications of the Library 158, 361, 440,499<br />

Prices of Library Publications 13, 61, 110, 159, 222, 318, 440, 500<br />

A Recent Gift; the Books of an Old Pittsburgh<br />

Library 102<br />

Some Japanese Art Books 316<br />

South Side Branch 361<br />

Special Gift Funds '. 14<br />

Twenty-fifth Anniversary 363, 433<br />

Vacation Book Privileges 221<br />

West End Branch 101<br />

Wylie Avenue Branch 149


CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

MONTHLY BULLETIN<br />

VOL - 25 JANUARY 1920 NO. l<br />

CENTRAL BUILDING<br />

CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

PITTSBURGH<br />

CARNEGIE LIBRARY<br />

1920


Board of Trustees<br />

S. H. CHURCH, President<br />

ANDREW W. MELLON, Vice-President<br />

J. D. HAILMAN, Secretary<br />

JAMES H. REED, Treasurer<br />

E. V. BABCOCK DAVID B. OLIVER<br />

W.W. BLACKBURN . H. K. PORTER<br />

JOHN H. DAILEY<br />

W. H. ROBERTSON<br />

W. Y. ENGLISH CHARLES L. TAYLOR<br />

ROBERT GARLAND<br />

J. J. TURNER<br />

JOHN H. HENDERSON<br />

H. D. WILLIAMS<br />

JOHN S. HERRON<br />

DANIEL WINTERS<br />

Library Committee<br />

J. J. TURNER, Chairman<br />

E. V. BABCOCK J. D. HAILMAN<br />

ROBERT GARLAND<br />

DANIEL WINTERS<br />

Director<br />

JOHN H. LEETE<br />

Branch Libraries<br />

Central Library, Schenley Park<br />

Lawrenceville Branch, 27g Fisk Street<br />

West End Branch, Wabash and Neptune Streets<br />

Wylie Avenue Branch, Wylie Avenue and Green Street<br />

Mount Washington Branch, 315 Grandview Avenue<br />

Hazelwood Branch, 4748 Monongahela Street<br />

East Liberty Branch, Station Street and Larimer Avenue<br />

South Side Branch, Carson and Twenty-second Streets<br />

Homewood Branch, Hamilton and Lang Avenues


Contents<br />

Central Building, Carnegie Library<br />

of Pittsburgh - - 5<br />

Maurice Maeterlinck<br />

6<br />

Names of Pittsburgh Streets<br />

and Suburbs -<br />

Apprentice Class - - -<br />

Prices of Library Publications<br />

- - - - - - -13<br />

Special Gift Funds - - - 14<br />

After-War Problems -<br />

Books Added, December i 1919<br />

January 1, 1920<br />

Agriculture -<br />

Americanization - - -<br />

Architecture - - - -<br />

Army - - - - - -<br />

Biography -<br />

Blind, Books for the -<br />

Business. Communication<br />

Business Ethics -<br />

Chemistry -<br />

Commerce - - - - -<br />

Customs - - - - -<br />

Drama. Theatre -<br />

Drawing - - - - -<br />

Economics - - - - -<br />

Education -<br />

Electrical Engineering -<br />

Page<br />

11<br />

28<br />

13<br />

15<br />

to<br />

21<br />

31<br />

22<br />

39<br />

44<br />

29<br />

19<br />

26<br />

24<br />

24<br />

38<br />

3i<br />

21<br />

23<br />

Page<br />

Engineering - - - - - 27<br />

Ethics - - - - - - - 1$<br />

European War - - - - 42<br />

Fiction - - - - - - - 16<br />

Fine Arts - - - - - 29<br />

Forestry - - - - 28<br />

French Fiction - - - - 17<br />

Gardening - - - - - - 30<br />

History - - - - - - 41<br />

Language - - - - - - 24<br />

Law - - - - - - - 22<br />

Literature - - - - - - 36<br />

Medicine, Physiology, Hygiene<br />

- - - - - - 27<br />

Miscellaneous - - - - - 44<br />

Music - - - - - - - 32<br />

Philosophy - - - - - - 18<br />

Poetry - - - - - - 37<br />

Politics and Government - - 20<br />

Public Utilities - - - - 24<br />

Recreations - - - - - - 35<br />

Religion - - - - - - 19<br />

Science - - - - - - - 25<br />

Spanish Fiction - - - - 18<br />

Travel and Description - - 40<br />

Useful Arts - - - - - 27<br />

Young People's Books - - 45


Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh<br />

Monthly Bulletin<br />

Published monthly, except in August and September, by the Carnegie Library of<br />

Pittsburgh, Forbes Street and Bellefield Avenue, Schenley Park, Pittsburgh, Pa. President,<br />

S. H. Church, Carnegie Library, Forbes Street and Bellefield Avenue; Secretary,<br />

J. D. Hailman; Treasurer, James H. Reed, 1027 Carnegie Building; Director, John H.<br />

Leete, Carnegie Library, Forbes Street and Bellefield Avenue.<br />

Subscription 50 cents a year.<br />

Vol. 25 January 1920 No. 1<br />

Central Building<br />

Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh<br />

The central building of the Carnegie Library is at the<br />

Forbes Street entrance to Schenley Park. The original building,<br />

which was opened to the public in 1895, had under its roof<br />

only the Library and the Music Hall. The following' year an<br />

Art Department and a Museum Department were opened in<br />

the Library building but not connected with it in any other way,<br />

since the administration of the various departments of the Carnegie<br />

Institute is separate from that of the Library and the<br />

maintenance is from endowment, the Library alone being maintained<br />

by city appropriation. A few years later the building<br />

was much enlarged and in April 1907 was opened in its present<br />

form with the Library entrance on the park side, but with access<br />

from Forbes Street, through the other departments of the<br />

Institute. Both the original and the enlarged building were<br />

the gift of Mr. Andrew Carnegie.<br />

5


6 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

In this central building of the Library are the administrative<br />

offices; all the departments for ordering, cataloguing and<br />

rebinding the books and for doing the Library printing; the<br />

departments which lend, both to adults and to children, books<br />

for home use; the departments which handle the reference work,<br />

the technical work, and the work which the Library does in<br />

connection with schools and with the blind. Here too are the<br />

quarters of the Carnegie Library School which is under the direction<br />

of the Library but is not administered from public<br />

funds; and here is the chief collection of books from which the<br />

eight branch libraries draw to supplement their smaller collections<br />

as special need arises.<br />

The Central Library, in the departments which lend books<br />

for home use, serves the people who frequent the Oakland district.<br />

In reference work, both general and technical, it is much<br />

used by the students and faculties of the large educational institutions<br />

located near it, and by people from all over the city<br />

who either come to the building to consult books and other<br />

printed material, or telephone for information which they wish.<br />

In short, this building is what its name implies, the center<br />

of the library activities of the city, the place where is co-ordinated<br />

the work of the whole system for placing information so<br />

that it will be as readily available as circumstances allow, to<br />

people of all parts of the community.<br />

ft<br />

Maurice Maeterlinck<br />

Maurice Maeterlinck, who is to be in Pittsburgh this month,<br />

is, without doubt, one of the world figures in literature and<br />

drama. While his play, "The Blue Bird," is the only one of<br />

his works which has made a wide popular appeal, there is certainly<br />

a message for those who are willing to receive it, a<br />

message which has already been welcomed by many, in the<br />

works of a man whose endeavor is to contribute somethino- toward<br />

helping men to see more clearly through the dust of which<br />

he writes in "A Double Garden :"


MAURICE MAETERLINCK 7<br />

"Let us not f<strong>org</strong>et that we live in pregnant and decisive<br />

times. It is probable that our descendants will envy us the<br />

dawn through which, without knowing it, we are passing, just<br />

as we envy those who took part in the age of Pericles, in the<br />

most glorious days of Roman greatness and in certain hours of<br />

the Italian Renascence. The splendid dust that clouds the great<br />

movements of men shines brightly in the memory, but blinds<br />

those who raise it and breathe it, hiding from them the direction<br />

of their road and, above all, the thought, the necessity or the<br />

instinct that leads them."<br />

Edwin Bjorkman in "Voices of To-Morrow" interprets<br />

certain phases of Maeterlinck's character as shown in his work.<br />

Part of that essay is given here as an aid to interpreting Maeterlinck's<br />

ideas; but an intimate knowledge and appreciation of the<br />

mind and thought of the man, can best be gained by reading,<br />

not one, but many, of his plays and essays, and in so doing, absorbing<br />

the spirit which inspired them.<br />

There was a time, not so very long ago, when, to use James Huneker's<br />

striking phrase, "Maeterlinck meant for most people a crazy<br />

crow masquerading in tail feathers plucked from the Swan of Avon."<br />

As he stands before us to-day, modern literature knows of few more<br />

commanding figures, and of none more charming. Springing from a<br />

small country, his genius has turned the whole civilized world into a<br />

fatherland claiming him for its own. Writing miniature plays for puppet<br />

stages, he has taken his place beside Ibsen and Strindberg as a reformer<br />

of the modern theatre. Seeking for a form that would fit his<br />

dreams even more perfectly than his own "formless" dramas, he has<br />

raised the philosophical essay to a height attained only by Emerson<br />

among latter-day writers. Though working only for truth and the joy<br />

of working, his efforts have also earned worldly returns, enabling him<br />

to make a home of an old Benedictine abbey. . .<br />

The charm of this man, who has given us such masterpieces of<br />

soul-penetration as "Aglavaine and Selysette" or "Wisdom and Destiny,"<br />

is rendered doubly striking by a physical ruggedness and balance<br />

that furnish a background of unexpectedness to the subtlety of his<br />

speculation and the delicacy of his artistic form. Tall and active, large<br />

of limb and rather heavy featured, he is more at home out of doors<br />

than in the study. Sweeping along the highroads in an automobile<br />

driven by himself, or skimming the frozen surface of some canal in<br />

his native country, he appears most himself. Yet there is much both<br />

in his appearance and his habits that helps to account for that gentle<br />

calm which strikes us as the dominant spirit of his work even when he


8 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

deals with the heart's most stirring tragedies. Having only the tone<br />

of his poetry in mind, Arthur Symons said once that "he speaks always<br />

without raising his voice." But that saying holds true of the whole<br />

man and all that he is and does.<br />

Seldom has the world known a soul so well poised, so at peace<br />

with whatever fate might choose to bring, so disregardful of the petty<br />

concerns that keep most human lives in a state of turmoil. All polite<br />

conventionalities are hateful to him, and yet he would never dream of<br />

striving consciously at any sort of unconventionality. It seems just as<br />

natural for him to be himself as this requires effort in ordinary persons.<br />

And when thus surrendering to the quiet pressure from within,<br />

he cannot but shun the bustle and hustle, the strife and the shamming,<br />

of mart and of drawing room.<br />

Next to his unostentatious strength and unfeigned equanimity, the<br />

man's most characteristic trait is a shy reserve, behind which lies an<br />

almost complete lack of personal vanity, and not, as sometimes happens,<br />

a pride so overweening that it dares not expose itself to any rebuff.<br />

If caught at the right time and place, he will talk most fascinatingly—about<br />

practically anything but himself. But silence is more<br />

natural to him than talk, solitude more dear than company. There is<br />

in him a craving to dream and to brood that must have got into his<br />

very blood out of the mist-laden atmosphere of his native shores.<br />

But whenever he does speak—or write—his every expression proves<br />

the truth of Alfred Sutro's declaration that, "if the word mystic implies<br />

anything of mental fog or obscurity, then Maeterlinck is none."<br />

He springs from Flemish stock that has been settled for something<br />

like six centuries in or about Ghent, where he was born in 1862.<br />

His childhood was spent in a home where, as in some of his own plays,<br />

ships could be seen sailing through what looked to be the back part of<br />

the garden. The country and its population of slow, taciturn peasantry<br />

seem to have impressed themselves with equal force on the boy. And<br />

to this day his work takes much of its dominant coloring from the<br />

closely allied tempers of Belgian nature and Belgian people.<br />

Seven years of precious youth were spent in a Jesuit college under<br />

a discipline that he himself has described as tyrannical. And yet I<br />

cannot recall a single protest in his art evoked by that significant experience.<br />

Here as elsewhere he looks kindly to the past and the institutions<br />

that once served it well, while all the eagerness of his spirit<br />

goes out to the future and what it may bring of higher perfection,<br />

higher happiness.<br />

In that college, and later at the university, he met several men of<br />

his own kind—men like Charles van Lerberghe and Emile Verhaeren,<br />

whose names hardly mean anything in English-speaking countries,<br />

though they have given Belgium a noted place in present-day literature.<br />

He studied law and was admitted to the bar. He even practiced<br />

a little and lost a case or two. This failure was ascribed to his low<br />

and rather thin voice, which lends itself but poorly to emphatic expression.<br />

But I suspect that it depended as much on his ability to see


MAURICE MAETERLINCK<br />

both sides of every case. He, who has spoken of our tendency t<br />

lieve in a universal justice as "the prejudice which has its roots deepest<br />

in our hearts," cannot have failed, from the very start, to perceive<br />

how the elusive thing we call "right" refuses to stay undivided with<br />

any one person or cause.<br />

^ At twenty-four he went to Paris—to the place where,if we may<br />

believe Alfred Sutro, "art is more than a word, more than a cult—a<br />

brotherhood." From the first Maeterlinck was received as a member<br />

of that brotherhood by the grace of God. The air was then full of a<br />

sort of symbolism that endeavored to express by the innate melody<br />

of words what might be too elusive for their meaning. And young<br />

Maeterlinck wrote poems as hauntingly incomprehensible as any of<br />

the rest.<br />

Then he published his first play, "Princess Maleine," and Octave<br />

Mirbeau proclaimed him "greater than Shakespeare." Most men<br />

would have lost their heads over the ill-worded praise, or their hearts<br />

over the ridicule it provoked. Nothing illustrates his wonderful mental<br />

equilibrium better than his calm disregard of both applause and<br />

laughter. And it was not long before other plays followed—of a<br />

quaintness and a daintiness such as the world had never seen before—<br />

and with each of them his fame waxed and spread. . .<br />

And so he has continued to do ever since—'"loving what he wrote,<br />

and writing only what he loved." Now the day is gone when the authenticity<br />

of his genius might be seriously questioned. Probably<br />

nothing has done more to settle that question than his fairy play,<br />

"The Blue Bird," by which he succeeded in appealing to the many as<br />

formerly he had appealed to the few. They tell me that at one time<br />

this play was given by fifty-nine different companies in Russia alone.<br />

Be that as it may, there is now no civilized language into which his<br />

works have not been transplanted. Nor is there a nook so hidden in<br />

any part of the Western world that it is not likely to hold some life<br />

made a little more livable by his wise musings. And yet one may wonder<br />

whether his influence on those more accustomed to lead than to<br />

follow is not even more noteworthy, as these words by August Strindberg<br />

seem to indicate:<br />

"One can neither steal nor borrow from Maeterlinck. It is even<br />

difficult to become his pupil, for there are no free passes that give entrance<br />

into his world of beauty. But one may be urged by his example<br />

into searching one's own dross-heaps for gold—and it is in this sense<br />

that I acknowledge my debt to the master."<br />

To take up his works separately would lead me beyond my present<br />

purpose. All I wish to do here is to suggest certain general aspects<br />

that seem inseparable from whatever he does—that, in a word,<br />

are one with his spirit. Of course, he must be acclaimed a master in<br />

the handling of the written word, and his mastery shows itself not the<br />

least in the harmony with which his sentences invariably are fraught.<br />

But the better part of the beauty springing from his soul lies, nevertheless,<br />

in the thoughts to which his words give wings—thoughts like<br />

g


10 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

the one shining brightly out of this passage: "Light, though so fragil<br />

is perhaps the one thing of all that yields naught of itself as it faces<br />

immensity." Here we have infinity of time and space confined within<br />

a few words, spoken "without the air of having said anything more<br />

than the simplest observation."<br />

And his work abounds with thoughts that are equally sublime in<br />

aspect and in scope. Yet he never lets himself be tempted beyond<br />

poetic suggestiveness into scientific exhaustiveness. The sense of<br />

things still unuttered always remains the final impression. And perhaps<br />

it is in this implied abundance, this limitless reserve power, that his<br />

main appeal lies. For it is this side of his nature that has enabled him<br />

to look at life and death with such imperturbable eyes. Through that<br />

quiescent power, reaching beyond the spoken word into the one not<br />

yet breathed, he has carried peace to a time fatigued beyond endurance<br />

by an over-long struggle.<br />

For more than one hundred years, up to the closing decade of the<br />

last century, the cry was for action, and for ever more action. From<br />

Maeterlinck came the first truly inspired call to rest...Not inaction,<br />

but action properly determined, is his gospel. If we follow him, then<br />

conflict, which is hastened action, will be reduced to a minimum, while<br />

combination and cooperation, which stand for action more fully prepared,<br />

will take more and more of the world's energy.<br />

Maeterlinck has been called a poet of the subconscious. . .But his<br />

main discovery and most significant revelation concerning the subconscious<br />

rests in the intimate connection which he has established between<br />

certain mysterious powers within ourselves and certain equally<br />

mysterious powers on the outside. What he shows—or tries to show<br />

—is that these two sets of powers are at bottom identical.<br />

Poetically he has accomplished what Bergson has achieved philosophically.<br />

Life, so threatening while lying wholly beyond our own<br />

selves, becomes homely and familiar when found at work within those<br />

same selves. The fear with which man has regarded fate tends thus to<br />

change into happy faith—the unknown becomes the partly known—<br />

and in dealing with life, destiny, providence, man begins at last to feel<br />

as if he were but dealing with another self. But by opening up these<br />

new vistas into the heart of being, where our own image comes back<br />

to us asif mirrored in the pupil of a loved one's eye, Maeterlinck has<br />

done his share, and a large one at that, toward preparing a religious<br />

re-formulation for which some of the best men on both sides of the<br />

ocean are now working ardently. When that formulation has been attained,<br />

I think it will be seen that Maeterlinck has contributed not<br />

only a conception of life as trustworthy, but of death as an integral<br />

part of life—and not the unkindliest at that.<br />

Like Tolstoy, like Zola, like so many other men of strong physique<br />

and vivid imagination, this dreamer from the Lowlands has been<br />

largely preoccupied with the inevitable moment of dissolution that<br />

forms the interrogation point at the end of every career. But while<br />

Tolstoy sought to scare men into righteousness by enhancing the


NAMES OF PITTSBURGH STREETS AND SUBURBS<br />

terror of that ever-present spectre, one of Maeterlinck's chief tasks<br />

been to breathe the breath of hope and sympathetic comprehension on<br />

our terror, and thus to melt it into vanishing mist. Of course, he began<br />

by staring at the spectre in open-eyed horror like the rest of us.<br />

For years its grim figure stalked through his plays like a veiled angel<br />

of darkness. But gradually there came light into his vision, and that<br />

vision widened and grew until all creation lay steeped in brightness.<br />

It is that vision he has tried to make ours—in "The Blue Bird," for instance—and<br />

when we possess it, then what has hitherto figured in our<br />

fancies as life's main curse will undoubtedly change into one of its<br />

many blessings. . .<br />

In man he finds. . .a tendency "toward a sort of equilibrium which<br />

is the great secret of the future." And in the solving of that secret—<br />

the secret of how to make the man with a mission and the mass of<br />

ordinary men give each other mutual respect and support—lies the<br />

only hope of our modern democracies. . .<br />

It is not out of place to give the title of philosopher to Maeterlinck—as<br />

Professor Dewey has pointed out—but he is more: a sage.<br />

Application lurks back of his most abstract speculations, and what he<br />

principally wants us to do is to learn in order to live. Both the manner<br />

and the result of such learning are suggested in this passage: "If<br />

we had applied to the removal of various necessities that crush us,<br />

such as pain, old age and death, one-half of the energy displayed by<br />

any little flower in our gardens, we may well believe that our lot<br />

would be very different from what it is."<br />

Somebody has said that he possesses "the child's faculty of wonder."<br />

This is true, and one reason for his power over our time is his<br />

untiring effort to turn us in childlike wonder toward that ocean of<br />

dumb life out of which we have risen into unique articulateness. Like<br />

Bergson, he wants to teach us how to soften the noise made by our<br />

reasons in order that we may catch the unspoken messages passing<br />

from the rest of life into our instincts and intuitions. But to do so,<br />

we must cultivate the simplicity of spirit that has lived untainted in<br />

his own heart through so many years of conspicuous success—the simplicity<br />

that sends him out to watch his beloved bees in the early morn<br />

of every day, and that helps him to define the new mysticism he feels<br />

coming as "nothing more than a knowledge of self that has far overstepped<br />

the ordinary limits of consciousness."<br />

n<br />

Names of Pittsburgh Streets and Suburbs<br />

In days when a less utilitarian spirit prevailed, and association<br />

was still powerful, the City of Pittsburgh acknowledged its debt of<br />

gratitude to the soldiers, statesmen and early settlers who made its<br />

unexampled prosperity possible, by naming for them many of its<br />

streets and suburbs. Its early history can be traced thereby, much as<br />

the historian and archaeologist discovers the successive Roman, Saxon,


CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Danish and Norman occupations of London and other English towns.<br />

Alliquippa, Mingo, Shannopin, Shinghiss, Guyasuta and Killbuck recall<br />

the Indian tribes and chiefs who once possessed the country; Gist,<br />

Montour, Girty, McKee, Chartiers and Van Braam the guides and<br />

traders who first penetrated the wilderness. Dinwiddie brings to mind<br />

the crusty but far-seeing Scotch governor of Virginia, who first comprehended<br />

the value of the disputed land. Forbes, Bouquet, Ligonier,<br />

Halket, Grant, Stanwix, Neville, Crawford, Hay, Marbury, Ormsby,<br />

Tannehill, O'Hara, Butler, Wayne, Bayard, Stobo, Steuben, St. Clair,<br />

Craig, Smallman and Irwin recall, or did recall, the soldiers and commandants<br />

who won the West. Duquesne, St. Pierre and Jumonville<br />

speak of the French governor of Canada, the officer who received<br />

Washington at Fort Le Bceuf, and the captain who fell at Great Meadows.<br />

Smithfield owes its name to Devereaux Smith, prominent in<br />

colonial and revolutionary days; and Wood Street was called for<br />

Ge<strong>org</strong>e Woods, surveyor.<br />

In Penn avenue, or street, as it used and still ought to be called,<br />

the name of the founder of the Commonwealth, the Quaker feudal<br />

proprietor, is preserved; and the great city itself, as well as two shabby,<br />

sooty little streets, forever immortalizes William Pitt, the friend of<br />

America, and makes for him a splendid and enduring monument.<br />

But let us dig into the lowest historical stratum, and discover the<br />

local relationships of names and places with the first occupants of the<br />

land. Alliquippa tells us of the great queen of the Delawares, who<br />

lived at the mouth of the Youghiogheny, where McKeesport now is,<br />

and whom it must be remembered Washington visited on his first<br />

memorable journey to the Ohio. From what he relates to us she could<br />

not have been a very temperate sovereign lady, but she was a celebrity<br />

and a power in her day, with a prestige that long survived her; and<br />

when in full savage regalia, surrounded by her warriors, she granted<br />

an audience to the young Virginian she was doubtless most impressive<br />

and condescending.<br />

Shinghiss, who bore a name which suggests a subject of Queen<br />

Wilhelmina rather than a North American Indian, was a mighty warrior<br />

in his day, and a king of the Delawares. Some of the chroniclers<br />

give him a very bad name and tell us that his exploits in war would<br />

"form an interesting though shocking document;" others, among them<br />

Christian Post, give him a much better character. Nevertheless it is<br />

true that the colony of Pennsylvania offered a thousand dollars for<br />

his scalp. Washington met him on his first visit to the Ohio, and<br />

speaks of him in his Journal. This brave and much feared chief was<br />

small in stature for an Indian, and lived near the Ohio on Chartiers<br />

creek.<br />

A chieftain as renowned as Shinghiss, and more frequently mentioned<br />

in the histories of the olden time, was Guyasuta, or Kiashuta, a<br />

Seneca, who first appears on the scene as one of the three Indians who<br />

accompanied Washington to Fort Le Boeuf. He was a conspicuous<br />

figure in all the Indian wars and treaties which followed that event,


LIBRARY NOTICES 13<br />

and was present at the treaty Colonel Bouquet held with the Shawnees,<br />

Delawares and Senecas on the Muskingum. We hear of him again in<br />

Lord Dunmore's war. He was frequently at or in the neighborhood<br />

of Fort Pitt, and had unbounded influence with his people, an influence<br />

he generally exerted for good and in the interest of the colonies,<br />

though finally won over to the British during the Revolution. His<br />

speeches at the various councils he attended were eloquent, and his<br />

language that of an autocrat who had unquestioning confidence in the<br />

power of his people and in his own might. He was deeply concerned<br />

in the conspiracy of Pontiac, and is believed to have inspired the attack<br />

on Hannahstown. Guyasuta found his last resting place near the<br />

banks of the Allegheny on General O'Hara's farm, which is still called<br />

by his name. Julia M<strong>org</strong>an Harding, in "Names of Pittsburgh Streets."<br />

Apprentice Class<br />

A new Apprentice Class will be formed February the first.<br />

Young women between eighteen and thirty-five years of age,<br />

who are graduates of a four year high school course or who<br />

have had equivalent training, may enter this class after passing<br />

entrance examinations. The course is three months in length,<br />

at the end of which time apprentices will be eligible for certain<br />

positions on the staff of the Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh.<br />

No tuition is charged.<br />

For further information address the Principal, Carnegie<br />

Library School, Pittsburgh, Pa.<br />

Prices of Library Publications<br />

The list of "Publications of the Library Now in Print" at<br />

the back of this "Bulletin" gives the price of each. Any publication<br />

not marked * in that list will be sent postpaid on receipt<br />

of five cents.


14 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Special Gift Funds<br />

The Library has several funds which were given to purchase<br />

books on special subjects. The books added to the collection<br />

in this way are included each month in the additions listed<br />

in the "Bulletin."<br />

The Mellor Funds given by Mr. Charles C. Mellor.<br />

The Louisa P. Mellor Fund, for the purchase of "any<br />

books that will be interesting and instructive to children."<br />

The Annie M. Mellor Fund, for the purchase of "any<br />

books relating to history."<br />

The Laura Reinhart Mellor Fund, for the purchase of<br />

"any books on biography."<br />

The Charles C. Mellor Fund, for the purchase of "books<br />

relating to woman, considered physically, intellectually<br />

and historically."<br />

The Julius D. Bernd Fund, a memorial fund devoted to the<br />

purchase of books on architecture.<br />

The Schwartz Fund, a memorial fund for the purchase of<br />

books on ethics.<br />

The Stuart Fund, a memorial fund for the purchase of<br />

books on single tax.


AFTER-WAR PROBLEMS 15<br />

After-War Problems<br />

The books in this list are entered also, in fuller form and with annotations,<br />

under their proper headings in this issue of the "Bulletin."<br />

They are brought together here to show the additions of books which<br />

deal with problems arising from the war. The date of publication is<br />

1919 unless otherwise stated.<br />

American Exchange National Bank, New York city. Acceptances;<br />

their importance as a means of increasing<br />

and simplifying domestic and foreign trade. 1918 332.5 A51<br />

Association of Railway Executives. Remedial railroad legislation<br />

r 385 A84<br />

Barker, Ernest. Confederation of the nations. 1918<br />

341-6 B24<br />

Barron, C. W. War finance 940.91 B26W<br />

Benedict, Bertram. Express companies of the United States..r 385 B43<br />

Black, H. C. Relation of the executive power to legislation..342.7 B51<br />

Brooks, C. A. Christian Americanization 325.73 B77<br />

Bullard, Arthur, (pseud. Albert Edwards). The Russian pendulum<br />

947 B87<br />

Chinese Patriotic Committee, New York city. China vs.<br />

Japan<br />

327-52 C44<br />

Chinese Patriotic Committee, New York city. China's claims<br />

at the peace table<br />

327-51 C44<br />

Guaranty Trust Company of New York. Solvency of the<br />

allies<br />

qr 330.9 G95<br />

Harris, F. S. The young man and his vocation. 1916 174 H29<br />

Ignatius, M. B. Financing of public service corporations.<br />

1918 r 352.8 I17<br />

Inman, S. G. Intervention in Mexico<br />

972 I24<br />

Kelman, John. The war and preaching<br />

251 K17<br />

Leverhulme, W. H. L. baron. The six-hour day & other industrial<br />

questions 33 1 L665<br />

Lingle, Mrs C. S. (Souther). Course on Americanization, .r 325.73 L72<br />

Morris, B. J. & Paull, C. H. Opportunities for handicapped<br />

men in the rubber industry<br />

37i-9i M91<br />

Oklahoma University. Woman suffrage. [1918.]<br />

r 324.3 O22<br />

Parry, E. A. & Codrington, Sir A. E. War pensions. [1918.]..351.5 P26<br />

Pollard, A. F. League of nations. 1918 341-6 p 76<br />

Sloane, W. M. Powers and aims of Western democracy 320.9 S63<br />

Trowbridge, E. D. Mexico to-day and to-morrow 917-2 T77<br />

Turner, E. R. Ireland and England<br />

Wildman, Edwin, ed. Reconstructing America<br />

941-5 T86<br />

330-4 W71


Books Added to the Library<br />

December 1, 1919 to January 1, 1920<br />

An r or b prefixed to the call number indicates that tlie book must be<br />

called for and used in the Reference or the Technology Room; j that it is<br />

especially suitable for children, and q that it is quarto size or larger.<br />

Fiction<br />

Atherton, Mrs Gertrude Franklin (Horn). A868t<br />

Transplanted; a novel. Dodd.<br />

Revised edition of the author's "American wives and English husbands." The<br />

heroine, a Californian, forms an early attachment for an English boy, some years later<br />

marries him, and finds herself, strongly individualistic as she is, confronted with the<br />

need of adapting herself to English customs and to the viewpoint of her husband.<br />

Aumonier, Stacy. Ag25q<br />

The Querrils. Century.<br />

Story of an interesting English family who hide their emotions and are constantly<br />

seeking to shield one another from the harsher side of life. Shows how they react to<br />

the problems they are forced to face when trouble enters their circle.<br />

Barbusse, Henri. B2352I<br />

Light; tr. by Fitzwater Wray. Dutton.<br />

Story of the personal experience of an intelligent French workingman before and<br />

during the European war. The vision of this simple man is that there is but one hope<br />

for the world—the abolition of force both in its moral and in its physical guise. Condensed<br />

from Nation, 1910.<br />

Clarke, Isabel Constance. C532W<br />

Whose name is legion. Benziger.<br />

Story of spiritualism used as an evil power. Sets forth the Catholic teachings in<br />

regard to its dangers.<br />

Curwood, James Oliver. C936r<br />

The river's end; a new story of God's country. Cosmopolitan Book<br />

Corporation.<br />

Appeared in "Good housekeeping," v.68-69, Jan.-Aug. 1919.<br />

John Keith, alleged murderer, assumes the role of a member of the Northwest<br />

mounted police, becomes involved in many complications, but is finally found innocent.<br />

Harrison, Mrs Mary St. Leger (Kingsley), (pseud. Lucas H2ggd<br />

Malet).<br />

Deadham Hard; a romance. Dodd.<br />

Damaris, young and beautiful, is living with her father at Deadham Hard, an old<br />

house which had been a famous resort for smugglers and which is haunted by the<br />

cruelties perpetrated there. The plot centers about Damaris and her illegitimate half<br />

brother—the half mystical attraction between them and their relations to each other.<br />

Condensed from New York times, igig.<br />

16


BOOKS ADDED—JANUARY 1920 17<br />

Hope, Anthony, (pseud, of Anthony Hope Hawkins).<br />

H78ise<br />

Secret of the tower. Appleton.<br />

A brave but puzzling man, a madman, a treasure in a tower, a false suspicion, go<br />

to make up a mystery story with a happy ending.<br />

Knibbs, Harry Herbert. K34ir<br />

The ridin* kid from Powder river. Houghton.<br />

Story of the adventures of a daring, honest cowboy.<br />

Lynde, Francis. Lgg2d<br />

David Vallory. Scribner.<br />

An ambitious young engineer who is under obligation to an unscrupulous contractor<br />

by whom he is employed, compromises with his ideals; but ultimately he comes<br />

to himself and wins out honorably.<br />

Maugham, William Somerset. M488mo<br />

The moon and sixpence. Doran.<br />

"The painter, in this novel, is an incarnate example of the 'divine tyranny of art'<br />

in his quest of the moon, in which the sixpence in every conventional form—home,<br />

family, food, the opinion of mankind, fame, decency itself—is contemptuously thrown<br />

aside. . . [It] is a purely intellectual examination, penetrating and unpleasantly beautiful."<br />

Booklist, 1919.<br />

Montgomery, Lucy Maud. M864r<br />

Rainbow valley. Stokes.<br />

Story of the adventures and pranks of the children of "Anne of Green Gables"<br />

and the four motherless children of the Presbyterian minister.<br />

Perrault-Harry, Mme. (pseud. Myriam Harry). P438I<br />

Little daughter of Jerusalem, with an introduction by Jules Lemaitre;<br />

tr. from the French by Phoebe Allen. Dutton.<br />

Story of a passionate, precocious little girl, born and bred in Jerusalem amid its<br />

varied peoples and creeds. Here she lived in a world of dreams, was deeply impressed<br />

with the charm of the Holy city, but grew up with a minimum of religious faith. The<br />

story is really autobiographical. The author's father was a Russian Jew who became<br />

a convert to the faith of the English church, and her mother had been a German<br />

deaconess. Condensed from Preface.<br />

Walpole, Hugh. W1862J<br />

Jeremy. Doran.<br />

Appeared in the "Bookman," v.48-49, Sept. 1918-Aug. 1919.<br />

Engaging story of life for one year in an English rector's family, when the son,<br />

Jeremy, an independent and imaginative boy, is eight years old.<br />

Weyman, Stanley John. Ws86gr<br />

The great house. Longmans.<br />

Story set in the time of the repeal of the com laws. It develops around an irregularity<br />

in family pedigree and some secret papers. Condensed from Outlook (London),<br />

igio.<br />

Witwer, Harry Charles. W82aa<br />

Alex the Great. Small.<br />

Slangy stories told by the manager of a baseball club.<br />

success is achieved through extreme self-confidence.<br />

French Fiction<br />

The hero believes that<br />

Huzard, Mme Antoinette (de Bergevin), (pseud. 843 H987CO<br />

Colette Yver).<br />

Les cousins riches.


iS<br />

CARXEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Rolland, Romain.<br />

843 R64C<br />

Colas Breugnon [in French].<br />

Recounts the life of this carpenter and woodworker in a village of Burgundy, tie<br />

is always gay, good-natured, full of laughter and jest, loves his food and his w-ine, everything<br />

out-of-doors and, most of all, his work. Condensed from New York times, 1919.<br />

Spanish Fiction<br />

Blasco Ibafiez, Vicente.<br />

863 Bs4ca<br />

La catedral; novela.<br />

Sombre story of the Spanish cathedral at Toledo, a world in itself, as it appears<br />

in the life of the ecclesiastics, the domestics and the laborers who collectively animate<br />

it.<br />

Philosophy<br />

Drummond, Margaret.<br />

136.7 D845<br />

Dawn of mind; an introduction to child psychology. 1919. Arnold.<br />

Contents: The physical basis.—Early consciousness ; absorption.—Early consciousness<br />

; expression.—Some fundamental concepts.—The unlucky baby.—Memory, imagination<br />

and play.—Sympathy, suggestibility and self-control.—Reasoning.—Language;<br />

spoken and written.—Conclusion.<br />

"References for reading," pref. p.8.<br />

Inge, William Ralph.<br />

186 P7izi<br />

Philosophy of Plotinus. 2v. 1918. Longmans. (St. Andrews University.<br />

Gifford lectures, 1917-18.)<br />

Contains bibliographical foot-notes.<br />

King, Basil.<br />

134 K26<br />

The abolishing of death. 1919. Cosmopolitan Book Corporation.<br />

Record of the author's experiences in written communication w r ith "the plane next<br />

above us."<br />

Pfister, Oskar.<br />

130 P47<br />

Psychoanalytic method; authorized translation bv C. R. Payne.<br />

1919. Moffat.<br />

Ethics<br />

Bautain, Louis Eugene Marie.<br />

171 B328C<br />

La conscience; ou, La regie des actions humaines. 1861.<br />

Blondeaux, Constant.<br />

171 B55<br />

Le Christianisme; sa valeur morale et sociale. 1887.<br />

Contents: Jerusalem; origines hebraiques.—Le Christianisme; developpement<br />

litteraire et intellectuel.—Jesus.—L'eglise : Contradictions morales et politiques ; Incompatibilites<br />

morales et sociales; L'ideal religieux insuffisant pour la raison et la<br />

pratique; Suite et conclusion.<br />

Bonald, Louis Ambroise, vicomte de.<br />

171 B61<br />

Recherches philosophiques sur les premiers objets des connoissances<br />

morales. 2v. 1818.<br />

Bouillier, Francisque Cyrille. 171 B654<br />

Morale et progres. 1875.


BOOKS ADDED—JANUARY 1920 19<br />

Franck, Adolphe. 1J0.g F87<br />

Moralistes et philosophes. 1872.<br />

Contents: Gerbert (le pape Sylvestre II), etat de la philosophie et des sciences au<br />

ioe siecle.—Levi ben Gerson ; ou, La philosophie au I4e siecle.—Petrarque et l'amour<br />

platonique.—Pierre Pomponace; ou, La philosophie italienne au ise siecle.—Galilee,<br />

la raison et l'autorite au commencement du I7e siecle.—Descartes et le cartesianisme;<br />

ou, La philosophie au i7e siecle.—Spinoza.—Gcethe.—Maine de Biran.—Victor Cousin.—<br />

Damiron.—Garnier.—Barthelemy Saint-Hilaire.—Janet.—Ravaisson.—Renouvier.<br />

Mausbach, Joseph. I7I M511<br />

Catholic moral teaching and its antagonists, viewed in the light of<br />

principle and of contemporaneous history; tr. from the German by<br />

A. M. Buchanan. 1914. Wagner.<br />

Contains bibliographical foot-notes.<br />

Sorley, William Ritchie. 171 S7im<br />

Moral values and the idea of God; the Gifford lectures delivered in<br />

the University of Aberdeen in 1914 and 1915. 1918. Cambridge University<br />

Press.<br />

Contents: The problem.—Values.—The meaning of value.—The criteria of moral<br />

value.—Value and personality.—Relative and absolute value.—The conservation of<br />

value.—Value and reality.—The division of reality.—The unity of reality.—The interpretation<br />

of reality.—The theistic arguments.—The moral argument.—Pluralism.—<br />

Monism.—Purpose.—Freedom.—Theism.—The idea of God.—The limits of morality.<br />

Business Ethics<br />

Harris, Franklin Stewart. 174 H29<br />

The young man and his vocation. 1916. Badger.<br />

problems series.)<br />

Larson, Christian Daa. 174 L33<br />

Business inspirations. 1919. Crowell.<br />

(Present day<br />

Author, who believes that without vision there is no attainment, aims to show<br />

that inspiration and idealism play an important part in the world of business and suggests<br />

methods by which one's powers may be developed to the utmost.<br />

Religion<br />

Ames, Edward Scribner. 204 A51<br />

The new orthodoxy. 1918. University of Chicago Press.<br />

"Plea for a humanized faith in contrast to the scholastic faith of traditional<br />

Protestantism." Nation, 1019.<br />

Bohme, Jakob. 230 B59<br />

Personal Christianity a science, with introduction and notes by<br />

Franz Hartmann. 1919. Macoy.<br />

Selections, with comments, from the works of Bohme (1575-1624), setting forth<br />

his doctrines under such topics as creation, the angels, man, nature, Christ, redemption.<br />

Douglas, John Albert. 274.9 D75<br />

Redemption of Saint Sophia [an historical & political account of<br />

the subject]. 1919. Faith Press.<br />

Genung, John Franklin. 220.8 G29<br />

Guidebook to the biblical literature. 1919. Ginn.<br />

Traces the evolution and co-ordination of the literature which makes up the Bible,<br />

showing how closely interwoven it is with national and race affairs.


20 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Kelman, John.<br />

251 K17<br />

The war and preaching. 1919. Yale University Press. (Yale lectures<br />

on preaching.)<br />

Contents: INTRODUCTORY: Reality.—Dogma and experience.—Then came the war.<br />

—The soldier's creed.—The preacher as expert.—The preacher as statesman.—The<br />

preacher as priest.—The preacher as prophet.<br />

McComb, Samuel.<br />

218 M138<br />

The future life in the light of modern inquiry. 1919. Dodd.<br />

Contents: What is immortality?—Immortality and the modern man.—The desire for<br />

immortality.—Hindrances to belief in immortality.—The moral argument.—Jesus<br />

Christ and the future life.—Did Jesus rise from the dead?—The argument from psychical<br />

research.—Specimens of the evidence supplied by psychical research.—The practical<br />

value of belief in immortality.<br />

Contains bibliographical foot-notes.<br />

qr 282.05 P674<br />

Pittsburg observer [weekly], Sept. 5, 1918-date. v.20-date. 1918-date.<br />

Pittsburgh.<br />

v.20, no.6, Oct. 10, 1918, wanting.<br />

Scott, Martin J.<br />

271.9 S42<br />

Convent life; the meaning of a religious vocation. 1919. Kenedy.<br />

"Sisterhoods and brotherhoods in the United States and the nature of their work,"<br />

p.297-316.<br />

Sokolow, Nahum. 296 S68<br />

History of Zionism, 1600-1918, with an introduction by A. J. Balfour.<br />

2v. 1919. Longmans.<br />

"Books consulted," v.2, p.449-460.<br />

Deals with "the origin and development of the Zionist idea principally in England,<br />

and partly in France." Preface.<br />

Stadelman, William Francis Xavier. 248 S77<br />

Eucharistic soul elevations; thoughts and texts gleaned from Holy<br />

writ and the Roman missal, methodically arranged as preparations<br />

and thanksgiving for holy communion. 1907. Benziger.<br />

Stadelman, William Francis Xavier. 231 S77<br />

Glories of the Holy Ghost; a series of studies, a collection of tributes,<br />

an account of certain movements bearing on the third person of<br />

the blessed Trinity. 1919. Mission Press, S. V. D.<br />

Van Dyke, Henry. 252 Vi8w<br />

What peace means. 1919. Revell.<br />

Contents: Peace in the soul.—Peace on earth through righteousness.—The power<br />

of an endless life.<br />

"Sermons which were preached in New York in the Easter season of 1919." Fore-<br />

Politics and Government<br />

Chinese Patriotic Committee, New York city.<br />

327.52 C44<br />

China vs. Japan. 1919.<br />

Contents: Introduction.—The Chino-Japanese question.—Japan's territorial expansion.—Japan's<br />

financial imperialism.—Japan's economic ambitions.—The Manchurian<br />

question.—Japan's political schemes.—Japanese diplomacy.—The open door policy.<br />

—Conclusion.


BOOKS ADDED—JANUARY 1920 21<br />

Chinese Patriotic Committee, New York city.<br />

China's claims at the peace table. 1919.<br />

327.51 C44<br />

Oklahoma University.<br />

r 324.3 O22<br />

Woman suffrage; Resolved: That women should be granted equal<br />

suffrage with men. [1918.] (Bulletin; university extension series, no.<br />

40.)<br />

Sloane, William Milligan.<br />

320.9 S63<br />

Powers and aims of Western democracy. 1919. Scribner.<br />

Traces the development of democracy from its beginnings and the evolution of<br />

the modern nation ; points out the meaning of peace and the factors which make for<br />

peace.<br />

Americanization<br />

Brooks, Charles Alvin.<br />

325.73 B77<br />

Christian Americanization; a task for the churches. 1919. Council<br />

of Women for Home Missions.<br />

Contents: The present issue.—America's genius for assimilation.—The language<br />

question.—Arrested assimilation.—The path of progress.—The price of national unity.<br />

"Bibliography," p.157-160.<br />

Lingle, Mrs Clara S. (Souther).<br />

r 325.73 L72<br />

Course on Americanization; studies of the peoples and the movements<br />

that are building up the American nation. 1919. North Carolina<br />

University. (North Carolina University. Extension leaflets, v.2,<br />

no.8.)<br />

"Specific references," p.4; "General references," p.55—61.<br />

Contains numerous bibliographies.<br />

Issued as After-the-war information series, no.3.<br />

Economics<br />

American Exchange National Bank, New York city. 332.5 A51<br />

Acceptances; their importance as a means of increasing and simplifying<br />

domestic and foreign trade, with a digest of the amendments to<br />

the Federal reserve act, regulations of the Federal reserve board, the<br />

Federal bill of lading act, the Trading with the enemy act and functions<br />

of the War trade board. 1918.<br />

American Federation of Labor.<br />

r 331.88 A51I1<br />

History, encyclopedia, reference book; prepared and pub. by authority<br />

of the 1916 and 1917 conventions. 1919.<br />

Condensation of the many questions considered in the 38 sessions of these labor<br />

federation conventions, revealing the principles upon which the trade union movement<br />

is founded.<br />

Beer, M.<br />

335 B381<br />

History of British socialism, with an introduction by R. H. Tawney.<br />

v.i. 1919. Bell.<br />

Account of the development of socialist thought in Great Britain down to the rise<br />

of Chartism.<br />

Guaranty Trust Company of New York.<br />

qr 332 G95<br />

How business with foreign countries is financed. 1919.<br />

"Currencies of various countries in the world and their value in United States<br />

dollars," p.53-55-


22 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Guaranty Trust Company of New York. qr 3309 G95<br />

Solvency of the allies, Great Britain, France, Belgium, Italy. I9 X 9-<br />

Leverhulme, William Hesketh Lever, baron. 33 1 L665<br />

The six-hour day & other industrial questions, with an introduction<br />

by Viscount Haldane of Cloan; ed. by Stanley Unwin. [1919.] Allen.<br />

Other industrial questions: Co-partnership.—Housing and social welfare.—Education<br />

and business.—Some industrial questions.<br />

United States—Internal revenue office.<br />

r 336.2 U25m<br />

Manual for the oil and gas industry under the revenue act of 1918.<br />

1919.<br />

Wildman, Edwin, ed.<br />

33°-4 W71<br />

Reconstructing America, our next big job; the latest word on the<br />

vital subjects of the hour; the views on reconstruction and readjustment<br />

of the country's greatest thinkers and constructive and industrial<br />

geniuses. 1919. Page.<br />

Law<br />

Barker, Ernest.<br />

341-6 B24<br />

Confederation of the nations; its powers and constitution. 1918.<br />

Clarendon Press.<br />

Black, Henry Campbell.<br />

342-7 B51<br />

Relation of the executive power to legislation. 1919. Princeton<br />

University Press.<br />

Contents: The growth of executive power.—Executive initiative in legislation<br />

abroad.—Executive initiative in legislation in the United States.—The cabinet in Congress.—The<br />

selective or partial veto.—Executive orders and decrees.—Executive power<br />

in the states.—Summary and conclusion.<br />

Conyngton, Thomas.<br />

347-1 C76<br />

Corporate <strong>org</strong>anization and management; rev. by H. Potter. Ed.4.<br />

1919. Ronald Press Co.<br />

This book is a combination of the author's "Manual of corporate management"<br />

and "Manual of corporate <strong>org</strong>anization."<br />

Geiser, Karl Frederick.<br />

342 G28<br />

Democracy versus autocracy; a comparative study of governments<br />

in the world war. 1918. Heath.<br />

Contents: Introduction.—Comparative government.—The government of Germany.<br />

—Austria-Hungary.—Austria-Hungary; government of to-day.—The government of<br />

Belgium.—The government of Brazil.<br />

"Bibliography," p.87-59.<br />

Pollard, Albert Frederick.<br />

341.6 P76<br />

League of nations; an historical argument. 1918. Clarendon Press.<br />

Contents: The conditions of the problem.—The league of nations on paper.—The<br />

lesson of history.<br />

Army<br />

qr 355-52 B33<br />

The Bayonet [official publication of Camp Lee; weekly], Dec. 28, 1917-<br />

May 30, 1919. v.i, no.i3-v.3, no.15. I9 T 7-I9.<br />

Many numbers wanting.<br />

Publication discontinued with v.3, no.15, May 30, 1919.


BOOKS ADDED—JANUARY 1920 23<br />

Education<br />

American Institute of Instruction. r 370.6 A512<br />

Annual meeting, Aug. 1830-July 1896; addresses, discussions and<br />

proceedings. 1831-96.<br />

General index, 1830-50. (In volume for 1850.)<br />

Title varies.<br />

Volumes wanting for 1831-36, 1839-44, 1846, 184S-49, 1852-57, 1863, 1873-74,<br />

1876.<br />

No volume issued for 1893.<br />

Bailey, Carolyn Sherwin.<br />

372.6 Bist<br />

Tell me another story; the book of story programs. 1918. Bradley.<br />

Aim has been to group the stories "so that their telling will result in definite mental<br />

growth for children, as well as satisfied story hunger...The instinctive and universal<br />

interests of all children form the themes of the story programs." Preface.<br />

Beard, Margaret Kent.<br />

r 371.9 B34<br />

Relation between dependency and retardation; a study of 1,351<br />

public school children known to the Minneapolis Associated Charities.<br />

1919. (Minnesota University. Current problems, no.10.)<br />

Caullery, Maurice Jules Gaston Corneille.<br />

378.7 C28<br />

Les universites et la vie scientifique aux fitats-Unis.1917.<br />

Lippincott, Horace Mather.<br />

378.7 L73<br />

University of Pennsylvania, Franklin's college; some account of<br />

its beginnings and development, its customs and traditions and its<br />

gifts to the nation. 1919. Lippincott.<br />

Contents: The story of America's first university.—The provosts.—The seal, the<br />

colours, the cheer and the songs.—Undergraduate customs.—University characters.—<br />

Athletics.—To the nation.—The alumni.<br />

Morris, Bert Jasper, & Paull, C. H.<br />

37I-9I M91<br />

Opportunities for handicapped men in the rubber industry. 1919.<br />

(Red Cross Institute for Crippled and Disabled Men. Publications,<br />

ser.2, no.9.)<br />

Prepared by the Bureau of vocational guidance of Harvard University in co-operation<br />

with Red Cross Institute for Crippled and Disabled Men.<br />

"Bibliography," p.116.<br />

The same. (In Red Cross Institute for Crippled and Disabled Men.<br />

Publications, ser.2, no.9.)<br />

r 37 J -9i R26 no.9<br />

Phillips, Claude Anderson.<br />

r 370.9 P51<br />

History of education in Missouri; the essential facts concerning the<br />

history and <strong>org</strong>anization of Missouri's schools. 1911. Stephens.<br />

Contents: Elementary schools.—Secondary schools.—Normal schools.—Supervision<br />

of schools.—Special schools.—The College Union.—City school systems.—<br />

Teachers' associations.—Educational problems.<br />

"Bibliography," p. 300.<br />

Pittsburgh University.<br />

r 378.7 P67i<br />

Information book, 1919-20. [1919- Pittsburgh.] (Bulletin, v.15,<br />

no.16.)<br />

Putnam, Daniel.<br />

r 379-774 P99<br />

Development of primary and secondary public education in Michigan;<br />

a historical sketch. 1904. Wahr.


24 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Commerce<br />

Guaranty Trust Company of New York.<br />

qr 382 G95t<br />

Trading with China; methods found successful in dealing with the<br />

Chinese. 1919.<br />

United States—Tariff commission.<br />

r 382 U2532<br />

Japan; trade during the war; a study of the trade of Japan, particularly<br />

during the years 1913 to 1917 and with special reference to the<br />

trade with the United States. 1919.<br />

Public Utilities<br />

Association of Railway Executives. r 385 A84<br />

Remedial railroad legislation, 1919; testimony before Senate committee<br />

on interstate commerce and statements bearing on the return<br />

of the railroads of the United States to private management and operation<br />

and on remedial legislation to accompany such return, as suggested<br />

by the Association of Railway Executives, Jan. 1919; preliminary<br />

edition ed. by R. S. Binkerd and Supplement. 1919.<br />

Supplement contains Testimony before Senate committee on interstate commerce,<br />

by J. Kruttschnitt and a statement read before the same committee, by D. E. Willard.<br />

Benedict, Bertram.<br />

r 385 B43<br />

Express companies of the United States; a study of a public utility.<br />

1919. Intercollegiate Socialist Soc.<br />

"Bibliography," p.46-47.<br />

Ignatius, Milton Berge.<br />

r 352.8 I17<br />

Financing of public service corporations. 1918. Ronald Press Co.<br />

Customs<br />

Kelley, Ruth Edna.<br />

3g4 K16<br />

Book of Hallowe'en. 1919. Lothrop.<br />

"Magazine references to Hallowe'en entertainments," p.179-181; "Supplementary<br />

list of readings, recitations and plays," p.182-183.<br />

An account of the origin and history of Hallowe'en. Describes the customs in<br />

Great Britain and in other countries.<br />

Smith, Nora Archibald, comp.<br />

394 S65<br />

Christmas festival service for home, kindergarten and Sunday<br />

school. 1893. Bradley.<br />

Language<br />

Cornett, William N.<br />

448 C82<br />

French commercial correspondence and technicalities, etc. Reilly.<br />

(Hossfeld's series.)<br />

Harry, Philip Warner, ed.<br />

468 H31<br />

Anecdotas espafiolas; ed. for conversational work, with an appendix<br />

of familiar words, phrases and idioms. 1919. Allyn.


BOOKS ADDED—JANUARY 1920 25<br />

Hills, Elijah Clarence, & Ford, J. D. M. comp.<br />

465 H56<br />

Spanish grammar. 1915. Heath. (Heath's modern language series.)<br />

Hoffman, Horace Addison.<br />

422 H67<br />

Everyday Greek; Greek words in English, including scientific terms.<br />

1919. University of Chicago Press.<br />

Hugo's Language Publishing Company, London.<br />

448 H89<br />

French commercial correspondent, on Hugo's simplified system;<br />

a selection of mercantile letters used in business of the present day, arranged<br />

with French and English on the same page, with copious notes,<br />

phrases, idioms, etc. [including a dictionary of commercial terms].<br />

Binder's title reads "Hugo's French commercial correspondent."<br />

Jusserand, Jean Jules.<br />

448 J53<br />

La vie nomade et les routes d'Angleterre au i4e siecle; ed. by A.<br />

Wilson-Green. 1919. Cambridge University Press. (Cambridge<br />

modern French series; middle group.)<br />

"Exercices," p.94—132.<br />

Kittson, Edward Creagh.<br />

407 K31<br />

Theory and practice of language teaching, with special reference<br />

to French and German. 1918. Oxford University Press.<br />

"Bibliography," p.165—186.<br />

Korts, G.<br />

448 K387<br />

Elements of French commercial correspondence for use of schools<br />

and classes and for private students. 2 pts. in 2v. 1890-1918.<br />

La Rochelle, Philippe de. 445 L32<br />

Modern French grammar, for secondary schools and colleges.<br />

1919. Putnam.<br />

Sandys, Sir John Edwin.<br />

47 1 -? S22<br />

Latin epigraphy; an introduction to the study of Latin inscriptions.<br />

1919. Cambridge University Press.<br />

"Select bibliography," pref. p.18-23.<br />

Science<br />

r 533-6 A2g<br />

Aircraft year book; issued by Manufacturers Aircraft Association,<br />

1919. 1919.<br />

Johnson, Douglas Wilson.<br />

551-35 J35<br />

Shore processes and shoreline development. 1919. Wiley.<br />

"References" at end of each chapter; "Alphabetical list of authorities cited," p.<br />

Well written and well illustrated work on an important phase of physiography.<br />

In his treatment, the author attempts to shed light on the much discussed question of<br />

coastal subsidence.<br />

Roberts, Thomas Sadler.<br />

r 598.2 R538<br />

Review of the ornithology of Minnesota. 1919. (Minnesota University.<br />

Current problems, no.11.)<br />

"An abridged bibliography of Minnesota ornithology," p.48-59.


26 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Sarkar, Benoy Kumar. 5°9 S24<br />

Hindu achievements in exact science; a study in the history ot<br />

scientific development. 1918. Longmans.<br />

"Main object...is to furnish some of the chronological links and logical affinities<br />

between the scientific investigations of the Hindus and those of the Greeks, Chinese<br />

and Saracens.. .It has been sought to present a comprehensive though very brief account<br />

of the entire scientific work of ancient and medieval India in the perspective of<br />

developments in other lands." Preface.<br />

Snow, Bonnie E. & Froehlich, H. B. qr 535.6 S67<br />

Theory and practice of color. 1918. Prang.<br />

Deals, in a non-technical manner, with the primary pigment colors, yellow, red<br />

and blue, and their color derivatives. Text is illustrated by numerous charts showing<br />

hand painted examples of color.<br />

Tower, William Lawrence. qr 595-768 T6sm<br />

Mechanism of evolution in Leptinotarsa. 1918. (Carnegie Institution<br />

of Washington. Publication 263.)<br />

"Bibliography," p.382-384.<br />

Udden, Johan August. 551-7 U14<br />

Aids to identification of geological formations. [1919?] (Texas<br />

University—Economic geology and technology, Bureau of. Handbook<br />

series, no.i.)<br />

Information which will aid the practical man in correctly identifying the materials<br />

explored in drilling for water, gas or oil.<br />

United States—National park service. r 599 U25<br />

Wild animals of Glacier national park. 1918.<br />

Contents: Mammals, with notes on physiography and life zones, by Vernon Bailey.<br />

—Birds, by F. M. Bailey.<br />

Sufficiently technical in treatment to be a reliable guide, and yet written in a<br />

style to appeal to the general reader.<br />

Warren, David M. qr 551 W245e<br />

Elementary treatise on physical geography, to which is added a<br />

brief description of the physical phenomena of the United States; rev.<br />

by A. von Steinwehr. Rev. ed. 1869. Cowperthwait.<br />

Chemistry<br />

Metzger, Helene. r 548 M64<br />

La genese de la science des cristaux. 1918.<br />

"Liste des auteurs et des ouvrages cites ou mentionnes dans ce travail," p.235-242.<br />

"History of the science of crystals during the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries—that<br />

is, during the period of its origin and early development." Nature, igig.<br />

Spencer, James Frederick. r 546.3 S74<br />

Metals of the rare earths. 1919. Longmans. (Monographs on in<strong>org</strong>anic<br />

and physical chemistry.)<br />

"References," p.241-262.<br />

"Whole treatment of the subject is logical and thorough and the book gives a<br />

very readable account of a difficult branch of in<strong>org</strong>anic chemistry. It can be strongly<br />

recommended to all interested in the rare earths." H. Bassett, in Journal of the Society<br />

of Chemical Industry, 1919.


Useful Arts<br />

BOOKS ADDED—JANUARY 1920 27<br />

American Library Association—War service committee. r 016.6 A51<br />

Reconstruction hospital list; books on subjects taught in reconstruction<br />

hospitals. 1919.<br />

Multigraph copy.<br />

Johnson, Emil A.<br />

684.7 J36<br />

Furniture upholstery for schools. 1919. Manual Arts Press.<br />

Brief elementary work, intended for use in manual arts schools. Well illustrated.<br />

Stevens, Henry P.<br />

676 S84<br />

Paper mill chemist. Ed.2, rev. & enl. 1919. Scott.<br />

Contains, within limited compass, considerable information of value to those interested<br />

in physical and chemical tests of paper and the raw materials used in its manufacture.<br />

Includes a large number of useful tables.<br />

Medicine, Physiology, Hygiene<br />

Crocker, Alfred Armstrong. r 617.6 C88<br />

Modern dentistry for the laity and industrial dentistry for the corporation,<br />

modern preventive dentistry and industrial welfare dentistry.<br />

Ed.2. 1919. Dental register.<br />

National Association for the Study and r 614.097444 N15<br />

Prevention of Tuberculosis.<br />

Framingham monograph, no.1-6. 1918-19.<br />

N0.2 wanting.<br />

A series of monographs on the development of the Framingham Community<br />

Health and Tuberculosis Demonstration, conducted by the National Association for<br />

the Study and Prevention of Tuberculosis.<br />

Pani, Alberto J.<br />

r 614.09725 P21<br />

Hygiene in Mexico; a study of sanitary and educational problems;<br />

tr. by E. L. de Gogorza. 1917. Putnam.<br />

"Bibliography pertaining to mortality," p.184-190.<br />

Engineering<br />

Hammel, Victor Frank.<br />

qr 623.451 H22<br />

Construction and operation of a shell loading plant, and the town of<br />

Amatol, New Jersey, for the United States government, Ordnance department,<br />

U. S. army. 1918. Atlantic Loading Co.<br />

Binder's title reads "Shell loading at Amatol, N. J."<br />

Devoted almost entirely to illustrations of the plant and its personnel and of the<br />

town which it was necessary to build to house the large number of civil and military<br />

employees.<br />

Meron, Frederic.<br />

r 621.7 M63<br />

Manufacturer's instructor and adviser. 3v. in 4. 1918. Audel.<br />

v.i. Layouts and equipments of factories.<br />

v.iA. [Plates.]<br />

v.2. Common sense working methods in factories.<br />

v.3. The human element in <strong>org</strong>anizations.<br />

Brief and informal in treatment.


28 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

United States Shipping Board Emergency Fleet r 623.835 U25<br />

Corporation.<br />

Construction of concrete ships; letters and reports submitted on<br />

the cost, plans and advantages in the construction of concrete ships, as<br />

submitted by constructing engineers to the chairman of the Emergency<br />

Fleet Corporation and the Senate commerce committee. 1918. (65th<br />

cong. 2d. sess. Senate. Doc. no.239.)<br />

Electrical Engineering<br />

American Institute of Electrical Engineers. r 621.305 A512P<br />

Proceedings, 1911-date. v.30-date. 1911-date.<br />

Canada—Conservation commission. r 621.31102 C16<br />

Electric generation and distribution in Canada, by L. G. Denis.<br />

1918.<br />

Useful compilation of data on the mechanical and electrical equipment of Canadian<br />

electric power-plants and on the distribution of and rates for electric energy in Canada.<br />

Primarily a directory of plants, with detailed information regarding each. Includes<br />

many illustrations of Canadian generating plants.<br />

Lamme, Benjamin G. r 621.304 L19<br />

Electrical engineering papers. 1919. Westinghouse Electric &<br />

Manufacturing Co. East Pittsburgh, Pa.<br />

Not a systematic text or reference book, but a collection of papers, by an eminent<br />

authority, on a diversity of topics pertaining to electrical engineering. Owing to the<br />

nature, and to the dates of original publication of many of the papers, the work has<br />

distinct historical as well as technical value.<br />

Agriculture<br />

Hedrick, Ulysses Prentiss. 634.6 H39<br />

Manual of American grape-growing. 1919. Macmillan. (Rural<br />

manuals.)<br />

Treats the subject from the standpoint of those who grow grapes for pleasure, as<br />

well as from the standpoint of the commercial grower. Covers a wide field, including<br />

the culture of grapes in all parts of North America. Includes material on the growing<br />

of European varieties in western United States.<br />

Hercules Powder Co. Pittsburgh. r 631.9 H46<br />

Progressive cultivation; facts for farmers; contains a description<br />

of the many ways in which Hercules dynamite aids the modern agriculturist<br />

with instructions for handling and an explanatory list of Hercules<br />

explosives and blasting supplies used in agriculture.<br />

Forestry<br />

Syracuse University—New York state college of forestry, r 634.9 Sggb<br />

Bulletin, no.i, 4-6. 1913-16.<br />

Syracuse University—New York state college of forestry, r 634.9 S99C<br />

Circular, no.4, 7, 10, 12. 16. 1913-17.


BOOKS ADDED—JANUARY 1920 29<br />

Business. Communication<br />

Gerstenberg, Charles William. 658 G32<br />

Principles of business. 1919. Prentice-Hall.<br />

"Bibliography" at the end of many of the chapters.<br />

In­<br />

Author attempts to cover, in a general way, the whole subject of business.<br />

tended for the experienced business man as well as for the student.<br />

Hall, Samuel Roland. 659 H17<br />

Writing an advertisement; an analysis of the methods and the mental<br />

processes that play a part in the writing of successful advertising.<br />

1915. Houghton.<br />

Considers only the preparation of copy for advertising.<br />

many successful advertisements.<br />

Meyer, Charles Albert. 658.5 M65<br />

Mercantile credits and collections. 1919. Macmillan.<br />

Shows reproductions of<br />

Contents: Mercantile credit.—Mercantile collections.—United States bankruptcy<br />

law.—APPENDIX : Requirements of each state as to conditional sales contracts; Forms<br />

of conditional sales contracts.<br />

United States—Navigation bureau. (Department r 654.105 U25<br />

of commerce.)<br />

Radio service bulletin [monthly], 1915-March 1917. no.1-27. 1915-<br />

17.<br />

Continuation of the quarterly supplements to the list of "Radio stations of the<br />

United States."<br />

Publication suspended with no.27.<br />

Fine Arts<br />

Bajot, fidouard, ed. qb 749 B17<br />

Encyclopedie du meuble du I5e siecle jusqu'a nos jours; recueil de<br />

planches contenant des meubles de style de toutes les epoques et de<br />

tous les pays, depuis le I5e siecle jusqu'a nos jours, classees par ordre<br />

alphabetique, avec une notice historique. [8v. 1901-09.]<br />

v.r. Appui, Meubles d'.—Armoires.<br />

v.2. Bahuts.—Bancs.—Berceaux.—Bibliotheques.—Billards.—Buffets.<br />

v.3. Bureaux.—Cabinets.—Cadres.<br />

v.4. Canapes.—Caquetoires.—Chaises.—Chaises-longues.—Chaises a porteurs.—<br />

Chayeres.—Cheminees.—Chevalets.<br />

v.5. Coffres.—Commodes.—Consoles.<br />

v.6. Credences.—Dressoirs.—ficrans.—Encoignures.—Entre-deux, Meubles d\—<br />

Escabeaux.—Etageres.—Fauteuils.—Fauteuils d'enfants.<br />

v.7. Galeries.—Gueridons.—Horloges.—Lavabos.—Lits.<br />

v.8. Medaillers.—Orgues.—Paravents.— Pianos.— Presses.— Pupitres.— Rapes a<br />

tabac.— Rouets.— Secretaires.— Serre-papiers.— Servantes.— Sieges de commodite.—<br />

Soufflets.—Stalles.—Tables.—Tabourets.—Toilettes.—Vitrines.<br />

Barber, Edwin AtLee. r 738 B23tne<br />

Mexican maiolica in the collection of the Hispanic Society of America.<br />

1915. (Hispanic Society of America. Publications, no.92.)<br />

Barber, Edwin AtLee. r 738.2 B23<br />

Spanish glass in the collection of the Hispanic Society of America.<br />

1917. Putnam. (Hispanic Society of America. Publications, no.102.)


30 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Browne, Henry J.<br />

r 737 B81<br />

First lessons in numismatics for junior students of Latin and Greek.<br />

1915. Bell.<br />

These lessons have been prepared for the Association for the Reform of Latin<br />

Teaching by the chairman of the Realien committee.<br />

Describes the Greek and Roman coins collected by the committee and shows how<br />

the study of them may be adapted to the needs of young scholars.<br />

Burgess, Frederick W.<br />

739 B8gan<br />

Antique jewellery and trinkets. 1919. Putnam. (Home connoisseur<br />

series.)<br />

Well illustrated description of various kinds of objects from prehistoric times to<br />

the Victorian age.<br />

qr 759 C32<br />

Une centaine de peintres; the works of 100 great masters (engraved),<br />

with descriptive text; under the direction of Alphonse Bacheret. 3v.<br />

[1902?] Barrie.<br />

Illustrates the work of artists of various countries and of various times.<br />

Govett, Ernest.<br />

750 G75<br />

Art principles, with special reference to painting, with notes on the<br />

illusions produced by the painter. 1919. Putnam.<br />

Stimulating and interesting work, setting forth definite canons of taste and judgment.<br />

There is much to commend in the author's treatment of individual works of<br />

art, both in sculpture and in painting. Condensed from Boston transcript, 1919.<br />

Hoppin, Joseph Clark.<br />

r 738.1 H78<br />

Handbook of Attic red-figured vases signed by or attributed to the<br />

various masters of the sixth and fifth centuries B. C. v.i. 1919. Harvard<br />

University Press.<br />

Pennsylvania—State museum.<br />

779 P39<br />

Catalogue of lantern slides. 1918.<br />

The same<br />

r 779 P39<br />

Slides on travel, science, agriculture, forestry, industries, which are circulated for<br />

educational purposes.<br />

Rome, Esposizione Internazionale, 1911. r 708.5 R66<br />

Catalogo della mostra di etnografia italiana in Piazza d'Armi. 1911.<br />

Van Dyke, John Charles.<br />

759.1 V18<br />

American painting and its tradition; as represented by Inness,<br />

Wyant, Martin, Homer, La Farge, Whistler, Chase, Alexander, Sargent.<br />

1919. Scribner.<br />

Gardening<br />

Bennett, Ida Dandridge.<br />

y T Q B43m<br />

Making of a flower garden. 1919. Stokes.<br />

Helpful suggestions for planning a small garden or arranging a city lot.<br />

Webb, William.<br />

7I0 ^36<br />

Garden first in land development. 1919. Longmans.<br />

Contents: Meaning and objects.—Hedges and trees.—Gardens.—Roads.—Roadside<br />

decoration.—Houses.—Finance and law.—The village.<br />

Author is an Englishman who has actively promoted the nature study movement<br />

in England.


Architecture<br />

BOOKS ADDED—JANUARY 1920 31<br />

Architectural Association of Boston. qb 720.944 A67<br />

Sketch book [ed. by R. D. Andrews and others]. 1st issue. 1883.<br />

Plates, for the most part illustrating examples of French architecture.<br />

Building Brick Association of America.<br />

q 728 B860<br />

One hundred bungalows. 1912.<br />

The same<br />

qr 728 B860<br />

Designs selected from drawings submitted by architects and draughtsmen from<br />

all parts of the country, in a competition recently conducted by the Briekbuilder. Condensed<br />

from Foreword.<br />

Byne, Arthur, & Stapley, Mildred. qb 729.97 B99<br />

Rejeria of the Spanish renaissance; a collection of photographs and<br />

measured drawings, with descriptive text. 1914. (Hispanic Society of<br />

America. Publications, no.87.)<br />

q 728 I24<br />

Inexpensive homes of individuality; a collection of photographs and<br />

floor plans illustrating certain of America's best country and suburban<br />

homes of moderate size; ed. by H. H. Saylor, with an introduction by<br />

F. M. Day and a discussion of costs by Aymar Embury. 1915. Mc­<br />

Bride.<br />

Keith, Max L. pub.<br />

q 728 K16<br />

Keith's 38 designs of duplexes, double houses and flats. [1913?]<br />

(Keith's books for the home-builder, v.ll.)<br />

Rogers and Manson Company, Boston.<br />

q 728 R61<br />

Old colonial brick houses of New England; ed. and pub. with the<br />

purpose of furthering a wider knowledge of the beautiful forms of<br />

domestic architecture developed during the time of the colonies and the<br />

early days of the republic. 1917. (Monograph series on subjects pertaining<br />

to architecture & allied interests.)<br />

The same q r 728 R61<br />

White Pine Bureau, St. Paul, Minn.<br />

White pine in home building. 1919.<br />

Drawing<br />

q 728 W637<br />

Faust, Charles Ayers.<br />

744-2 F28<br />

Faust's complete card-writer; lessons and alphabets for use of<br />

brushes, marking, Soennecken, Payzant and common pens, air-brushes<br />

and relief-pencils. 1911. [Braithwaite Co.]<br />

Seaman, Ge<strong>org</strong>e W.<br />


3-'<br />

CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Scores<br />

Music<br />

Bach, Johann Sebastian.<br />

qM 786.4 Bi2ch<br />

Chromatic fantasy and fugue; Concerto in the Italian style; Fantasy<br />

in C minor; Prelude and fugue in A minor [for piano]; ed. and<br />

rev. by Hans von Bulow and Max Vogrich. 1896. Schirmer.<br />

Bach, Johann Sebastian.<br />

qM 786.8 B12C0<br />

Complete <strong>org</strong>an works; a critico-practical edition, provided with a<br />

preface containing general observations on the manner of performing<br />

the preludes and fugues and suggestions for the interpretation of the<br />

compositions contained in each volume, by C. M. Widor and Albert<br />

Schweitzer, v.1-5. 1912-13- Schirmer.<br />

v.i. Preludes and fugues of the youthful period.<br />

v.2. Preludes and fugues of the first master-period.<br />

v.3-4. Preludes and fugues of the mature master-period.<br />

v.5. Organ concertos and <strong>org</strong>an sonatas.<br />

Bach, Johann Sebastian.<br />

qM 783.4 B12<br />

Magnificat (in D), in vocal score, with an accompaniment for the<br />

<strong>org</strong>an or pianoforte; the adaptation to English words by J. Troutbeck.<br />

Novello.<br />

Latin and English words.<br />

Beach, Mrs Amy Marcy (Cheney).<br />

qM 783.21 B34<br />

Mass in E flat, vocal score, with pianoforte accompaniment arranged<br />

from the full score. 1890. Schmidt.<br />

Debussy, Achille Claude. qM 786.4902 D35<br />

Prelude a "L'apres-midi d'un faune," transcription [pour piano] a<br />

quatre mains par Maurice Ravel. 1910. Fromont.<br />

Gaul, Harvey B. comp. qM 784.7 G24<br />

Nine negro spirituals; collected and arranged by H. B. Gaul. 1918.<br />

Gray.<br />

Contents: Inch song.—What a tryin' time.—Nobody knows the trouble I see.—<br />

I'm troubled in mind.—Boat song.—Listen to the angels shouting.—Feasting on milk<br />

and honey and wine.—O, my little soul's going to shine.—I'm traveling to the grave.<br />

Glazunov, Aleksandr Konstantinovitch. qM 786.4902 G47q<br />

Quatrieme symphonie, pour grand orchestre, reduction pour piano<br />

a quatre mains par I'auteur. Op.48. 1894. Belaieff.<br />

Glazunov, Aleksandr Konstantinovitch. qM 786.4902 G47<br />

Cinquieme symphonie, pour grand orchestre, reduction pour piano<br />

a quatre mains par S. Taneiew. Op.55. 1896. Belaieff.<br />

Grieg, Edvard. qM 784 G89V<br />

Vocal album; 48 songs with piano accompaniment. 4v. in 1. 1SS2-<br />

84. Schirmer. (Schirmer's library of musical classics, v.1021, 1023,<br />

1025, 1027.)<br />

v.1-3 (110.1-36! transposed for high voice; v.4 (110.37-48) in the original key.


BOOKS ADDED—JANUARY 1920 33<br />

Haydn, Franz Joseph. qM 786.4 H37C0<br />

Complete pianoforte works; collected, chronologically arranged,<br />

phrased and fingered by Hugo Riemann. v.1-2, 4-6. Augener.<br />

v.i. Sonatas, no.i to 12.<br />

V.2<br />

v.4<br />

v.5<br />

Sonatas, no. 13 to 22.<br />

Sonatas, no.33 to 39.<br />

Seven sets of variations, four pieces &<br />

Minuets & German dances.<br />

13 smaller pieces.<br />

Hughes, Rupert, ed.<br />

qM 784.8 H89<br />

Songs by 30 Americans, for high voice. 1904. Ditson. (Musicians<br />

library.)<br />

MacDowell, Edward Alexander. qM 784 Mi4e<br />

Eight songs; high [voice]. Op.47. 1906. Breitkopf.<br />

Contents: "The robin sings in the apple-tree."—Midsummer lullaby.—Folksong.—<br />

Confidence.—"The west-wind croons in the cedar-trees."—In the woods.—The sea.—<br />

Through the meadow.<br />

English and German words.<br />

MacDowell, Edward Alexander.<br />

qM 786.4 Mi4e<br />

Erste moderne suite, fiir pianoforte zu 2 handen. Op.10. 1906.<br />

Breitkopf.<br />

Contents: Praeludium.—Presto.—Andantino ed allegretto.—Intermezzo.—Rhapsodic—Fugue.<br />

MacDowell, Edward Alexander. qM 786.4 Mi4f<br />

Fireside tales; composed for the pianoforte. Op.61. 1902. Schmidt.<br />

Contents: An old love story.—Of Br'er Rabbit.—From a German forest.—Of<br />

salamanders.—A haunted house.—By smouldering embers.<br />

MacDowell, Edward Alexander. qM 786.4 Mi4fo<br />

Four little poems for the pianoforte. Op.32. 1906. Breitkopf.<br />

Contents: The eagle.—The brook.—Moonshine.—Winter.<br />

MacDowell, Edward Alexander.<br />

Four songs; high voice. Op.56. 1899. Schmidt.<br />

qM 784 Mi4f<br />

MacDowell, Edward Alexander. qM 784 M14<br />

From an old garden; six songs, verses by Margaret Deland. Op.26.<br />

1887. Schirmer.<br />

Contents: The pansy.—The myrtle.—The clover.—The yellow daisy.—The bluebell.—The<br />

mignonette.<br />

MacDowell, Edward Alexander.<br />

qM 786.4902 M14<br />

Lamia; dritte symphonische dichtung (nach Keats), fur grosses<br />

orchester, clavierauszug zu 4 handen vom componisten. Op.29. 1908.<br />

Schmidt.<br />

MacDowell, Edward Alexander. qM 785.4 M14<br />

Lamia; dritte symphonische dichtung (nach Keats), fiir grosses<br />

orchester, partitur. Op.29. 1908. Schmidt.<br />

MacDowell, Edward Alexander. qM 786.4 Mi4m<br />

Marionettes; eight little pianoforte pieces. Op.38. 1916. Schmidt.<br />

Contents: Prologue.—Soubrette.—Lover.—Witch.—Clown.—Villain.—Sweetheart.<br />

—Epilogue.


34 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

MacDowell, Edward Alexander.<br />

qM 786.4 Mi4n<br />

New England idyls; composed for the pianoforte. Op.62. 1902.<br />

Schmidt.<br />

Contents: An old garden.—Mid-summer.—Mid-winter.—With sweet lavender.—<br />

In deep woods.—Indian idyl.—To an old white pine.—From Puritan days.—From a<br />

log cabin.—The joy of autumn.<br />

MacDowell, Edward Alexander.<br />

qM 786.4 M14S<br />

Sea pieces [for the pianoforte]. Op.55. 1899. Schmidt.<br />

Contents: To the sea.—From a wandering iceberg.—A. D. 1620.—Starlight.—<br />

Song.—From the depths.—Nautilus.—In mid-ocean.<br />

MacDowell, Edward Alexander.<br />

qM 786.4 M14W<br />

Woodland sketches [for the pianoforte]. [Op.51.] 1899. Schmidt.<br />

Contents: To a wild rose.—Will o' the wisp.—At an old trysting place.— In autumn.—From<br />

an Indian lodge.—To a waterlily.—From Uncle Remus.—A deserced<br />

farm.—By a meadow brook.—Told at sunset.<br />

Massenet, Jules limile Frederic.<br />

qM 782.4 M45J<br />

[Le jongleur de Notre Dame.] Our Lady's juggler; miracle in<br />

three acts; libretto by Maurice Lena, English translation by M. L.<br />

Baum, vocal score. 1908. Heugel.<br />

French and English words.<br />

Massenet, Jules Smile Frederic.<br />

qM 782.4 M45n<br />

La Navarraise; episode lyrique en 2 actes; poeme de Jules Claretie<br />

& Henri Cain, partition piano et chant. 1894, Heugel.<br />

French and English words.<br />

Massenet, Jules fimileFrederic. qM 782.4 M45r<br />

Le roi de Lahore; opera en 5 actes de Louis Gallet, partition chant<br />

et piano. Heugel.<br />

French words.<br />

Rimsky-Korsakov, Nicolai Andreievich.<br />

qM 786.4902 R46<br />

Sheherazade, after the 'Arabian nights;" symphonic suite for orchestra,<br />

arranged for piano 4 hands, transcription for piano by P. Gilson;<br />

ed. and fingered by Constantin Sternberg. Op.35. 1918. Schirmer.<br />

Saint-Saens, Charles Camille. qM 787.1 S15<br />

Deuxieme concerto (en Ut majeur), pour violon, avec accompagnement<br />

de piano. Op.58. Durand.<br />

Violin part in pocket.<br />

Saint-Saens, Charles Camille.<br />

qM 787.1 Si5t<br />

Troisieme concerto pour violon et [piano]. Op.61. 1909. Durand.<br />

Violin part in pocket.<br />

Schumann, Robert.<br />

qM 785.5 S39I1<br />

Hermann und Dorothea; ouverture zu Goethe's Hermann u. Dorothea,<br />

fiir orchester, partitur. Op.136. Rieter-Biedermann.<br />

Spohr, Ludwig.<br />

qM 787.1 S76<br />

Concerto (no.2) in D minor for violin, with accompaniment of pianoforte;<br />

ed. and fingered by Ferdinand David. Op.2. 1896. Schirmer.<br />

Piano part in pocket.


BOOKS ADDED—JANUARY 1920 35<br />

Spohr, Ludwig. qM 787.1 S76C<br />

Concerto (no.7) in E minor for violin, with accompaniment of pianoforte;<br />

ed. and fingered by Henry Schradieck. Op.38. 1896. Schirmer.<br />

Violin part in pocket.<br />

Spohr, Ludwig.<br />

qM 787.1 S76cn<br />

Concerto in form of a vocal scena (gesangscene), no.8, in A for<br />

violin, with accompaniment of pianoforte; ed. and fingered by Henry<br />

Schradieck, with a biographical sketch of the author by Philip Hale.<br />

Op.47. 1896. Schirmer.<br />

Violin part in pocket.<br />

Spohr, Ludwig.<br />

qM 787.1 S76C0<br />

Concerto (110.9) for violin, with accompaniment of pianoforte; ed.<br />

and fingered by Henry Schradieck. Op.55. 1895. Schirmer.<br />

Violin part in pocket.<br />

Thomas, Charles Louis Ambroise.<br />

qM 782.4 T37m<br />

Mignon; opera in three acts and five tableaux; libretto by Michel<br />

Carre and Jules Barbier, the English version by Th. Baker, with an essay<br />

on the story of the opera by H. E. Krehbiel. 1901. Schirmer.<br />

French and English words.<br />

Wolf-Ferrari, Ermanno.<br />

qM 782.5 W83S<br />

Suzanne's secret (Susannens geheimnis, II segreto di Susanna);<br />

interlude in one act from the French by Enrico Golisciani, English<br />

version by Claude Aveling, vocal score. 1911. Weinberger.<br />

English and Italian words.<br />

Books About Music<br />

Lehmann, Friedrich Johann.<br />

780 L55<br />

Analysis of form in music. 1919. Comings.<br />

Considers in detail each of various forms of music, such as the two-part song<br />

form, the rondo, the sonata, the symphony.<br />

Saint-Saens, Charles Camille.<br />

780.4 Sism<br />

Musical memories; tr. by E. G. Rich. 1919. Small.<br />

Contents: Memories of my childhood.—The old Conservatoire.—Victor Hugo.—<br />

The history of an opera-comique.—Louis Gallet.—History and mythology in opera.—<br />

Art for art's sake.—Popular science and art.—Anarchy in music.—The <strong>org</strong>an.—Joseph<br />

Haydn and the "Seven words."—The Liszt centenary at Heidelberg (1912).—Berlioz's<br />

Requiem.—Pauline Viardot.—Orphee.—Delsarte.—Seghers.—Rossini.—Jules Massenet.<br />

—Meyerbeer.—Jacques Offenbach.—Their Majesties.—Musical painters.<br />

Recreations<br />

Bonser, Frederick Gordon.<br />

790 B62g<br />

School work and spare time. 1918. Survey committee of the Cleveland<br />

foundation. (Cleveland Recreation Survey.)<br />

Based on facts gathered from the children themselves. Points out forcefully the<br />

failure of the school to connect all school and spare time interests and the need for<br />

the school to stimulate and direct these interests. Condensed from Survey, 1919.<br />

Gillin, John Lewis.<br />

790 G41<br />

Wholesome citizens and spare time. 1918. Survey committee of<br />

the Cleveland foundation. (Cleveland Recreation Survey.)<br />

Study of a number of citizens of Cleveland, for the purpose of ascertaining the<br />

part played in their development by recreations, the kinds of recreations engaged in<br />

at various periods of their lives, and how they came to form their spare-time habits.


36 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Spacek, Anna, & Boyd, N. L.<br />

793-3 S73<br />

Folk dances of Bohemia and Moravia, for school, playground and<br />

social center; harmonizing of music by Gertrude Shoemaker. 1917-<br />

Saul.<br />

Literature<br />

Bergengren, Ralph Wilhelm. 814 B45<br />

The perfect gentleman [and other essays]. 1919. Atlantic Monthly<br />

Press.<br />

Other essays: As a man dresses.—In the chair.—Oh, shining shoes!—On making<br />

calls.—The Her in bed.—To bore or not to bore.—Where toils the tailor.—Shaving<br />

thoughts.—Oh, the afternoon tea I<br />

Holliday, Robert Cortes. 814 H72<br />

Walking-stick papers. 1918. Doran.<br />

Contents: PROLOGUE: On carrying a cane.—The fish reporter.— On going a journey.—Going<br />

to art exhibitions.—A roundabout paper.—That reviewer "cuss."—Literary<br />

levities in London.—Henry James, himself.—Memories of a manuscript.—"You<br />

are an American."—Why men can't read novels by women.—The dessert of life.—A<br />

clerk may look at a celebrity.—Caun't speak the language.—Hunting lodgings.—My<br />

friend, the policeman.—Help wanted—male, female.-—Human municipal documents.—<br />

As to people.—Humours of the book shop.—The deceased.—A town constitutional.—<br />

Reading after thirty.—EPILOGUE: On wearing a hat.<br />

Kenyon, C. Fred. 824 K19<br />

Set down in malice; a book of reminiscences, by Gerald Cumberland<br />

[pseud.]. 1919. Brentano.<br />

During the author's progress from youth onward through the paths of journalism,<br />

he came in contact with many personalities, particularly those of the literary and<br />

artistic worlds. Each of his sketches is a pen portrait of the intellect and physique of<br />

his subject. Includes such names as Frank Harris, Arnold Bennett, Sir Herbert Tree,<br />

Hall Caine. Condensed from New York times, igig.<br />

Mackenzie, Alastair St. Clair. 820.9 M17<br />

History of English literature. 1914. Macmillan.<br />

"Supplementary reading" at the end of each chapter.<br />

Text-book for an elementary study of the subject.<br />

Maeterlinck, Maurice. 844 M24mo<br />

Mountain paths; tr. by Alexander Teixeira de Mattos. 1919. Dodd.<br />

Contents: The power of the dead.—Messages from beyond the grave.—Bad news.<br />

—The soul of nations.—The mothers.—Three unknown heroes.—Wasted beauties.—<br />

The insect world.—Evil-speaking.—Of gambling.—The riddle of progress.—The two<br />

lobes.—Hope and despair.—Macrocosm and microcosm.—Heredity and preexistence.—<br />

The great revelation.—The necessary silence.—Karma.<br />

The same<br />

r 844 M24mo<br />

Pater, Walter. g 24 p 2gs<br />

Sketches and reviews. 1919. Boni.<br />

Contents: Aesthetic poetry.—M. LeMaitre's Serenus and other tales.—The life<br />

and letters of Gustave Flaubert.—Correspondance de Gustave Flaubert.—Coleridge as<br />

a theologian.—Wordsworth.—A novel by Mr Oscar Wilde ("The picture of Dorian<br />

Gray").—A poet with something to say [Symons].—Mr Ge<strong>org</strong>e Moore as an art critic<br />

("Modern painting").<br />

Waugh, Arthur. 820.4 W33t<br />

Tradition and change; studies in contemporary literature. 1919.<br />

Dutton.<br />

Contents: Tradition and change.—STUDIES IN POETRY: The new poetry; War<br />

poetry (1914-18); Stephen Phillips; Lionel Johnson; The tragedies of Mr Arthur


BOOKS ADDED—JANUARY 1920 37<br />

Waugh, Arthur—continued. 820.4 W33t<br />

Symons; J. E. Flecker; The imagists; Mr D. H. Lawrence; Mr J. C. Squire; Rupert<br />

Brooke and the war.—STUDIES IN PROSE: Dickens's lovers; The Swinburne letters; The<br />

new realism; The religious novel; Samuel Butler; The charm of Stevenson; The art<br />

of Henry James; Dixon Scott's criticism; Mr Arthur Symons's criticism; Mr John<br />

Freeman's criticism; Mr Joseph Conrad and the discipline of fear; Mr John Galsworthy<br />

; Mr E. V. Lucas.<br />

Poetry<br />

Bodenheim, Maxwell. 811 B58<br />

Minna and myself. 1918. Pagan Pub. Co.<br />

Contents: Minna; poems.—Myself; poems.—The master poisoner; a one-act<br />

poetic play by Maxwell Bodenheim and Ben Hecht.—Poet's heart; a poetic play in<br />

one act.<br />

Bridges, Robert, b. 1844. 808.1 B74<br />

Necessity of poetry; an address given to the Tredegar & District<br />

Co-operative Society, Nov. 22, 1917. 1918. Clarendon Press.<br />

Broadhurst, Jean, & Rhodes, C. L. comp. 821.08 B75<br />

Verse for patriots, to encourage good citizenship. 1919. Lippincott.<br />

Contents: The "last" war.—The call.—Heroes.—On land and sea.—Dying for<br />

one's country.—National hymns and war songs.—Home and country.—The flag and<br />

freedom.—Peace after war.—The true patriot.<br />

The same<br />

j 821.08 B75<br />

Cid. r 861 C47<br />

Poem of the Cid. 3v. 1907-08. Hispanic Soc. of America.<br />

V.I.<br />

v.2.<br />

v.3.<br />

Text, reprinted from the unique manuscript at Madrid.<br />

Translation, by A. M. Huntington.<br />

Notes, by A. M. Huntington.<br />

Conkling, Mrs Grace Walcott (Hazard).<br />

811 C75<br />

Afternoons of April; a book of verse. 1915. Houghton. (New<br />

poetry series.)<br />

Drinkwater, John, b. 1882. 821 D82<br />

Loyalties [poems]. 1919. Sidgwick.<br />

Drinkwater, John, b. 1882. 821 D82t<br />

Tides [poems]. 1918. Sidgwick.<br />

Fletcher, John Gould. 811 F6 3g<br />

Goblins and pagodas [poems]. 1916. Houghton. (New poetry<br />

series.)<br />

Garvin, John William, comp. 811.08 G19<br />

Canadian poems of the great war. 1918. McClelland.<br />

The same r 8lI '° 8 Gl 9<br />

Kipling, Rudyard. 821 Ka 7 ve<br />

Verse; inclusive edition, 1885-1918. 1919- Doubleday.<br />

The same r 8zl K2 ? v<br />

Parsons, Mary Prescott, comp. 016.821 P26<br />

The new poetry; a study outline. 1919. Wilson. (Study outline<br />

series.)<br />

The same. (In Wilson (H. W.) Co. pub. Study outline series,<br />

no.26.) r 374-3 W76 no.26


38 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Rhys, Ernest, ed. 821.08 R38<br />

New golden treasury of songs & lyrics. [1916.] Dent. (Everyman's<br />

library.)<br />

"Bibliography in brief of English lyric anthologies," pref. p.9-10.<br />

"Companion book to the old Golden Treasury, ranging farther back in time and<br />

farther forward, and adding many poets who have enriched the lyric tongue, omitted<br />

in those pages." Introduction.<br />

Skinner, Avery Warner, comp.<br />

821.08 S628<br />

Selections for memorizing required for elementary schools by the<br />

Education department of New York state, books 1-3. [3v.] 1911. Silver.<br />

v.i. First, second, third and fourth years.<br />

v.2. Fifth and sixth years.<br />

v.3. Seventh and eighth years.<br />

Drama. Theatre<br />

Craig, Edward Gordon.<br />

The theatre—advancing. 1919. Little.<br />

Pithy articles dealing with various aspects of the stage.<br />

792 C86t<br />

Cronyn, Ge<strong>org</strong>e.<br />

812 C893<br />

The sandbar queen; a play in one act as played by the Washington<br />

square players. 1918. Arens. (Flying stag plays for the little theatre,<br />

no.l.)<br />

Davies, Mary Carolyn.<br />

812 D313<br />

The slave with two faces; an allegory in one act as played by the<br />

Provincetown players. 1918. Arens. (Flying stag plays for the little<br />

theatre, no.6.)<br />

Dell, Floyd.<br />

812 D41<br />

The angel intrudes; a play in one act as played by the Provincetown<br />

players. 1918. Arens. (Flying stag plays for the little theatre,<br />

no.3.)<br />

Findlay, Maud I.<br />

793-1 F4g<br />

Scott's Ivanhoe; dramatised for school use. [1917.] Milford.<br />

Findlay, Maud I.<br />

793-1 F49S<br />

Scott's Talisman; dramatised for school use. [1917.] Milford.<br />

Helburn, Theresa.<br />

812 H42<br />

Enter the hero; a comedy in one act as played by the St. Francis<br />

players. 1918. Arens. (Flying stag plays for the little theatre, no.4.)<br />

Kemp, Harry.<br />

812 K17<br />

The prodigal son; a comedy in one act as played at the Little Thimble<br />

theatre. 1919. Arens. (Flying stag plays for the little theatre,<br />

no.8.)<br />

Moeller, Philip.<br />

812 M76t<br />

Two blind beggars and one less blind; a tragic comedy in one act<br />

as played by the Washington square players. 1918. Arens. (Flying<br />

stag plays for the little theatre, no.5.)


BOOKS ADDED—JANUARY 1920 39<br />

Biography<br />

Dante Alighieri.<br />

92 D237d<br />

Dinsmore, Charles Allen. Life of Dante Alighieri. 1919. Houghton.<br />

Sets forth the general character of the age in which Dante lived and the city<br />

which he loved; the facts of his life which are definitely known, together with some<br />

traditions; the development of his genius and character at the different stages of his<br />

career. Condensed from Preface.<br />

Digby, Kenelm Henry. 92 D5773I1<br />

Holland, Bernard Henry. Memoir of Kenelm Henry Digby. 1919.<br />

Longmans.<br />

Admirable study of a noble and dignified personality, a learned, eloquent and<br />

voluminous writer, whose works are a strong defence of Catholic principles. Condensed<br />

from Spectator, igig.<br />

Fiske, Bradley Allen. 92 Fs4if<br />

From midshipman to rear-admiral. 1919. Century.<br />

Detailed account of the career of the American naval officer who not only had<br />

part in many operations, but who invented naval and military appliances. Throws<br />

light on the friction with the Secretary of the navy concerning preparedness after the<br />

opening of the European war.<br />

Johnson, Samuel, 1709-84.<br />

92 j36sro<br />

Roberts, S. C. Story of Doctor Johnson; being an introduction to<br />

Boswell's Life. 1919. Cambridge University Press.<br />

"Bibliographical note," p.156-157.<br />

Mr Roberts has made a very entertaining abridgment with a view to sending more<br />

readers to Boswell himself. Condensed from Spectator, 1919.<br />

Lincoln, Abraham. 92 L7issh<br />

Shirley, Ralph. Short life of Abraham Lincoln. 1919. Rider.<br />

Roosevelt, Theodore. 92 R684a<br />

Abbott, Lawrence Fraser. Impressions of Theodore Roosevelt.<br />

1919. Doubleday.<br />

Contents: Acquaintanceship.—Politics.—The Progressive party.—Statesmanship.<br />

—Foreign affairs.—A man of letters.—The African and European tour.—Roosevelt's<br />

personal qualities.—The end.<br />

Tucker, William Jewett.<br />

92 T8i5t<br />

My generation; an autobiographical interpretation. 1919. Houghton.<br />

Author presents the various influences which contributed to his development and<br />

the many aspects of his active career as pastor, as professor at Andover Theological<br />

Seminary and particularly as president of Dartmouth College.<br />

Ward, Artemus, (pseud, of Charles Farrar Browne). 92 W2132S<br />

Seitz, Don Carlos. Artemus Ward (Charles Farrar Browne); a<br />

biography and bibliography. 1919. Harper.<br />

"Bibliography," p.319-338.<br />

The author's account, full of significant details and illustrations from the writings<br />

of the American humorist, reveals the charm of Ward's personality.<br />

Collected Biography<br />

Madden, Maude Whitmore. 920.7 M23<br />

Women of the Meiji era. 1919. Revell.<br />

Contents: Her Majesty, Haruko, the Meiji era empress.—Miss Ume Tsuda, educator.<br />

jvirs Kaji Ko Yajima, temperance reformer.—Miss Uta Hayashi, social reformer.<br />

Mrs Kashi Iwamoto, author.—Madame Asa Hirooka, millionaire evangelist.—Miss<br />

Michi Kawai, a new leader.—Mrs Roku Suto, Bible woman.


40 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

United States—Congress.<br />

[Memorial addresses.] m 7 (6 4 th con. sd • ^rf 3 '° A<br />

no.2138-42, v.108.)<br />

g ' d SeSS ' H ° U S e - D ° C -<br />

Tribb^eTnd M m F m Conry addreSSeS ° n D ' E ' F M ^ W' G ' Brown, H. H. Moss, S. J.<br />

United States—Congress.<br />

E. C. C Bu t r a iei gh mem0rial addreSSeS °" W ' °" B ~ d^> B - *• Shively, J. P. Clarke and<br />

Travel and Description<br />

Bartholomew, John Ge<strong>org</strong>e.<br />

School economic atlas, with introduction by L. W Ly^ioiV<br />

Oxford University Press. ^yae. 1915.<br />

tribu^rofcTm^rSprodui. 0 "" 13^ C° nditi ° nS fa * e *"*»• -as, and the di,<br />

Europe<br />

Sheil, Richard Lalor<br />

l8sf e £. ,egal and ^"^^ ed ' With " ^ ^ M. W. Savaje 5 ^<br />

^Concerning celebrities of the Irish bar and of political and religious affairs in<br />

United States<br />

qr 91763 N26D<br />

[Ferry-Hanly<br />

lTJ£ioT ans andtheindustriaISouth - -• q <br />

Boston—Statistics department<br />

^^Boston statistics, 1916, with memorable sites and buiidi^ £<br />

Other Countries<br />

Honaga, S.<br />

Trowbridge, Edward Dwight<br />

M<br />

R " C on°J, 0 ; si i £ ^ " ^ ^"- ^ ^7<br />

^induitr^Uic! | « B - - V - - - •*• ^ genera, idea of th


BOOKS ADDED—JANUARY 1920 41<br />

History<br />

General<br />

Breasted, James Henry.<br />

930 B71S<br />

Survey of the ancient world. 1919. Ginn.<br />

Contents: Earliest man.—The Orient.—The Greeks.—The Romans.<br />

"Bibliography," p.395-406.<br />

"Briefer. ..sketch of the same periods which are more fully treated in the author's<br />

Ancient Times." Preface.<br />

Europe<br />

Bullard, Arthur, (pseud. Albert Edwards). 947 B87<br />

The Russian pendulum; autocracy, democracy, Bolshivism. 1919.<br />

Macmillan.<br />

Author traveled extensively in Russia during 1905-08. In 1917 he took charge of<br />

the American propaganda work of the Committee on public information in Russia and<br />

later in Siberia. He sets forth the impressions and observations of his earlier visits<br />

to Russia, the events he witnessed after his arrival in Petrograd, and affairs in Siberia,<br />

and he suggests ways of helping Russia.<br />

Cazalet, Lucy. 947 C29<br />

Short history of Russia. 1915. Clarendon Press.<br />

Very brief sketch of the early history and of the principal events during the reign<br />

of each ruler down to Nicholas II.<br />

Kadomtzeff, Boris. 947 Kn<br />

The Russian collapse; a politico-economic essay. 1919. Russian<br />

Mercantile and Industrial Corporation.<br />

Author seeks to show that the blockade was the chief cause of the disintegration<br />

of Russia's economic system.<br />

Turner, Edward Raymond. 941-5 T86<br />

Ireland and England, in the past and at present. 1919. Century.<br />

"Bibliography," p.471—480.<br />

Author, professor of European history in the University of Michigan, gives a dispassionate,<br />

just and thoroughly informed survey of the essential facts on both sides,<br />

for the purpose of interpreting history with full justice to both. Written in popular<br />

style. Condensed from New York times, 1919.<br />

Velimirovic, Nikolaj. 949-7 V25<br />

Religion and nationality in Serbia [tr. by F. S. Copeland], with<br />

prefatory note by R. W. Seton-Watson. 1915. Nisbet.<br />

Webster, Charles Kingsley. 94°-8 W38<br />

Congress of Vienna, 1814-15. [1919.] Milford.<br />

"Authorities," p. 172-174.<br />

Published for the Historical section of the Foreign office.<br />

Sets forth the preparation and <strong>org</strong>anization of the congress, and the course of negotiations<br />

during 1814 and 1815.<br />

United States<br />

Benton, Elbert Jay. qr 973-7 B445<br />

Movement for peace without a victory during the Civil war. 1918.<br />

Western Reserve Historical Soc. (Western Reserve Historical Society.<br />

Collections.)<br />

Contains bibliographical foot-notes.<br />

Account of the activities of the Peace democratic party of the Northwest, which<br />

sought to overthrow the Lincoln administration, opposed the war and desired the restoration<br />

of the "Union as it was."


42 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Forbes, Alexander, 1778-1862. qr 979.4 F 75<br />

California; a history of Upper & Lower California from their first<br />

discovery to the present time, comprising an account of the climate,<br />

soil, natural productions, agriculture, commerce, &c, a full view of the<br />

missionary establishments and condition of the free & domesticated<br />

Indians, with an appendix relating to steam-navigation in the Pacific.<br />

1919. Russell.<br />

"Alexander Forbes, the author of the work," p.ga-ioa.<br />

Reprinted from the original edition published by Smith, Elder & Co., London,<br />

1839, with facsimile of title-page.<br />

Military Historical Society of Massachusetts. r 973.7 M686cv<br />

Civil war and miscellaneous papers. 1918. (Papers, v.14.)<br />

Miscellaneous papers: The occupation of Manila in 1898, by C. A. Whittier.—<br />

Filipino characteristics as manifested in diplomacy and war, by E. S. Otis.—The visit<br />

of the allies to China in 1900, by Henry Leonard.—The necessity of a broader system<br />

of military instruction in this country and our military policy, by Leonard Wood.—<br />

The Naval war college, by F. E. Chadwick.—The siege of Ladysmith, by A. J. Abdy.<br />

'—A judicial versus a military settlement of some international disputes, by William<br />

Crozier.—The geometrical factor in Napoleon's generalship, by R. M. Johnston.—<br />

American tactics in the present war, by T. G. Frothingham.<br />

Other Countries<br />

Davidson, Gordon Charles. 971.2 D29<br />

The North West Company. 1918. University of California Press.<br />

(California University. Publications in history, v.7.) •<br />

"List of authorities cited," p.249-255.<br />

Admirable account of the early fur trade in Canada, of the formation, activities<br />

and methods of the North West Company, of its small rival the X Y Company, and<br />

of its struggle with the Hudson Bay Company. Condensed from Nation, 1919.<br />

Inman, Samuel Guy.<br />

972 I24<br />

Intervention in Mexico, foreword by W. R. Shepherd. 1919. Y. M.<br />

C. A. Press.<br />

Contents: Various aspects of the problem.—Is the present disturbance in Mexico<br />

a real revolution?—What kind of a man is Carranza?—What Mexicans think of Americans.—The<br />

present situation in Mexico.—Future relations between Mexico and the<br />

United States.—APPENDIX : Proposed plan for a university to be established in<br />

Mexico.<br />

European War<br />

Aldrich, Mildred. 940.91 A36W<br />

When Johnny comes marching home. 1919. Small.<br />

Touches upon some of the aspects of life in France during the last weeks of the<br />

European war and the months following the armistice.<br />

Barron, Clarence Walker. 940.91 B26W<br />

War finance, as viewed from the roof of the world in Switzerland.<br />

1919. Houghton.<br />

Economic and financial aspects of the European war. Discusses such topics as<br />

starvation and prisoners, costs and indemnifications, camps, hospitals and salvages,<br />

our warehouses and their future, taxes and injustice, free-trade and protection.<br />

Blankenhorn, Heber. 940.916 B53<br />

Adventures in propaganda; letters from an intelligence officer in<br />

France. 1919. Houghton.<br />

Author, an American, was sent to France in 1918 to <strong>org</strong>anize efforts to weaken<br />

German morale by distributing propaganda over the enemy lines. His book contains<br />

a few illustrations of pamphlets used.


BOOKS ADDED—JANUARY 1920 43<br />

Brown, William Herbert, comp. 940.91 B79<br />

Stories of the great war for public speakers. 1919. Standard Pub.<br />

Co.<br />

Brief tales of the European war arranged under numerous and varied topics.<br />

Davison, Henry Pomeroy.<br />

940.917 D32<br />

The American Red Cross in the great war. 1919. Macmillan.<br />

Sets forth the <strong>org</strong>anization and work of the society at home and abroad.<br />

Dunsany, Edward John Moreton Drax Plunkett, baron. 940.919 D92<br />

Unhappy far-off things. 1919. Little.<br />

Contents: A dirge of victory [poem],—The cathedral of Arras.—A good war.—<br />

The house with two stories.—Bermondsey versus Wurtemburg.—On an old battlefield.—The<br />

real thing.—A garden of Arras.—After hell.—A happy valley.—In Bethune.<br />

—In an old drawing-room.—The homes of Arras.<br />

Fitch, Rachel Louise. 940.928 F55<br />

Madame France. 1919. Womans Press.<br />

Contents: We are introduced to Madame France.—She rallies her forces.—Her<br />

aid to the army.—The work of her hands.—Her refugees.—Her rapatries.—Her children.—Her<br />

schools in war time.—Her social life.—Her religion.—Her handicaps.—<br />

Madame France, the woman.—She begins to build anew.<br />

Floyd, Frank Trainor. 940.918 F67<br />

Company "F" overseas, 305. [1919. Pittsburgh Printing Co. Pittsburgh.]<br />

Author, a Pittsburgher, gives an account of experiences from May<br />

spring of 1919.<br />

1918 to the<br />

James, Henry, 1843-1916. 940.919 J16<br />

Within the rim, and other essays, 1914-15. 1918. Collins.<br />

Other essays: Refugees in Chelsea.—The American volunteer motor-ambulance<br />

corps in France.—France.—The long wards.<br />

O'Neill, H. C. 940.913 O25<br />

The war in Africa, 1914-17, and in the Far East, 1914. 1919. Longmans.<br />

Clearly summarizes the course of the campaigns. Condensed from Spectator, 1919.<br />

Peixotto, Ernest Clifford.<br />

940.91 P37<br />

The American front. 1919. Scribner.<br />

Author, as one of the eight artists officially attached to the American expeditionary<br />

forces, had opportunity to witness portions of the important offensives in which<br />

the American army was engaged. His account of what he saw contains numerous<br />

reproductions of the drawings he made "from nature and on the spot."<br />

qr 940.917 P44<br />

Pershing Limit Club; an American roll of honor. [1919. Pittsburgh?]<br />

List of 10,000 Western Pennsylvanians who contributed to the War savings cause<br />

the full limit of one thousand dollars allowed by law, and enrolled themselves as members<br />

of this club.<br />

Reiss, Rodolphe Archibald. 940.924 R32<br />

The kingdom of Serbia; infringements of the rules and laws of war<br />

committed by the Austro-Bulgaro-Germans; letters of a criminologist<br />

on the Serbian Macedonian front. 1919. Allen.<br />

Saint-Rene Taillandier, Mme. 940.917 S15<br />

Soul of the "C. R. B;" a French view of the Hoover relief work; tr.<br />

by M. C. Jones. 1919. Scribner.<br />

In conversations with prominent men and women, the author graphically reveals<br />

the spirit of the French and Belgian people in the midst of suffering and the spirit of<br />

the workers on the Commission for Relief in Belgium.


44 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Union Trust Company, Pittsburgh. 940.9137 ?39u<br />

Over there and over here. [1918-] Pittsburgh.<br />

Photographs, with extracts from letters, of the 19 men from the Union Trust Company<br />

of Pittsburgh who were with the American forces during the European war.<br />

r 940.927 W59<br />

What officers and men from Pittsburgh say about the "Y" overseas.<br />

[Pittsburgh?]<br />

Woollcott, Alexander. 940.913 W87<br />

The command is forward; tales of the A. E. F. battlefields as they<br />

appeared in the Stars and Stripes. 1919- Century.<br />

Miscellaneous<br />

qr 391 G25<br />

Gazette du bon ton; arts, modes & frivolites; Lucien Vogel, directeur.<br />

2v. [1912-15?]<br />

Nolen, John. qr 710 A3in<br />

City plan for Akron; prepared for Chamber of Commerce. 1919.<br />

Parry, Edward Abbott, & Codrington, Sir A. E. 351-5 P26<br />

War pensions, past and present. [1918.] Nisbet.<br />

Contains bibliographical foot-notes.<br />

Brief account of English systems, from early times through the European war.<br />

Contains a chapter on the United States pension system.<br />

United States—Foreign and domestic commerce bureau, r 025.4 U2532<br />

Decimal system for indexed correspondence files, for use of the<br />

Bureau of foreign and domestic commerce and its district and commercial<br />

attache offices, July 1919. 1919.<br />

Books for the Blind<br />

The Library has a collection of about 3,700 books and 75 periodicals for the blind.<br />

The Pennsylvania Home Teaching Society and Free Circulating Library for the Blind<br />

supports in this district a teacher, herself totally blind, who, under the direction of this<br />

Library, znsits the adult blind in their homes and teaches them to read. This service<br />

and the use of the books are absolutely free to all the adult blind in or near Pittsburgh,<br />

and the Director requests that names and addresses of such persons be sent to him in<br />

order that the teacher may call upon them.<br />

American Braille<br />

Spicer, William Ambrose. qE 220.1 S75<br />

Our day in the light of prophecy; stereotyped and printed for the<br />

Bible Training School of South Lancaster, Mass. 5v. 1918. Amer.<br />

Printing House for the Blind.<br />

New York Point<br />

Hall, Eliza Calvert, (pseud, of Mrs Eliza (Calvert) qE Hi72a<br />

Obenchain).<br />

Aunt Jane of Kentucky. Clovernook Printing House for the Blind.


BOOKS ADDED—JANUARY 1920 45<br />

Revised Braille with Contractions<br />

Davis, Richard Harding. qE D323D0<br />

The boy scout. Perkins Institution for the Blind.<br />

Henry, O. (pseud, of Sydney Porter). E H452me<br />

Memoirs of a yellow dog. Clovernook Printing House for the<br />

Blind.<br />

Henry, O. (pseud, of Sydney Porter). E H452ro<br />

Romance of a busy broker. Clovernook Printing House for the<br />

Blind.<br />

Prouty, Olive Higgins. qE P972P<br />

Pluck. Perkins Institution for the Blind.<br />

Young People's Books<br />

Broadhurst, Jean, & Rhodes, C. L. comp. j 821.08 B75<br />

Verse for patriots, to encourage good citizenship. 1919. Lippincott.<br />

Contents: The "last" war.—The call.—Heroes.—On land and sea.—Dying for<br />

one's country.—National hymns and war songs.—Home and country.—The flag and<br />

freedom.—Peace after war.—The true patriot.<br />

Browne, C. A. j 784.4 B79<br />

Story of our national ballads. 1919. Crowell.<br />

Contents: Yankee Doodle.—Hail Columbia.—The star-spangled banner.—America.<br />

—Columbia, the gem of the ocean.—Dixie.—Maryland, my Maryland.—The battle cry<br />

of freedom.—John Brown's body.—Battle hymn of the Republic.—We are coming.—<br />

Marching through Ge<strong>org</strong>ia.—Occasional songs.—Spanish war songs.—Songs of the<br />

great war; British.—Songs of the great war; American.<br />

Mills, Enos Abijah. j M699S<br />

Story of Scotch. Houghton.<br />

For eight years, Scotch, a faithful collie, lived with his master high up in the<br />

Rockies. Winter and summer they explored the rugged mountains and together<br />

fought their way through blizzards and forest fires.<br />

Stout, William Bushnell. j 684 S88<br />

Boy's book of mechanical models. 1916. Little.<br />

The toys, made from inexpensive materials, range from a siren whistle, musical<br />

instruments and animals that move, to a grain elevator, a railway line and a submarine<br />

boat. Illustrated with drawings and diagrams.<br />

Thompson, Mrs Jeanette May. j 551-57 T38<br />

Water wonders every child should know; little studies of dew, frost,<br />

snow, ice and rain. 1907. Grosset. (Every child should know series.)<br />

Contents: When the dew falls.—The coming of the hoar frost.—Etchings by Jack<br />

Frost.—Mysteries and beauties of the snow.—Ice and its formation.—The beneficent<br />

rain.<br />

Especially valuable for the many beautiful photographic illustrations.


46 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Publications of the Library Now in Print<br />

Prices. Where two prices are given, the first is that for which<br />

the publication is sold at the Library only. All prices are strictly net,<br />

except for individual publications ordered in lots of twenty or more.<br />

Remittances must be made in advance, payable to Carnegie Library of<br />

Pittsburgh. All publications not marked * may be had free at the<br />

Library, or will be sent postpaid for 5 cents each.<br />

*Classified Catalogue of the Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh.<br />

FIRST SERIES, 1895-1902. 1907. vol. 1-3. 3,890 pp. $12.00.<br />

SECOND SERIES, 1902-1906. 1908. vol. 4-5. 2,020 pp. $5.00.<br />

THIRD SERIES, 1907-1911. 1914. vol. 6-8. 3,475 pp. $8.00.<br />

Bound in buckram with gilt tops. Include full author and subject indexes.<br />

The same [in pamphlet form].<br />

FIRST SERIES, 1895-1902. 10 parts. 1903-07.<br />

Part 1. General Works. 1907. 67 pp. 10 cents, postpaid.<br />

Part 2. Philosophy and Religion. 1903. 223 pp. Out of print.<br />

Part 3. Sociology and Philology. 1904. 340 pp. 15 cents; postpaid, 25 cents.<br />

Part 4. Natural Science and Useful Arts. 1904. 598 pp. 35 cents; postpaid,<br />

50 cents.<br />

Part 5. Fine Arts. 1905. 351 pp. 15 cents; postpaid, 25 cents.<br />

Part 6. Literature. 1905. 308 pp. 15 cents; postpaid, 25 cents.<br />

Part 7. Fiction. 1906. 446 pp. 25 cents; postpaid, 40 cents.<br />

Part 8. History and Travel. 1907. 691 pp. 50 cents; postpaid, 65 cents.<br />

Part 9. Biography. 1907. 381 pp. 20 cents; postpaid, 30 cents.<br />

Part 10. Indexes, Title-pages, Contents, Preface and Synopsis of Classification.<br />

1907. 850 pp. $1.00; postpaid, $1.20.<br />

SECOND SERIES, 1902-1906. 5 parts. 1907-08.<br />

Part 1. General Works, Philosophy, Religion, Sociology and Philology. 1907.<br />

425 pp. Out of print.<br />

Part 2. Natural Science, Useful Arts and Fine Arts. 1907. 477 pp. 45<br />

cents; postpaid, 60 cents.<br />

Part 3. Literature, English Fiction and Fiction in Foreign Languages. 1908.<br />

342 pp. 40 cents; postpaid, 50 cents.<br />

Part 4. History and Travel, Collected Biography and Individual Biography.<br />

1908. 465 pp. 45 cents ; postpaid, 60 cents.<br />

Part 5. Indexes, Title-pages, Contents, Preface and Synopsis of Classification.<br />

1908. 460 pp. 80 cents ; postpaid, 95 cents.<br />

THIRD SERIES, 1907-1911. 10 parts. 1012-14.<br />

Part 1. General Works, Philosophy, Religion. 1912. 372 pp. 40 cents;<br />

postpaid, 50 cents.<br />

Part 2. Sociology. Philology. 1912. 418 pp. 45 cents; postpaid, 60 cents.<br />

Part 3. Natural Science, Useful Arts. 1913. 623 pp. 60 cents; postpaid,<br />

75 cents.<br />

Part 4. Fine Arts. 1913. 237 pp. 25 cents; postpaid, 35 cents.<br />

Part 5. Literature. 1913. 271 pp. 30 cents; postpaid, 40 cents.<br />

Part 6. English Fiction, Fiction in Foreign Languages. 1913. 294 pp. 30<br />

cents; postpaid, 40 cents.<br />

Part 7. History and Travel. 1914. 401 pp. 40 cents; postpaid, 50 cents.<br />

Part 8. Biography. 1914. 276 pp. 30 cents; postpaid, 40 cents.<br />

Part 9. Books for the Blind. 1914. 44 pp. 5 cents; postpaid, 10 cents.<br />

Part 10. Indexes, Title-pages, Contents, Preface and Synopsis of Classification.<br />

1914. 816 pp. 80 cents; postpaid, $1.00.<br />

FOURTH SERIES, 1912-1917. 10 parts. 1919.<br />

Part 1. General Works, Philosophy, Religion. IQIQ. 208 pp. Postpaid, 50<br />

cents.<br />

Part 2. Sociology, Philology. 1919. 360 pp. Postpaid, 80 cents.<br />

Monthly Bulletin. 50 cents a year, postpaid.<br />

Not published in August and September.<br />

Annual Reports, ist-23d, 1896-1918. Sent free upon request.<br />

Except the 3d, 6th and 20th, which are out of print.


PUBLICATIONS OF THE LIBRARY 47<br />

Catalogue of the Carnegie Library School; a school for training in<br />

General Library Work, Library Work with Children and School<br />

Library Work. Sent free upon request.<br />

• Debate Index. 3d edition. 1919. 116 pp. 25 cents; postpaid, 30 cents.<br />

Periodicals and Other Serials Currently Received by the Carnegie<br />

Library of Pittsburgh. 7th edition. 1915. 42 pp.<br />

Books in the Library of the American Philatelic Society. 1910. 20 pp.<br />

Rules for Filing Cards in the Dictionary Catalogues of the Carnegie<br />

Library of Pittsburgh. Reprint of 2d edition. 1918. 32 pp.<br />

What a Public Library Finds to Do; by Elisa May Willard. 1917. 18 pp.<br />

Reference Lists<br />

History-<br />

Books of Interest in Connection with the European War. 1914. 26 pp.<br />

Braddock's Expedition, n pp. (Monthly Bulletin, Nov. 1906.)<br />

England and the English; a Few Suggestions for Reading. 1918. 12 pp.<br />

Expeditions of General Forbes against Fort Duquesne. 1908. 20 pp.<br />

Expeditions of General Bouquet to the Ohio Country, 1763 and 1764.<br />

n pp. (Monthly Bulletin, Dec. 1909.)<br />

Letters of General Forbes; Reprint of 35 Letters Relating to the Expedition<br />

against Fort Duquesne. 63 pp. 20 cents, postpaid.<br />

(Monthly Bulletin, Feb.-May 1909.)<br />

*Pennsylvania; a Reading List for the Use of Schools, with Special<br />

Reference to Indian Warfare and the Local History of Pittsburgh,<br />

1911. 83 pp. 20 cents; postpaid, 25 cents.<br />

Pittsburgh in 1816. 1916. 75 pp.<br />

Washington's Visits to Pittsburgh and the Ohio Country. 15 pp.<br />

(Monthly Bulletin, Feb. 1908.)<br />

The Whiskey Insurrection. 9 pp. (Monthly Bulletin, July 1906.)<br />

Biography-<br />

Famous Royal Women; a Reading List for Girls. 1908. n pp.<br />

Lives and Letters; a Selected and Annotated List. 1910. 36pp.<br />

*Men of Science and Industry; a Guide to the Biographies of Scientists,<br />

Engineers, Inventors and Physicians, in the Carnegie Library of<br />

Pittsburgh. 1915. 189pp. 20 cents; postpaid, 30 cents.<br />

Sociology-<br />

Housing. 1912. 45 pp.<br />

Immigration. 1918. 12 pp.<br />

Vocational Guidance. Supplement. 10 pp. (Monthly Bulletin, Dec.<br />

I9I5-)<br />

Publications of Interest to Engineers<br />

Air-Brakes. 1915. 55 pp.<br />

Air Conditioning. 1914. 58 pp.<br />

Brick Manufacture and Bricklaying. 26 pp. (Monthly Bulletin, Jan.<br />

1912.)<br />

By-Product Coking. 1915. 40 pp.<br />

Case-Hardening. 1918. 10 pp.<br />

Electric Driving in Rolling-Mills and Foundries. 11 pp. (Monthly<br />

Bulletin, Nov. 1907.)<br />

Electric Heating and Cooking. 1910. 16 pp.<br />

Engineering Ethics. 1917. 17 PP-<br />

Floods and Flood Protection. 48 pp. (Monthly Bulletin, July 1908.)<br />

Floods and Flood Protection. Supplement. 1911. 19 PP-<br />

The Gyroscope. 1917- 23 pp.<br />

*Index to Proceedings of the Engineers' Society of Western Pennsylvania,<br />

Volumes 1 to 20, 1880-1904; Compiled by Harrison W.<br />

Craver. 1906. 144 pp. $1.00 postpaid.


48 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

*Index to the Classified Catalogue of the Technology Department. 2d<br />

edition. 1916. 63 pp. 10 cents.<br />

Lampblack. 1919. 8 pp.<br />

List of Technical Indexes and Bibliographies Appearing Serially. 1910.<br />

17 pp.<br />

Market Prices Appearing Currently in Technical and Trade Journals.<br />

1918. 6 pp.<br />

*Men of Science and Industry; a Guide to the Biographies of Scientists,<br />

Engineers, Inventors and Physicians, in the Carnegie Library of<br />

Pittsburgh. 1915. 189pp. 20 cents; postpaid, 30 cents.<br />

Metal Corrosion and Protection. 2d edition, revised and enlarged.<br />

58 pp. (Monthly Bulletin, July 1909-)<br />

Mica. 12 pp. (Monthly Bulletin, Oct. 1908.)<br />

One Hundred Recent Books on Agriculture. 1910. 19 pp.<br />

Refuse and Garbage Disposal. 1909. 39 pp.<br />

Road Dust Preventives. 1916. 39 pp.<br />

*Sand; Its Occurrence, Properties and Uses. 1918. 72 pp. 15 cents.<br />

postpaid.<br />

Scientific and Technical Reference Books. 19 pp. (Monthly Bulletin,<br />

Nov. 1916.)<br />

*Sewage Disposal and Treatment. 1910. 96 pp. 15 cents, postpaid.<br />

Smoke Prevention. 18 pp. (Monthly Bulletin, May 1907.)<br />

Sodium Nitrate Industry of Chile. 7 pp. (Monthly Bulletin, March<br />

1908.)<br />

Steam Turbines. 21 pp. (Monthly Bulletin, Nov. 1904.)<br />

*Technical Book Review Index, v.i-date, March 1917-date. 50 cents<br />

a year, postpaid.<br />

No. 1-3, March, April, May, published in the Monthly Bulletin of those months,<br />

5 cents each, postpaid.<br />

v.i, no.4-v.3, no.i (July 1917-March 1919), issued separately, quarterly, 15<br />

cents each, postpaid.<br />

Trees and Forestry. 1917. 18 pp.<br />

Water Softening. 8 pp. (Monthly Bulletin, June 1904.)<br />

Library 'Work with Children<br />

•Catalogue of Books, Annotated and Arranged, and Provided by the<br />

Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh for the Use of the First Eight<br />

Grades in the Pittsburgh Schools. 1907. 331 pp. 35 cents;<br />

postpaid, 50 cents.<br />

•Annotated Catalogue of Books Used in the Home Libraries and<br />

Reading Clubs. 1005. no pp. 20 cents; postpaid, 25 cents.<br />

Illustrated Editions of Children's Books. 1915. 20 pp.<br />

Patriotism Through Literature; by Elva S. Smith. 1919. 17 pp.<br />

(Monthly Bulletin, June 1919.)<br />

Story-Telling<br />

Stories from the Ballads of Robin Hood; Outlines for Story-Telling.<br />

1914- 38 pp.<br />

Stories from the Norse; Outlines for Story-Telling. 1914. 22 pp.<br />

•Stories to Tell to Children. 2d edition. 1918. 72 pp. 25 cents.<br />

Reading Lists<br />

Famous Royal Women; a Reading List for Girls. 1908. 11 pp.<br />

Favorite Books of Well-known People When They Were Boys and<br />

Girls. 2d reprint. 1918. 12 pp.<br />

"Foreign Lands Where Wonders Are." 1911. 14 pp.<br />

•Pennsylvania; a Reading List for the Use of Schools, with Special<br />

Reference to Indian Warfare and the Local History of Pittsburgh.<br />

1911. 83 pp. 20 cents; postpaid, 25 cents.<br />

January IS, 1920.


CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

MONTHLY BULLETIN<br />

VOL. 25 FEBRUARY 1920 NO. 2<br />

LAWRENCEVILLE BRANCH<br />

CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

PITTSBURGH<br />

CARNEGIE LIBRARY<br />

1920


Board of Trustees<br />

S. H. CHURCH, President<br />

ANDREW W. MELLON, Vice-President<br />

J. D. HAILMAN, Secretary<br />

JAMES H. REED, Treasurer<br />

E. V. BABCOCK DAVID B. OLIVER<br />

W. W. BLACKBURN H. K. PORTER<br />

JOHN H. DAILEY<br />

W. H. ROBERTSON<br />

W. Y. ENGLISH CHARLES L. TAYLOR<br />

ROBERT GARLAND<br />

J. J. TURNER<br />

JOHN H. HENDERSON<br />

H. D. WILLIAMS<br />

JOHN S. HERRON DANIEL WINTERS<br />

Library Committee<br />

J. J. TURNER, Chairman<br />

E. V. BABCOCK J. D. HAILMAN<br />

ROBERT GARLAND DANIEL WINTERS<br />

Director<br />

JOHN H. LEETE<br />

Central Library, Schenley Park<br />

Branch Libraries<br />

Lawrenceville Branch, 279 Fisk Street<br />

West End Branch, Wabash and Neptune Streets<br />

Wylie Avenue Branch, Wylie Avenue and Green Street<br />

Mount Washington Branch, 315 Grandview Avenue<br />

Hazelwood Branch, 4748 Monongahela Street<br />

East Liberty Branch, Station Street and Larimer Avenue<br />

South Side Branch, Carson and Twenty-second Streets<br />

Homewood Branch, Hamilton and Lang Avenues


Contents<br />

Lawrenceville Branch<br />

Current Terms Defined<br />

Origin of St. Valentine Customs<br />

- - - - - - 57<br />

Prices of Library Publications<br />

- - - - - - - 61<br />

New Periodicals - - - -<br />

Present Day Problems<br />

Books Added, January i to<br />

February i, 1920<br />

Agriculture - - - - -<br />

Architecture -<br />

Biography -<br />

Blind, Books for the -<br />

•Business. Communication -<br />

Chemistry - - - - - -<br />

Commerce.<br />

Costume - -<br />

Communication<br />

Domestic Economy - - -<br />

Drama. Theatre - - - -<br />

Drawing. Decoration -<br />

Economics - - - - - -<br />

Education - - - - -<br />

Engineering -<br />

Ethics - - - - - -<br />

Page<br />

53<br />

- 54<br />

61<br />

- 62<br />

84<br />

88<br />

79<br />

77<br />

74<br />

74<br />

79<br />

83<br />

81<br />

72<br />

73<br />

78<br />

68<br />

Page<br />

European War - - - - 86<br />

Fiction - - - - - - 64<br />

Fine Arts - - - - - - 80<br />

French Fiction - - - - 67<br />

History - - - - - - 86<br />

Language - - - - - 75<br />

Law - - - - - - - 73<br />

Literature - - - - - 81<br />

Mathematics - 77<br />

Medicine, Physiology, Hygiene<br />

- - - - - - 78<br />

Miscellaneous - - - - - 88<br />

Music - - - - - - 81<br />

Philosophy - - - - - 67<br />

Poetry - - - - - - 82<br />

Politics and Government - - 71<br />

Religion - - - - - - 69<br />

Science - - - - - - - 7 6<br />

Sociology - - - - - 70<br />

Spanish Fiction - - - - 67<br />

Travel and Description - - 85<br />

Useful Arts - 77<br />

Women - - - - - - 74<br />

Young People's Books - - 88


Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh<br />

Monthly Bulletin<br />

Published monthly, except in August and September, by the Carnegie Library of<br />

Pittsburgh, Forbes Street and Bellefield Avenue, Schenley Park, Pittsburgh, Pa. President,<br />

S. H. Church, Carnegie Library, Forbes Street and Bellefield Avenue; Secretary,<br />

J. D. Hailman; Treasurer, James H. Reed, 1027 Carnegie Building; Director, John H.<br />

Leete, Carnegie Library, Forbes Street and Bellefield Avenue.<br />

Subscription 50 cents a year.<br />

Vol. 25 February 1920 No. 2<br />

Lawrenceville Branch<br />

Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh<br />

The Lawrenceville Branch, which is the oldest of the<br />

branches of the Library, is on Fisk Street between Butler Street<br />

and Penn Avenue. When it was opened to the public on May<br />

11, 1898, it was in the center of the old Lawrenceville residence<br />

district, but conditions in that part of the city have changed so<br />

radically that its position is no longer so fortunate for meeting<br />

the needs of the section of the city which it serves. Altered<br />

conditions have likewise affected the general character of the<br />

demands made upon the Branch.<br />

A few of the old time Irish and Scotch-Irish residents of<br />

Lawrenceville remain, but there is now a large element of foreign<br />

born people—German, Polish, Lithuanian, Russian, Croatian,<br />

Yiddish, Swedish, Slovakian—many of whom read English<br />

with difficulty or not at all, so that books in these languages<br />

and books of easy readings in English are now a considerable<br />

part of the collection kept in this building.<br />

53


54 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

The Lawrenceville Branch is called on for circulating and<br />

reference work with both adults and children, just as is the<br />

Central Library, but the demands are of a different character<br />

because of the special conditions in the district served. The<br />

reference work is largely with high school, grade school and<br />

parochial school pupils, although there is also somewhat of a<br />

demand for information on technical questions.<br />

This branch does an extensive work with children in lending<br />

books for home use and in the telling of famous stories from<br />

literature and history. It also conducts clubs of various kinds<br />

and co-operates with the playgrounds and various other community<br />

<strong>org</strong>anizations of the district in the ways in which a<br />

library can help to further the intelligence and information of<br />

a community.<br />

Current Terms Defined<br />

Various terms frequently seen in recent books, magazines<br />

and newspapers are of such recent use in the exact sense in<br />

which they are employed, that their meaning is vague to many<br />

readers. Explanations of some of these terms are given here.<br />

Mandatory<br />

The League of Nations recognizes that there are such things as<br />

"backward peoples"—peoples which are unable to govern themselves,<br />

and yet which, in their dis<strong>org</strong>anized and anarchic state, constitute a<br />

menace to themselves and the peace of the world. It recognizes also<br />

that the old-fashioned way of dealing with such peoples—annexation,<br />

enslavement, and exploitation—is something which the conscience of<br />

the modern world cannot endorse. It has therefore devised the system<br />

of "mandatory" or trusteeship. Under this plan a nation is expected to<br />

take charge of such a dis<strong>org</strong>anized territory, administer it in the interest<br />

•f its people, introduce education and the other essentials of progress,<br />

all with the idea of training such a people in the ways of self-government<br />

and democracy, and of ultimately turning their country back to their<br />

keeping. The cynical smile at this lofty scheme; yet the United States<br />

during the last twenty years, has given an illustration which proves<br />

that it may be successful. The Philippine Islands, when we took them<br />

from Spain in 1899, were as badly dis<strong>org</strong>anized as Mexico is to-day,<br />

and they were just as lacking in what may be called the fundamentals


CURRENT TERMS DEFINED 55<br />

of civilization—universal primary education, sanitation, agriculture,<br />

communications—as is Mexico to-day. In twenty years we have introduced<br />

all these agencies of progress, with the result that the Philippines<br />

are to-day prosperous, happy, even enlightened, and show a capacity<br />

for self-government which points to the day when, under proper control,<br />

we can give them their independence. World's Work, 1919.<br />

Pogrom<br />

[Originally] the name given anti-Jewish riots in Russia. The first<br />

pogroms took place in 1881 after the assassination of Alexander II<br />

by the revolutionists, and were <strong>org</strong>anized by a secret society which the<br />

officials of the government encouraged, hoping to turn the discontent<br />

of the people with political conditions into the channels of race hatred.<br />

The pogroms of 1881 were the direct cause of the first large wave of<br />

Russian-Jewish emigration to the United States. The policy of <strong>org</strong>anizing<br />

such riots was not renewed till 1903, when the massacre of Kishinev<br />

in the Province of Bessarabia took place. This was the first demonstration<br />

in which blood was shed, about 50 Jews being killed and several<br />

hundred wounded. After the manifesto of Oct. 17 (30), 1905, a series of<br />

pogroms was <strong>org</strong>anized throughout the Pale of Residence by the<br />

counterrevolutionary and reactionary forces; their <strong>org</strong>anized and<br />

governmental character has been partially proved by various investigations<br />

and by the publication of secret government documents. It is<br />

estimated that at this time Jews were attacked in more than 600 cities,<br />

villages, and towns; the number of killed, wounded, and tortured was<br />

several thousand, while the property damage exceeded 50, 000, 000 roubles.<br />

The Jews were overwhelmed by the calamity, and hundreds of<br />

thousands of them left Russia for the United States, South America,<br />

Africa, and Palestine. Yet they did not all suffer passively, in many<br />

cases <strong>org</strong>anizing leagues for self-defense. New International Encyclopaedia.<br />

Recently the use of the word "pogrom" has been extended to include<br />

anti-Jewish persecutions in whatever country they may occur.<br />

Near East<br />

The Near East consists of the countries of the Balkan Peninsula<br />

and of Asia Minor, including Armenia, Mesopotamia, Syria, Palestine,<br />

Arabia, and Persia. Outlook, 1919.<br />

Far East<br />

The Far East comprises Eastern Siberia, China. Japan, Korea,<br />

Indo-China, the Straits Settlements, and the islands adjacent to the<br />

above countries. Sometimes India is also included. Outlook, 1919.


MONTHLY BULLETIN<br />

OF THE<br />

CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

VOLUME 25<br />

1920<br />

ok<br />

PITTSBURGH<br />

CARNEGIE LIBRARY<br />

1921


56 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Czecho-Slovaks<br />

The Czecho-Slovaks were the pioneers of the Slavs in Europe,<br />

forming a bulwark against the German onslaughts toward the east. It<br />

has been said that the Czecho-Slovaks made possible the rise and<br />

development of Poland, and it was the latter, together with Lithuania,<br />

that stopped the Teutonic movement in the direction of Russia, preventing<br />

the formation between the Dnieper and the Rhine of a huge German<br />

empire.<br />

The Czech-Slovaks penetrated into the very heart of Europe, establishing<br />

themselves in the geographical center of the continent. The<br />

Czechs and the Slovaks are one and the same race, but were early divided<br />

by their conquerors. The first inhabiting Bohemia, Moravia and some<br />

sections of Silesia, were incorporated with Austria. The second, living<br />

in so-called Slovakia, were subjugated by the Magyars and became part<br />

of Hungary. United, the land of the Czecho-Slovaks is bounded on the<br />

north by Germany and Poland; on the west by Germany; on the south<br />

by Austria and Hungary, and on the east by Ukraine. Geographically,<br />

then, the Czecho-Slovaks formed the very backbone of the disrupted<br />

Dual Monarchy. Numerically, they were far from being a negligible<br />

quantity, as there are about seven and a half million Czechs and three<br />

million Slovaks. Economically, Bohemia was the most developed and<br />

productive part of Austria, yielding five times as much coal as the rest<br />

of the State, twice as many agricultural products, and bearing sixtythree<br />

per cent, of Austria's taxation.<br />

The history of the Czechs goes back almost to the beginning of<br />

the Christian era. Nearly two thousand years ago their forefathers<br />

waged bitter warfare against the Teutons. They established their<br />

supremacy after several centuries of struggle, and already in the<br />

seventh century Bohemia emerges as a consolidated nation.. .<br />

On the Galician battlefield, in July, 1917, the foundation was really<br />

laid for the Czecho-Slovak Republic...<br />

On October 18, 1918, Czecho-Slovakia declared its independence<br />

and on November 14 a National Assembly met in Prague and proclaimed<br />

the establishment of a Czecho-Slovak Republic. From Isaac Don Levine's<br />

"The Resurrected Nations."<br />

Jugoslavs<br />

Jugoslavia is the land of the Southern Slavs. The word "jug" in<br />

Slavic means "south." The Jugoslavs and the Southern Slavs are therefore<br />

synonymous terms. Racially the Jugoslavs include the Bulgars,<br />

Serbs, Croats and Slovenes. Politically, however, the Bulgars have<br />

dissociated themselves from the Southern Slavs. Jugoslavia in its<br />

current usage is therefore primarily a political term, applied to the<br />

territory inhabited by Serbs, Croats and Slovenes.


ORIGIN OF ST. VALENTINE CUSTOMS 57<br />

This territory is a huge block nearly two hundred miles wide,<br />

bounded on the west by Italy and the Adriatic Sea; on the north by<br />

Austria and Hungary; on the east by Roumania and Bulgaria; and on<br />

the south by Greece and Albania. It comprises Montenegro, Serbia,<br />

Bosnia-Herzegovina, Dalmatia, Croatia-Slavonia, Carniola, and sections<br />

of Istria, Goritzia, Styria, Carinthia, Baranya, Backa and the Banat. All<br />

of these, except the first two, were provinces of Austria and Hungary<br />

before the outbreak of the World War. The population of entire<br />

Jugoslavia exceeds twelve million, more than a third of which falls to<br />

Serbia and Montenegro.<br />

The Slovenes, the least numerous of the Jugoslavs, numbering only<br />

about a million and a half, inhabit the northwestern end of the country,<br />

surrounded by the Italians to the west and the Austrians to the north.<br />

The Croats occupy the central regions of Jugoslavia, and the Serbs and<br />

Montenegrins are at the extreme south and east. While the language<br />

of the Croats and Serbs is nearly identical, that of the Slovenes is a<br />

distinct dialect. These linguistic differences are undoubtedly the result<br />

of the forced estrangement of the various elements of the Jugoslav<br />

race in the course of centuries of struggle and slavery.<br />

In their early history, the Jugoslavs appear as one people. Fifteen<br />

centuries ago they crossed from the Carpathian ranges and established<br />

themselves in their present homeland. From Isaac Don Levine's "The<br />

Resurrected Nations."<br />

Origin of St. Valentine Customs<br />

Custom, more potent than any other authority known to man, has<br />

decreed that on St. Valentine's Day, which in the Roman and Anglican<br />

calendar falls on February 14, young folks of both sexes, and older<br />

ones, too, for that matter, should exchange missives and epistles, either<br />

comic or sentimental, in which the foibles of the receiver or the love of<br />

the sender are set forth in prose, in verse, and in emblematic picture.<br />

Now there is no custom without a reason. But the reason for this cannot<br />

be found in the life of the good saint who is made to endorse the custom<br />

with his name. He wrote no love-songs.. .He was a bishop or Pope of<br />

Rome who stood steadfast to the faith during the Claudian persecutions,<br />

and for that faith was cast into jail, where he cured his keeper's daughter<br />

of blindness .. .<br />

Nor was there anything, either comic or sentimental, in the fate<br />

of St. Valentine when the miracle was made known to the authorities.<br />

They first beat him with clubs and then beheaded him. What was left of<br />

him is preserved in the church of St. Praxedes at Rome, where a gate,<br />

now known as the Porta del Popolo, was formerly named, in his honor,<br />

Porta Valentini, or Valentine's Gate.


58 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Another Valentine also claims a share in the day, who has as little<br />

to do with comedy or sentiment. He was the bishop who healed a son<br />

of Craton the rhetorician, and was choked to death by a fish-bone...<br />

Either Valentine would be surprised to find himself a lovers' saint.. .<br />

In default of any light thrown upon the custom by biography, etymologists<br />

and lexicographers, antiquarians and hagiologists, have drawn<br />

more or less satisfactory explanations from their special studies...<br />

[The etymologist] points out that v and g were frequently interchangeable<br />

in popular speech, and as a notable instance produces the<br />

words gallant and valiant, which both spring from the Latin valens. He<br />

then explains that the Norman word galantin, a lover of the fair sex.. .<br />

was frequently written and pronounced valantan or valentin. And from<br />

these premises he concludes that by a natural confusion of names Bishop<br />

Valentine was established as the patron saint of sweethearts and lovers,<br />

although he has no real connection, not even an etymological one,<br />

with that class of beings.<br />

So far so good. As a guess why St. Valentine became associated<br />

with the custom this is plausible, though not convincing. Still, it leaves<br />

the origin of the custom as much in the dark as ever. . .<br />

Let us turn to the antiquary. Francis Douce, in his "Illustrations<br />

of Shakespeare" (1807), suggests that St. Valentine's Day is the Christianized<br />

form of the classic Lupercalia, which were feasts held in Rome<br />

during the month of February in honor of Pan and Juno (hence known<br />

as Juno Februata),when among other ceremonies it was customary to<br />

put the names of young women into a box, from which they were<br />

drawn by the men as chance directed, and that the Christian clergy,<br />

finding it difficult or impossible to extirpate the pagan practice, gave it<br />

at least a religious aspect by substituting the names of particular saints<br />

for those of the women.<br />

He buttresses up his opinion by an appeal to the hagiologist. This<br />

is no less a person than the Rev. Alban Butler, who, in his "Lives of the<br />

Saints," explains that pastors of the Christian Church, "by every means<br />

in their power, worked zealously to eradicate the vestiges of pagan<br />

superstition; chiefly by the simple process of retaining the ceremonies,<br />

but modifying their significance; and substituted, for the drawing of<br />

names in honor of the goddess Februata Juno, the names of some particular<br />

saints. But as the festival of the Lupercalia took place during<br />

February, the 14th of that month, St. Valentine's Day, was selected<br />

for this new feast, as occurring about the same time. . .<br />

But see how strong is the old Adam in the hearts of the unregenerate.<br />

. .Youth was not satisfied to imitate these holy fathers and<br />

ballot for a ghostly partner in heaven. . . So it went back to something<br />

like the pagan custom.<br />

This was at least as early as the fourteenth century. . .In the latter


ORIGIN OF ST. VALENTINE CUSTOMS 59<br />

part of the sixteenth century the Church, in the person of St. Francis<br />

de Sales, once more stepped in to sanctify the rites of St. Valentine's<br />

Day. Again Butler is our authority. He tells us how St. Francis<br />

"severely forbade the custom of Valentines, or giving Boys in writing<br />

the names of Girls to be admired and attended on by them; and, to<br />

abolish it, he changed it into giving billets with the names of certain<br />

Saints, for them to honor and imitate in a particular manner."<br />

But in the end the Boys and Girls triumphed over the Saint... In<br />

France itself it appears that the names of young people of both sexes<br />

were written out and put into proper receptacles, and drawings took<br />

place, in which each sex could secure a partner from the other, andit<br />

was customary for the sentimental bond set up by the selection so made<br />

to inure for one year and no longer, unless, as a sarcastic bachelor<br />

observes, "terminated by the marriage or death of the parties." During<br />

the year each stood to the other in the relation of Cavalier and Lady of<br />

Beauty, the knight being bound to the honor and defence of his fair<br />

one, for which she repaid him in smiles and silk favors, when silk was<br />

obtainable and too much good-natured encouragement was not strictly<br />

forbidden by parents and guardians.<br />

The same mutuality obtained across the Channel. Misson, in his<br />

"Travels in England" (1698), tells us that on the eve of St. Valentine's<br />

Day "an equal number of Maids and Bachelors get together, each writes<br />

their true or some feigned name upon separate billets, which they roll<br />

up and draw by way of lots, the Maids taking the Men's billets, and the<br />

Men the Maids'; so that each of the young Men lights upon a Girl that<br />

he calls his Valentine, and each of the Girls upon a young Man which<br />

she calls hers. By this means each has two Valentines—but the Man<br />

sticks faster to the Valentine that is fallen to him than to the Valentine<br />

to whom he is fallen. Fortune having thus divided the company into so<br />

many couples, the Valentines give balls and treats to their mistresses,<br />

wear their billets several days upon their bosoms or sleeves.. .There is<br />

another kind of Valentine, which is the first young Man or Woman<br />

chance throws in your way in the street, or elsewhere," on Valentine's<br />

Day itself. The latter appears at an early date to have been the manner<br />

in Scotland, if Sir Walter is right in his description of the wooing of<br />

the Fair Maid of Perth and of Hal of the Wynd. A more notable<br />

example is Ophelia's song:<br />

"Good morrow, 'tis St. Valentine's Day,<br />

All in the morn betime,<br />

And I a maid at your window,<br />

To be your valentine."<br />

It is evident, therefore, that in Shakespeare's day the custom of<br />

challenging your valentine had already commenced. The challenge


60 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

consisted simply in saying, "Good morrow, 'tis St. Valentine's Day,<br />

and he or she who saidit first on meeting a person of the opposite sex<br />

received a present. Later a gallant custom enacted that the gentleman<br />

alone should give the present, but only if he were successfully challenged.<br />

This explains good Mr. Pepys's anxiety when early on St.<br />

Valentine's Day (1664) he called at Sir William Batten's and would not<br />

go in "till I asked whether they that opened the door was a man or a<br />

woman, and Mingo, who was there, answered a woman, which, with his<br />

tones, made me laugh; so up I went, and took Mrs. Martha for my<br />

Valentine (which I do only for complacency); and Sir W. Batten he go<br />

in the same manner to my wife, and so we were very merry."<br />

It seems also that some element of choice as well as of chance had<br />

now been introduced into the sport, for a person could wilfully close his<br />

or her eyes and refuse to open them until an appropriate mate arrived.<br />

Thus, on next St. Valentine's Day Mr. Pepys records that Will Bowyer<br />

came to be his wife's valentine, "she having (at which I made good<br />

sport to myself) held her hands all the morning, that she might not see<br />

the painters that were at work gilding my chimney-piece and pictures<br />

in my dining-room."<br />

From the same diarist we get the first record of a drawing or<br />

illustration as connected with the day. This is under date of February<br />

14, 1667.. .Another innovation is mentioned under the same date: "I<br />

do first observe the drawing of mottoes as well as of names; so that<br />

Pierce, who drew my wife's, did draw also a motto. Her motto was<br />

'most courteous and most fair,' which, as it may be used for an anagram<br />

upon each name, might be very pretty."<br />

And so in the pages of Pepys we trace the hint for the modern<br />

valentine. It only remained to join the illustration and the motto, to<br />

enlarge the latter into a verse, original or selected, and to give the<br />

sender an unlimited choice as to the person or persons whom he should<br />

favor. Exactly when this union of qualities was effected we have no<br />

later Pepys to inform us. But we know that by the beginning of the<br />

present century [the nineteenth] the new method had fully established<br />

itself in popular favor.<br />

In the days of quill pens and dear postage the transmission of<br />

valentines through the post was an expensive luxury.. .With the<br />

reduction of the heavy postal charges printed valentines gradually came<br />

into use...The introduction of the cheap postage of to-day laid the<br />

foundation of the present trade in valentines... Cheap postage is also<br />

responsible for the introduction of the comic valentine... But side by<br />

side with this monstrosity grew up the pretty and fanciful cards whose<br />

use in a modified form has been'extended also to Christmas and to<br />

New Year's. From William S. Walsh's "Curiosities of Popular Customs."


LIBRARY NEWS AND NOTICES 61<br />

Prices of Library Publications<br />

The list of "Publications of the Library Now in Print" at<br />

the back of this "Bulletin" gives the price of each. Any publication<br />

not marked * in that list will be sent postpaid on receipt<br />

of five cents.<br />

New Periodicals<br />

The following magazines and newspapers have recently<br />

been added to the list of those regularly received in the Periodical<br />

Room:<br />

Magazines<br />

American Gas Association Bulletin of Abstracts. Easton, Pa.<br />

American Gas Association Monthly. Easton, Pa.<br />

American Metal Market and Daily Iron and Steel Report.<br />

York.<br />

Class. Chicago.<br />

Contemporary Verse. New York.<br />

Dearborn Independent. Dearborn, Mich.<br />

Eastern Europe. Paris.<br />

Factory. Chicago.<br />

New<br />

Journal of the American Institute of Criminal Law and Criminology.<br />

Chicago.<br />

Mexican Review. Mexico City.<br />

National Petroleum News. Cleveland.<br />

Power Plant Engineering. Chicago.<br />

Purdue Alumnus. Lafayette, Ind.<br />

Quarterly Bulletin of the Michigan Agricultural College Experiment<br />

Station. East Lansing, Mich.<br />

Russian Cooperative News. New York.<br />

Newspapers<br />

Columbus (O.) Evening Dispatch.<br />

Memphis (Tenn.) Commercial Appeal.<br />

Newark (N.J.) News.<br />

St. Paul (Minn.) Pioneer Press.<br />

Tampa (Fla.) Tribune.<br />

Toledo (O.) Blade.


62 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Present Day Problems<br />

The books in this list are entered also, in fuller form and with annotations,<br />

under their proper headings in this issue of the "Bulletin."<br />

They are brought together here to show the additions of books which<br />

are of interest in connection with problems of the day. The date of<br />

publication is 1919 unless otherwise stated.<br />

Acworth, W. M. Historical sketch of government ownership<br />

of railroads in foreign countries. 1917<br />

r 385 A18<br />

Atkisson, H. L. B. Readjustment r 330.9 A87<br />

Burton, T. E. Modern political tendencies and the effect of<br />

the war thereon<br />

342-7 B95<br />

Detroit—Education board. Teaching of patriotism.<br />

Duggan, S. P. H. and others, cd. The league of nations<br />

1918.. .r 172.1 D48<br />

341-6 D87<br />

Emerson, Harrington. Comparative study of wage and bonus<br />

plans. 1917<br />

r 331.2 E58<br />

Gilkey, S. AY. A plea for greater unity<br />

280 G39<br />

Hayward, P. R. Compensation for injuries to Canadian workmen.<br />

1918<br />

qr 331.823 H37<br />

Hutchins, Miss B. L.<br />

[I9I7-]<br />

Women in industry after the war.<br />

r 3314 H96<br />

Kendall, C. W. The truth about Korea 951-9 K17<br />

Knoeppel, C. E. Women in industry. [1918?] r 331.4 K34<br />

Lippincott, Isaac. Problems of reconstruction<br />

330.9 L733<br />

McMurtrie, D. C. Rehabilitation of the war cripple.<br />

[1918.] r 371.91 M2ir<br />

Marcosson, I. F. Peace and business 382 M37<br />

Moore, H. H. The youth and the nation<br />

New careers for women. 1917<br />

174 M87<br />

396.5 N26<br />

Red Cross Institute for Crippled and Disabled Men. American<br />

program for the rehabilitation of disabled soldiers.<br />

[ T 9i8.] qr 371.91 R26pr<br />

Shimmin, A. X.<br />

[^/J<br />

Taxation and social reconstruction.<br />

Smith, T. R. comp. The woman question. 1918<br />

r 336.2 S55<br />

396 S662<br />

Taft, J. J. The woman movement from the point of view of<br />

social consciousness. 1915<br />

qr 396 T13


PRESENT DAY PROBLEMS 63<br />

United States—Federal reserve board. Index-digest of the<br />

act of Oct. 15, 1914 (Clayton act) and of the act approved<br />

May 15, 1916 (Kern amendment). 1916. . . ,r 338.8 U25393<br />

United States—Mediation and conciliation board. Railroad<br />

labor arbitrations. 1916<br />

r 331.1 U253r<br />

United States—Negro economics division. Negro migration<br />

in 1916-17<br />

r 326 U2532<br />

Webb, S. J. & Freeman, A. J. Great Britain after the war.<br />

[1918.] r 330.9 W36<br />

Zimmern, A. E. Nationality & government<br />

320.4 Z65


Books Added to the Library-<br />

January 1 to February 1, 1920<br />

An r or b prefixed to the call number indicates that the book must be<br />

called for and used in the Reference or the Technology Room; j that it i<br />

especially suitable for children,.and q that it is quarto sice or large<br />

Fiction<br />

Benson, Edward Frederic. B443da<br />

David Blaize and the blue door. Doran.<br />

David slips through the blue door behind his pillow into wonderland, where he<br />

has extraordinary and amusing experiences.<br />

Bertrand, Adrien. B465C<br />

Call of the soil ("L'appel du sol;" prix Goncourt, 1916); tr. by J. L.<br />

May. Lane.<br />

A vivid story of certain French chasseurs during the early months of the European<br />

war. Interspersed with the horrors of desperate conflict, are philosophical conversations<br />

of the officers, which reveal the great, unselfish love of the French for their<br />

country.<br />

Bojer, Johan. B597f<br />

Face of the world; tr. from the Norwegian by Jessie Muir. Moffat.<br />

The story of a young physician obsessed with the idea of bearing the burden of<br />

the world's troubles, who eventually sees the necessity of limiting his sympathies.<br />

Brown, Alice. B783bl<br />

The black drop. Macmillan.<br />

In a family of intensely loyal Americans there is one son who is utterly false and<br />

who secretly works for Germany during the European war. The story centers about his<br />

treachery, its effect on the various characters and the tracing of clues which finally<br />

brings him to justice.<br />

Brown, Mrs Demetra (Vaka), & Brown, Kenneth. B79131<br />

In pawn to a throne. Lane.<br />

War time Greece forms the setting for a story of love and intrigue, in which the<br />

central characters are a beautiful girl descended from a noble Greek family and the<br />

young secretary of the American legation.<br />

Cable, Boyd. Cii32a<br />

Air men o' war. Dutton.<br />

Contents: Silver wings.—Bring home the 'bus.—A tender subject.—A good day.<br />

—A rotten formation.—Quick work.—The air masters.—"The attack was broken."—<br />

If they knew—.—The Fo-fum's reputation.—Like gentlemen.—"Air activity."—The<br />

Little Butcher.—A cushy job.—No thoroughfare.—Thrills.—The sequel.—The raid<br />

killers.<br />

64


BOOKS ADDED—FEBRUARY 1920 65<br />

Clifford, Mrs Lucy (Lane). Cs87mi<br />

Miss Fingal. Scribner.<br />

An apparently insignificant little heiress develops happiness and unexpected power<br />

under responsibility.<br />

Clouston, Joseph Storer. C6igsi<br />

Simon. Doran.<br />

Detective story.<br />

Couperus, Louis. C83ge<br />

Ecstasy; a study of happiness; a novel; tr. by Alexander Teixeira<br />

de Mattos. Dodd.<br />

Dawson, Coningsby William. D3324t<br />

Test-of scarlet; a romance of reality. Lane.<br />

Appeared in "Good housekeeping," v.68-69, June-Oct. 1919.<br />

A war story. "The mind and soul, the strength and weakness, of the individual<br />

soldier are indicated with deep feeling and true literary art." Outlook, 1919.<br />

Dunsany, Edward John Moreton Drax Plunkett, baron. Dg262tl<br />

Tales of three hemispheres. Luce.<br />

Contents: The last dream of Bwona Khubla.—The postman of Otford.—The<br />

prayer of Boob Aheera.—East and west.—A pretty quarrel.—How the gods avenged<br />

Meoul Ri Ning.—The gifts of the gods.—The sack of emeralds.—The old brown coat.—<br />

An archive of the older mysteries.—A city of wonder.—BEYOND THE FIELDS WE KNOW:<br />

First tale: Idle days on the Yann; Second tale: A shop in Go-by street; Third<br />

tale: The avenger of Perdondaris.<br />

Glasgow, Ellen. G46sbu<br />

The builders. Doubleday.<br />

Appeared in the "Woman's home companion," v.46, Oct.-Dec. 1919.<br />

A beautiful but utterly selfish and designing woman, her husband, a man of higli<br />

ideals who is keenly interested in the furthering of true American democracy, a nurse<br />

in the home who gradually comes to understand and care for him, are the central figures<br />

in this novel.<br />

Gregory, Owen. G867m<br />

Meccania, the super-state. Methuen.<br />

A satire primarily of Prussian Germany.<br />

Henry, O. (pseud, of Sydney Porter). H4522ro<br />

Rolling stones. Doubleday.<br />

Contents: The dream.—A ruler of men.—The atavism of John Tom Little Bear.—<br />

Helping the other fellow.—The marionettes.—The marquis and Miss Sally.—A fog in<br />

Santone.— The friendly call.— A dinner at .— Sound and fury.— Tictocq.—<br />

Tracked to doom.—A snapshot at the president.—An unfinished Christmas story.—<br />

The unprofitable servant.—Aristocracy versus hash.—The prisoner of Zembla.—A<br />

strange story.—Fickle fortune; or, How Gladys hustled.—An apology.—Lord Oakhurst's<br />

curse.—Bexar script no.2692.—Queries and answers.—POEMS: The pewee ;<br />

Nothing to say; The murderer; Some postscripts; A contribution; The old farm;<br />

Vanity ; The lullaby boy ; Chanson de Boheme ; Hard to f<strong>org</strong>et; Drop a tear in this<br />

slot; Tamales.—Some letters.<br />

Hichens, Robert Smythe. H5222m<br />

Mrs Marden. Doran.<br />

Subtle story of a popular London society woman who loses her only son in the<br />

war. In her grief she turns to spiritualism, but a series of events reveals fraud. Only<br />

through pain does she at last find belief in God.<br />

Johnson, Alvin Saunders. J359J<br />

John Stuyvesant Ancestor, and other people. Harcourt.<br />

Contents: John Stuyvesant Ancestor.—A place in the sun.—A sympathetic strike.<br />

—The killing of different man.—Forbidden fruit.—The lot of the inventor.—After the<br />

penitentiary.—Short change.—Phyllis the feminist.—The molting of Alcibiades.—The


Of PinSflORdH<br />

PRESS


66 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Johnson, Alvin Saunders—continued.<br />

J3S9J<br />

meed of a brute.—On land and sea.—The lynching in Bass county.—Ivan the terrible.—<br />

Carnegied.—Suh-Ho in praise of foot binding.—The chances of being married.—My<br />

uncle.—The fear of God.—Evalina.—Old scores.<br />

Kyne, Peter Bernard. K448g<br />

The green-pea pirates [a novel], Houghton.<br />

Lewis, Sinclair. L675f<br />

Free air. Harcourt.<br />

Appeared in the "Saturday evening post," v.191, May 31-June 21, 1919 under<br />

the title "Free air," v.192, Oct. 18-25, 1919 under the title "Danger—run slow."<br />

A romance centering about an automobile trip from Brooklyn to Seattle.<br />

McKenna, Stephen. M178SO<br />

Sonia married. Doran.<br />

An epilogue to "Sonia: between two worlds." Only after her selfishness and<br />

infidelity have brought much suffering to herself and to those who love her, does<br />

Sonia finally approach true happiness.<br />

Marshall, Archibald. M4i63si<br />

Sir Harry; a love story. Dodd.<br />

"A few years in the life of a pure-minded, manly English boy, heir to wealth and<br />

position, isolated from the outside world that he may not repeat the mesalliance of<br />

his dead father. The test of this experiment comes with his idyllic love experience<br />

and his answer to the call of war." Booklist, 1920.<br />

Merwin, Samuel. M6394P<br />

The passionate pilgrim; the narrative of an oddly dramatic year in<br />

the life of Henry Calverly, 3rd. Bobbs.<br />

Third book of the Henry Calverly series.<br />

Miller, Mrs Alice (Duer). M6gich<br />

The charm school [a novel]. Harper.<br />

Appeared in the "Saturday evening post," v.191-192, June 21—July 5, 1919.<br />

Norton, Roy. N46sd<br />

Drowned gold; the story of a sailor's life. Houghton.<br />

"A yarn of sunken treasure, an American mariner, a lovely girl, and a German<br />

villain." Nation, 1919.<br />

Oppenheim, Edward Phillips. 026sg<br />

The great impersonation. Little.<br />

Story of the days just before the world war. An Englishman and a German look<br />

so much alike that one is able to impersonate the other to his undoing.<br />

Raine, William McLeod. Ri6i2m<br />

A man four-square [a novel]. Houghton.<br />

Reeve, Arthur Benjamin. R2872SO<br />

The soul scar; a Craig Kennedy scientific mystery novel. Harper.<br />

Reid, Forrest. R2gg2g<br />

A garden by the sea; stories and sketches. Talbot Press.<br />

Contents: In memoriam.—A garden by the sea.—Courage.—The truant.—Kenneth.<br />

—The reconciliation.—The accomplice.—An Ulster farm.—The special messenger.—<br />

A boy and his dog.—Costello's story.—An ending.—A trial of witches.—Autumn.<br />

Rolland, Romain. R644C<br />

Colas Breugnon; tr. by Katherine Miller. Holt.<br />

Recounts the life of this carpenter and woodworker in a village of Burgundy. He<br />

is always gay, good-natured, full of laughter and jest, loves his food and his wine, everything<br />

out-of-doors and, most of all, his work. Condensed from Nezv York times, 1919.


BOOKS ADDED—FEBRUARY 1920 67<br />

Street, Julian Leonard. 29153a<br />

After thirty. Century.<br />

"Good polite comedy—keen, observant, full of telling bits of insight into human<br />

nature." Nation, igig.<br />

Whitehead, Harold.<br />

W63gb<br />

Business career of Peter Flint. Page.<br />

Story of the varied experiences of a young man, revealing many pitfalls to be<br />

avoided.<br />

French Fiction<br />

Bazin, Rene.<br />

843 B33gu<br />

Le guide de l'empereur.<br />

Contents: Le guide de l'empereur.—Le soldat Freminet.—La coiffe blanche.—<br />

Le nouveau bail.—La source.—La mere Chaussee.—Le maitre macon Pignechatte.—Trois<br />

arbres.—Sur le tard.—Les gourmets du Bugey.—Le Pin-Sauvage.—Miss Ellen.—Le<br />

moulin de Bienluivient.—Les yeux tristes.—Le petit de treize ans.<br />

Bazin, Rene.<br />

Memoires d'une vieille fille.<br />

Bordeaux, Henry.<br />

La robe de laine.<br />

843 B33me<br />

843 B63r<br />

Geniaux, Charles.<br />

843 G293<br />

La passion d'Armelle Louanais.<br />

Tale of a woman's deep and undying love for a man vowed to God, set in the time<br />

of the noted preacher Lammenais. A masterpiece of psychological analysis. Condensed<br />

from Le Livre contemporain, igi8.<br />

Spanish Fiction<br />

Fernandez-Florez, Wenceslao. 863 F399<br />

Silencio; novela (seguida de Los mosqueteros y El calor de la<br />

hoguera).<br />

Mata, Pedro.<br />

Corazones sin rumbo; novela.<br />

Philosophy<br />

863 M467<br />

Bjerre, Poul Carl.<br />

130 B49<br />

History and practice of psychanalysis; tr. by E. N. Barrow. 1916.<br />

Badger.<br />

Hart, Bernard.<br />

r 132 H31<br />

Psychology of insanity. 1919. Cambridge University Press. (Cambridge<br />

manuals of science and literature.)<br />

"Bibliography," p. 173-174.<br />

Mackellar, Sir Charles Kinnaird, & Welsh, D. A.<br />

r 132 M17<br />

Mental deficiency; a medico-sociological study of feeble-mindedness.<br />

1917. Gullick.<br />

Mitchell, David, & Ruger, G. J. comp.<br />

016.1367 M74<br />

Psychological tests; revised and classified bibliograph3>\ 1918.<br />

Bureau of Educational Experiments. (Bureau of Educational Experiments,<br />

New York city. Bulletin 110.9.)


68 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Ethics<br />

Bersot, Ernest.<br />

I7°4 B46m<br />

Un moraliste; etudes et pensees, precedees d'une notice biographique<br />

par Edmond Scherer. 1882.<br />

Contents: Du bonheur.—Du plaisir et de la douleur.—La chretienne de nos jours.<br />

—M. Ernest Renan.—De la medecine en litterature.—Michelet.—Jean-Jacques Rousseau<br />

et Saint-Marc Girardin.—Voltaire.—Montaigne.—Versailles.—Arcachon.—Excursions<br />

dans le midi.—Lettre sur la botanique.—Discours prononce au bauquet des<br />

anciens eleves du lycee de Bordeaux.—Charles de Remusat.—Michelet.—Arnold Scherer.<br />

—Pensees.<br />

Broglie, Jacques Victor Albert, due de. 170.4 B 76<br />

Nouvelles etudes de litterature et de morale. 1869.<br />

Includes studies on Schiller, Madame Svetchine, Ampere, Leibnitz, Bossuet.<br />

Crafts, Wilbur Fisk.<br />

174 C85<br />

Successful men of to-day and what they say of success, based on<br />

facts and opinions gathered by letters and personal interviews from<br />

500 prominent men. 1907. Funk.<br />

Detroit—Education board. r 172.1 D48<br />

Teaching of patriotism; pub. for the Detroit public schools for the<br />

teaching of concrete Americanism to all pupils from the kindergarten<br />

through the junior college. 1918.<br />

"Patriotic literature," p.26-46.<br />

Goudouneche, L.<br />

Manuel de morale & d'economie populaires. 1866.<br />

170.4 G73<br />

Keyser, Leander Sylvester.<br />

170 K23<br />

A system of general ethics. 1918. Lutheran Literary Board.<br />

"A selected bibliography," p.276-278.<br />

Laboulaye, Edouard.<br />

Strides morales et politiques. 1874.<br />

I 7°-4 Li<br />

Contents: De la personnalite divine.—La devotion.—Mademoiselle de la Valliere.<br />

—Le rationalisme chretien.—Les moines d'occident.—Philippe II.—Les Etats-LTnis.—<br />

L'education en Amerique.—L'esclavage aux Etats-LTnis.—Le message de 1S56.—La<br />

Guerre civile aux Etats-LTnis.—L'Amerique et la Revolution francaise.—Les horizons<br />

prochains.—Les lettres d'Everard.—La loterie.—La manie des livres.—Sur un catalogue.<br />

Lambert, Charles.<br />

Le systeme du monde moral. 1862.<br />

Laplaigne, Honore.<br />

La morale en maximes. 1903.<br />

171 L18<br />

170 L31<br />

Lavollee, Rene.<br />

170.9 L39<br />

La morale dans I'histoire; etude sur les principaux systemes de<br />

philosophie de I'histoire depuis l'antiquite jusqu'a nos jours. 1892.<br />

Loubens, Emile, comp. qr 170.3 L92<br />

Recueil alphabetique de citations morales des meilleurs ecrivains,<br />

prosateurs et poetes, historiens et philosophes de tous les temps et<br />

surtout contemporains; ou, Encyclopedie morale. 1873.


BOOKS ADDED—FEBRUARY 1920 69<br />

Moore, Harry Hascall. I?4 Mgy<br />

The youth and the nation; a guide to service, with an introduction<br />

by S. M. Lindsay. 1919. Macmillan.<br />

"Selected books," p.169-170.<br />

"An attempt to arouse a wholesome interest among young men and older boys...<br />

in modern social evils, to show them how men have combatted these evils and to suggest<br />

vocational opportunities in the warfare against them." Preface.<br />

Spillman, Harry Collins. 170.4 S75<br />

Personality; studies in personal development. 1919. Gregg Pub<br />

Co.<br />

Contents: Self-survey and control.—Thinking I can.—Eyes that see.—"My ships."<br />

—The standard bearer.—Tides of life.—Unlisted assets.—Personality power.—Idealizing<br />

the real.—The old home town.—Winning with words.—The conquest of happiness.<br />

—Assembling the fragments.—Doing unto others.—The habit of harmony.—Making<br />

friends with the clock.—Defying the years.—That which is Caesar's.—Counting your<br />

friends.<br />

"References" at the end of each chapter.<br />

Wilson, Clarence Hall. 170.4 W767<br />

Talks to young people on ethics. 1917. Scribner.<br />

Contents: Into the woods.—Conscience.—The knowledge of good and evil.—The<br />

battle of life.—The grand adventure.—Courage.—Companions.—Habits.—Neglect and<br />

degeneration.— Work.— Play.— Little-mindedness.— Liberty and mastery.— Getting<br />

square with the world.<br />

"Suggestions for reading" at the end of most of the chapters.<br />

Religion<br />

Bible—Whole.<br />

r 264 B47<br />

Bible readings for the responsive service in Christian worship; prepared<br />

by G. C. Lorimer and H. M. Sanders. 1891. Barnes.<br />

Bible—Whole. German. qr 220.5 B47g<br />

Biblia; das ist die gantze Heilige schrifft, Alten und Neuen testa<br />

ments, nach der teutschen uebersetzung Martin Luthers; correctesten<br />

edition wiederum in grobem druck herausgegeben und mit der unveranderten<br />

Augspurgischen confession versehen. 1793.<br />

Gedruckt von Emanuel Thurneysen, Basel.<br />

Bible—Whole. Welsh.<br />

qr 220.5 B47W<br />

Y Bibl Sanctaidd, sef yr Hen destament a'r Newydd, gyd a nodau<br />

a sylwiadau ar bob pennod gan Peter Williams [Llyfr y Psalmau; wedi<br />

eu cyfieithu, a'u cyfansoddi ar fesur cerdd yn Gymraeg drwy waith<br />

Edmund Prys]. 1770.<br />

Burchett, Bessie Rebecca. qr 292 B89<br />

Janus in Roman life and cult; a study in Roman religions. 1918.<br />

Banta.<br />

"Bibliography," p.73~75-<br />

Thesis for Ph. D., University of Pennsylvania.<br />

Cohen, Israel.<br />

r 296 C66<br />

Report on the pogroms in Poland. 1919. Zionist Organisation.


70 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Gilkey, Seth Wilson.<br />

280 G39<br />

A plea for greater unity. 1919. Badger. (Library of religious<br />

thought.)<br />

"This volume is the outcome of an experience through which the author passed<br />

in the uniting of two rival congregations in an over-churched village and community<br />

...His study of the conditions by which he was surrounded. .. was the occasion by<br />

which was specially unfolded to him a vision of a united church." Preface.<br />

Prince, Walter Franklin. r 298 Pgs<br />

Psychological tests for the authorship of the Book of Mormon.<br />

[I9I7-]<br />

Reprinted from "American journal of psychology," V.2S, July 1917.<br />

Snowden, James Henry. 261 S674<br />

Is the world growing better? 1919. Macmillan.<br />

Contents: A fundamental question of philosophy.—A practical question of experience.—Good<br />

out of evil.—Human responsibility.—Dark views descriptive rather than<br />

comparative.—Material progress.—Intellectual progress.—Ethical and social progress.<br />

—The Bible and progress.—Religious progress.—The world war and a better world.—<br />

The evolution of the ages.—Some general objections considered.—Building the new<br />

world.—All things working together for good.—Practical optimism.—The blessed hope.<br />

Stadelman, William Francis Xavier. 282 S77<br />

Sparks of truth. [1918.] Columbus Press.<br />

With this is bound his "Archconfraternity of the cord of St. Francis."<br />

Wardle, Addie Grace. 268 W21<br />

History of the Sunday school movement in the Methodist Episcopal<br />

church. 1918. Methodist Book Concern.<br />

"Bibliography," p.223-225.<br />

Thesis for Ph. D., University of Chicago.<br />

Sociology<br />

Eubank, Earle Edward. qr 392 E91<br />

Study of family desertion. 1916.<br />

"Bibliography," p.69-73.<br />

Thesis for Ph. D., University of Chicago.<br />

Hyde, Mary Kendall. 361 H99<br />

Girls' book of the Red Cross. 1919. Crowell.<br />

The same<br />

j 361 H99<br />

Interesting account of the origin of the Red-cross Society, its service in times of<br />

national disaster and in the European war, including ambulance, hospital and canteen<br />

work, the care of refugees and orphans, camp and home service. Ends with a chapter<br />

on the future of the Red Cross.<br />

Marvin, Donald Mitchell. r 392 M43<br />

Occupational propinquity as a factor in marriage selection. 1918.<br />

Thesis for Ph. D., University of Pennsylvania.<br />

Red-cross Society. (United States. American r 361 R26gam<br />

National Red Cross.)<br />

American Red Cross, past, present and future; third Red Cross roll<br />

call, Nov. 2 to 11, 1919. [i9!9-]


BOOKS ADDED—FEBRUARY 1920<br />

Red-cross Society. (United States. American<br />

National Red Cross.)<br />

7I<br />

r 36l R269J<br />

American Red Cross, Pittsburgh chapter; Junior Red Cross activities<br />

in the P.ttsburgh public schools [ed. by C. H. Garwood]. 1919<br />

[Pittsburgh.]<br />

United States—Census bureau.<br />

r 3iy 66 U25c<br />

Special census of the population of Tulsa county, Okla., Jan. 15,<br />

1919; prepared under the supervision of R. B. Leach. 1919.<br />

Politics and Government<br />

Burton, Theodore Elijah.<br />

342 7 Bgs<br />

Modern political tendencies and the effect of the war thereon. 1919.<br />

Princeton University Press. (Stafford Little lectures.)<br />

Considers various aspects of politics and government in the United States during<br />

the period 1914-19.<br />

Fess, Simeon Davidson.<br />

r 327.73 F42<br />

Problems of neutrality when the world is at war; a history of our<br />

relations with Germany and Great Britain as detailed in the documents<br />

that passed between the United States and the two great belligerent<br />

powers. 1917. (United States. 64th cong. 2d. sess. House. Doc.<br />

no.2111, v.113.)<br />

Contents: The submarine controversy.—Restraints of trade controversy.<br />

Hartog, Philip Joseph.<br />

3SII H33<br />

Examinations and their relation to culture and efficiency, with a<br />

speech by the late earl of Cromer. [1918.] Constable.<br />

Contents: Introduction.—Examinations in their bearing on national efficiency.—<br />

The theory of examinations.—Notes.<br />

Bibliographical foot-notes.<br />

"A stimulating discussion." Nation, igig.<br />

National Civil Service Reform League.<br />

r 351.6 Nisd<br />

Draft of a civil service law. 1918.<br />

United States—Negro economics division.<br />

r 326 U2532<br />

Negro migration in 1916-17; reports by R. H. Leavell [and others],<br />

with an introduction by J. H. Dillard. 1919.<br />

Study of the migration of the negro from the Southern states to the Northern; the<br />

causes, effects and possible remedies.<br />

Woods, Arthur.<br />

352.2 W86<br />

Policeman and public. 1919. Yale University Press. (Yale lectures<br />

on the responsibilities of citizenship.)<br />

Contents: The puzzling law.—The policeman as judge.—The people's advocate.—<br />

Methods of law enforcement.—Esprit de corps.—Reward and punishment.—Grafting.—<br />

Influence.—Police leadership.—The public's part.<br />

Zimmern, Alfred Eckhard.<br />

320.4 Z65<br />

Nationality & government, with other war-time essays. 1919. Mc­<br />

Bride.<br />

Contents: German culture and the British commonwealth.—Nationality and government.—True<br />

and false nationalism.—The passing of nationality.—Education, social<br />

and national.—The universities and public opinion.—Progress in government.—Progress<br />

in industry.—The labour movement and the future of British industry.—Reconstruction.—The<br />

control of industry after the war.—Capitalism and international relations.—The<br />

new German empire.—Three doctrines in conflict.


72 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Economics<br />

Atkisson, Horace L. B.<br />

r 330.9 A87<br />

Readjustment; a cross-section of the best considered literature and<br />

discussions; prepared for the National Association of Manufacturers,<br />

Dec. 10, 1918. 1919. National Assoc, of Manufacturers.<br />

Contents: General.—Our foreign trade.—England and Germany.—Government<br />

in its relation to business.—Fuel.—Labor.<br />

Best, Harry.<br />

r 331.89 B46<br />

Men's garment industry of New York and the strike of 1913. [1914?]<br />

University Settlement Soc. (University settlement studies.)<br />

Emerson, Harrington.<br />

r 331.2 E58<br />

Comparative study of wage and bonus plans; a contribution by the<br />

Emerson Company toward a clearer understanding of the distinguishing<br />

features of various plans. 1917. Emerson Co.<br />

Hart, Hastings Hornell.<br />

qr 331 H31<br />

Fluctuations in unemployment in cities of the United States, 1902<br />

to 1917. 1918. (Studies from the Helen S. Trounstine foundation,<br />

v.i, no.2.)<br />

Hayward, Percy Roy.<br />

qr 331.823 H37<br />

Compensation for injuries to Canadian workmen. 1918. Canada<br />

Law Book Co.<br />

"Literature dealing with workmen's compensation in Canada," p.335.<br />

Reprinted from "Canada law journal," v.54, no.8-9, Aug.—Sept. 1918.<br />

Thesis for Ph. D., University of Pennsylvania.<br />

Lavollee, Rene.<br />

331 L39<br />

fitudes de morale sociale; lectures et conferences. 1897.<br />

Contents: Les budgets de families ouvrieres en Angleterre.—Une enquete sur la<br />

situation de la classe ouvriere dans la Cisleithanie.—La loi d'airain du salariat et les<br />

progres de la classe ouvriere en Angleterre.—La reforme de l'impot des boissons et<br />

l'alcoolisme.—La depopulation en France.—Socialisme agraire.<br />

Lippincott, Isaac.<br />

330.9 L733<br />

Problems of reconstruction. 1919. Macmillan.<br />

Contents: The need of reconstruction.—War control (food products).—War control<br />

(fuel administration).—War labor control.—Other elements of control.—War control<br />

in foreign countries.—Economic results of the war.—Reconstruction in foreign<br />

countries.—A reconstruction plan for the United States.<br />

Shimmin, Arnold N.<br />

r 336.2 S55<br />

Taxation and social reconstruction. [1917.] Athenaeum. (Social<br />

reconstruction pamphlets, no.2.)<br />

"Short list of books and articles for supplementary reading," p.32.<br />

United States—Federal reserve board.<br />

r 338.8 U25393<br />

Index-digest of the act of Oct. 15, 1914 (Clayton act) and of the act<br />

approved May 15, 1916 (Kern amendment). 1916. (64th cong. ist<br />

sess. Senate. Doc. no.355, v.ll.)<br />

United States—Interstate commerce committee. r 331.89 U2538<br />

Threatened strike of railway employees; hearing on bills in connection<br />

with legislation relative to the threatened strike of railway<br />

employees. 1916. (64th cong. ist. sess. Senate. Doc. 110.549, v.36.)


BOOKS ADDED-FEBRUARY 1920 73<br />

United States-Mediation and conciliation board.<br />

r 33I T Ua„ r<br />

proceedings »" "f^0^ ^ °" the effects of 'frbitra "<br />

proceedings upon rates of pay and working conditions of railroad employees,<br />

prepared under the direction of the board by W Laud<br />

1916. (64th cong. ist sess. Senate. Doc. 110493, v 3i)<br />

United States. Statutes. , Tr<br />

.Public land statutes of the United States; a compilation ZfZ<br />

principal statutes of practical importance at the present time relating<br />

to the public lands; comp. by J. W. Keener. T916. (64th cong ist<br />

sess. Senate. Doc. 110.547, v.35.)<br />

United States—Treasury department. r 336 2 TJ d<br />

Digest of decisions of the United States courts, Board of general<br />

appraisers and the Treasury department under the customs revenue<br />

laws, with the tariff acts from 1883 to 1913 and certain other customs<br />

revenue statutes. 2v. 1918.<br />

Webb, Sidney James, & Freeman, A. J.<br />

r 330 g Ws5<br />

Great Britain after the war; facts and figures, quotations and queries<br />

suggestions and forecasts, designed to help individual inquirers and<br />

study circles in considering what will happen after the war with regard<br />

to trade, employment, wages, prices, trade unionism, co-operation,<br />

women's labour, foreign commerce, the railways, the coal supply, education,<br />

taxation, etc. [1918.] Allen.<br />

"Books suggested for further reading," p.11-12.<br />

Law<br />

Browne, Ge<strong>org</strong>e Lathom.<br />

343 j B 8I<br />

Narratives of state trials in the 19th century; first period from the<br />

union with Ireland to the death of Ge<strong>org</strong>e the Fourth, 1801-30. 2v.<br />

1882. Low.<br />

v.i. From the union to the regency, 1801-11.<br />

v.2. The regency, 1811-20.—The reign of Ge<strong>org</strong>e IV, 1820-30.<br />

Duggan, Stephen Pierce Hayden, and others, ed.<br />

341.6 D87<br />

The league of nations; the principle and the practice. 1919. Atlantic<br />

Monthly Press.<br />

Contents: . History, philosophy and <strong>org</strong>anization of a league of nations.—International<br />

cooperation as applied to concrete problems.—America and the league of nations.<br />

"Bibliographical notes," p.341-357.<br />

Hight, James, & Bamford, H. D. • 342.931 H53<br />

Constitutional history and law of New Zealand. 1914. Whitcombe.<br />

"Shortlist of books," p.405-406.<br />

Education<br />

Graves, Frank Pierrepont.<br />

370.9 G8ih<br />

History of education during the middle ages, and the transition to<br />

modern times. 1919. Macmillan.<br />

McMurtrie, Douglas Crawford.<br />

r 371.91 M2ir<br />

Rehabilitation of the war cripple. [1918. Red Cross Institute for<br />

Crippled and Disabled Men.]


74 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

National Education Association. r 379-74 8 N155<br />

Greater Pittsburgh educationally; glimpses of school opportunities<br />

and training in service for all the people. 1918. Pittsburgh.<br />

Issued by the Publicity committee on the occasion of the meeting of the association<br />

in Pittsburgh in 1918.<br />

Red Cross Institute for Crippled and Disabled Men. qr 371.91 R26pr<br />

American program for the rehabilitation of disabled soldiers. [1918.]<br />

qr 371.9 S72<br />

Southern workmen [monthly], 1918-date. v.47-date. 1918-date.<br />

Published by the Hampton Normal and Agricultural Institute.<br />

Commerce. Communication<br />

Acworth, William Mitchell. r 385 A18<br />

Historical sketch of government ownership of railroads in foreign<br />

countries; presented to the Joint committee of Congress on interstate<br />

commerce. 1917.<br />

International High Commission.<br />

r 380 I248<br />

Appendix to the report of the United States section of the International<br />

High Commission on the first general meeting of the commission,<br />

held at Buenos Aires, April 3-12, 1916. 1917. (United States.<br />

64th cong. 2d. sess. Senate. Doc. no.739, v.7.)<br />

Marcosson, Isaac Frederick.<br />

382 M37<br />

Peace and business. 1919. Lane.<br />

The author attempts to point out some of the difficulties and some of the opportunities<br />

which are involved in the new struggle for international economic supremacy.<br />

Costume<br />

Grand-Carteret, John.<br />

391 G77<br />

Les elegances de la toilette; robes, chapeaux, coiffures de style;<br />

Louis XVI, directoire, empire, restauration (1780-1825). [1911.]<br />

"Notes bibliographiques," pref. p.43-48.<br />

Quincke, Wolfgang.<br />

Handbuch der kostumkunde. 1908.<br />

"Verzeichnis der benutzten werke," pref. p.7-8.<br />

Women<br />

qr 391 Q34<br />

Hutchins, Miss B. Leigh.<br />

r 331.4 H96<br />

Women in industry after the war. [1917.] Athenaeum. (Social<br />

reconstruction pamphlets, no.3.)<br />

"Books and papers recommended," p.28.<br />

Knoeppel, Charles Edward.<br />

r 331.4 K34<br />

Women in industry. [1918?] Knoeppel.<br />

Address based on answers to 1,000 questionnaires on women in industry delivered<br />

before the National Conference on Labor Problems Under War Conditions, under<br />

joint auspices of the Society of Industrial Engineers and the Western Efficiency Society,<br />

Chicago, March 1918.


BOOKS ADDED—FEBRUARY 1920 75<br />

Margueritte, Paul. 396 M38<br />

Adam, Eve et brid 'oison. 1919.<br />

Contents: Les femmes et la guerre.—La jeune fille.—La femme et la politique.—<br />

La femme et le mariage.—La femme et I'enfant.—La femme et le divorce.—La familie<br />

et la societe.<br />

396.5 N26<br />

New careers for women; the best positions and how to obtain them.<br />

1917. Newnes.<br />

Contents: Medicine.—Pharmacy.—Optics.—Dispensing.—Dentistry.—Bacteriology.<br />

Preventive medicine.—Analytical chemistry.—The hospital almoner.—Nursing.—<br />

Physical training.—Massage and remedial gymnastics.—The civil service.—Teaching.<br />

The general secretary.—The public librarian.—Inspectorships.—Accountancy.—<br />

Portrait photography.— Journalism and fashion-drawing.— Architecture.— The house<br />

decorator.—Gardening.—Landscape gardening.—Commercial gardening.— Housecraft.<br />

—Cookery — Dairying.— The breeding of horses.— Poultry-farming.— Bee-keeping.—<br />

Dog-breeding and rearing.—Motoring.—Unusual careers.—Organ-building — Printing.<br />

—Fly-tying.—Illuminating.—Dentists' mechanicians.—Women as archivists.—Opportunities<br />

overseas.<br />

O'Rell, Max, (pseud, of Paul Blouet). 396 O283<br />

Les filles de John Bull. 1884.<br />

Smith, T. R. comp. , 396 S662<br />

The woman question, by Ellen Key, Dickinson, and others. 1918-<br />

Boni. (Modern library of the world's best books.)<br />

Taft, Julia Jessie. V 396 T13<br />

The woman movement from the point of view of social consciousness.<br />

I9IS- [Banta.]<br />

"Bibliography," p.58-62-<br />

Thesis for Ph. D., University of Chicago.<br />

Language<br />

48s C?S<br />

Connell, Francis M.<br />

Short grammar of Attic Greek. 1919- Allyn.<br />

r 423 S644<br />

Smith, Charles Alphonso.<br />

New words self-defined. 1919- Doubleday.<br />

Arranged alphabetically. Quotes such sentences as make the meaning of each word<br />

stand self-revealed. Condensed from Preface.<br />

422 Sg7n<br />

Swinton, William. .<br />

New word-analysis; or, School etymology of English derivative<br />

words with practical exercises in spelling^analyzing, defining, synonyms<br />

and the use of words. 1879. Amer. Book Co.<br />

468 V15<br />

^El^o verde; ed. with introduction, notes, exercises and vocabulary<br />

by M. A. De Vitis. 1918. Allyn.<br />

Wenstrom, Oscar Edmund, & Lindgren, Erik, comp. r 439-7 Ws*<br />

Engelsk-svensk ordbok. [I9I7-]<br />

Wenstrom, Oscar Edmund, & Harlock, W. E. comp. r 439-7 W52S<br />

Svensk-engelsk ordbok. [i9 x 8-]


Contents<br />

Books Added to the Library during the Year, by Classes:<br />

Aerial Navigation 174, 331, 389<br />

Agriculture 28, 79, 125, 178, 286, 335, 397, 460<br />

Americanization and Immigration 21, 276, 325, 375<br />

Amusements 132, 186, 339<br />

Architecture 31, 80, 128, 182, 238, 290, 337, 402, 463, 523<br />

Army 22, 328, 453<br />

Banking. Finance 278, 379<br />

Biography 39, 84, 135, 187, 243, 295, 343, 408, 468, 527<br />

Blind, Books for the 44, 88, 193, 247, 299, 348, 416, 475, 532<br />

Botany 121, 284, 516<br />

Business. Communication 29, 79,125,179,287,335,398,461,520<br />

Business Ethics 19<br />

Capital. Labor. Wages 377<br />

Chemical Technology 126, 180, 288, 336, 400, 461, 521<br />

Chemistry 26, 77, 121, 174, 283, 390, 457, 515<br />

City Planning 182<br />

Commerce 24, 74, 118, 171, 234, 281, 329, 385, 455. 5>3<br />

Composition 340<br />

Costume. Folklore 74, 118, 172<br />

Crystallography 331<br />

Customs 24<br />

Domestic Economy 79, 125, 287, 335, 398, 461, 520<br />

Drama. Theatre 38, 83, 134, 187, 241, 294, 342, 406, 467, 5 2 6<br />

Drawing 31, 81<br />

Economics 21, 72, 116, 168, 232,277, 326, 375.449. 5°9<br />

Education 23, 73, 118, 170, 233, 280, 328, 383, 454, 511<br />

Electrical Engineering 28, 124, 334<br />

Electricity 177<br />

Engineering 27, 78, 123, 177, 236, 285, 333. 395. 459. 519<br />

Ethics 18, 68, 114, 164,228,274, 323, 370,446, 505<br />

European War 42, 86, 138, 191, 247, 298, 346, 414, 474, 531<br />

Fiction 16, 64, ill, 161, 227,270, 320, 364, 441, 501<br />

Fine Arts 29, 80. 127, 181, 237, 289, 336, 401, 462. 522<br />

Forestry 28, 179, 398<br />

French Fiction 17, 67, 113. 163, 272, 323, 367, 443. 504<br />

Gardening 30, 290, 463<br />

Genealogy. Names. Flags 470


76 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Science<br />

Coles-Finch, William, & Hawks, Ellison. 551-49 C68<br />

Water in nature. [1918.] Jack. ("Romance of reality" series.)<br />

Occurrence and properties of water in its several forms are treated in a popular<br />

and interesting manner.<br />

Davenport, Charles Benedict, & Scudder, M. T. r 575.1 D2gn<br />

Naval officers; their heredity and development. 1919. (Carnegie<br />

Institution of Washington. Publication 110.259.)<br />

The second part, "Brief biographies of naval officers," includes bibliographies.<br />

Downing, Elliot Rowland. 570-7 D77<br />

Source book of biological nature-study. 1919. University of<br />

Chicago Press. (Chicago University nature-study series.)<br />

"Bibliography" at the end of each chapter.<br />

Attempts, primarily, "to suggest ways in which living material may serve educational<br />

ends." Authors preface.<br />

Greene, Dascom. 522.7 G83<br />

Introduction to spherical and practical astronomy. 1891. Ginn.<br />

Although intended for the beginner in the subject, presupposes a considerable<br />

knowledge of mathematics and of the principles of astronomy.<br />

Hunter, Ge<strong>org</strong>e William. 570 H94C<br />

Civic biology; presented in problems. 1914. Amer. Book Co.<br />

"Reference books" at the end of each chapter.<br />

Presents the elements of biology for the instruction of secondary school students.<br />

Includes much that is usually classed as botany and physiology.<br />

Hunter, Ge<strong>org</strong>e William. 570 H94I<br />

Laboratory problems in civic biology. 1916. Amer. Book Co.<br />

"Reference books" at the end of each chapter.<br />

"Problems. . .that directly explain the text of the author's Civic biology, which this<br />

manual is intended to interpret in the laboratory." Foreword.<br />

McFee, Mrs Inez Nellie (Canfield). 582 M159<br />

Tree book. 1919. Stokes.<br />

The same<br />

j 582 M15<br />

Chapters on the life and work of trees are followed by descriptions of the more<br />

common families. Legends and poetic fancies associated with trees are introduced and<br />

there is a concluding chapter on forestry. Photographic illustrations.<br />

MacLeod, Julius. r 570 M19<br />

Quantitative method in biology. 1919. Manchester University<br />

Press. (Manchester University. Biological series, 110.2.)<br />

Pennsylvania—Water supply commission. r 551.48 P39<br />

Water resources inventory report, pt.2-5, 7-10. 1916-17.<br />

pt.z. Turtle creek investigation.<br />

pt.3. Gazetteer of streams.<br />

pt.4. Gazetteer of lakes and ponds.<br />

pt.5. Precipitation.<br />

pt.7. Water power.<br />

pt.8. Floods.<br />

pt.9. Navigation.<br />

pt.io. Culm in the streams of the anthracite region.<br />

Porter, Mrs Gene (Stratton).<br />

598.2 P83I1<br />

Homing with the birds; the history of a lifetime of personal experience<br />

with the birds. 1919. Doubleday.<br />

Popular account. Includes some remarkable incidents.


BOOKS ADDED—FEBRUARY i 920 77<br />

Strong, William Walker. 530 Sg2<br />

New science of the fundamental physics. 1918. S. I. E. M. Co.<br />

Technical treatment of various theories and principles pertaining to physical<br />

science.<br />

Young, Mary Sophie. r 581.9764 Y38<br />

Key to the families and genera of the wild plants of Austin, Texas.<br />

1917- Texas University. (Texas University. Bulletin 110.1754.)<br />

Mathematics<br />

Cajori, Florian.<br />

512.82 C12<br />

Introduction to the modern theory of equations. 1919. Macmillan.<br />

"The main difference between this text and others on the same subject, published<br />

in the English language, consists in the selection of the material. In proceeding from<br />

the elementary to the more advanced properties of equations, the subject of invariants<br />

and covariants is here omitted, to make room for a discussion of the elements of substitutions<br />

and substitution-groups, of domains of rationality and of their application<br />

to equations." Preface.<br />

Russell, Bertrand. 510.1 R91<br />

Introduction to mathematical philosophy. [1919.] Macmillan.<br />

(Library of philosophy.)<br />

"Succinct account of the main results of mathematical logic in a form requiring<br />

neither a knowledge of mathematics nor an aptitude for mathematical symbolism."<br />

Preface.<br />

Wells, Webster, comp. r 510.8 W49<br />

Six place logarithmic tables, together with a table of natural sines,<br />

cosines, tangents and cotangents. 1917. Heath. (Wells's mathematical<br />

series.)<br />

Chemistry<br />

Peters, Charles Adams. 547-89 P45<br />

Preparation of substances important in agriculture; a laboratory<br />

manual of synthetic agricultural chemistry. Ed.3. I9 T 9- Wiley.<br />

Brief treatment of laboratory procedures, accompanied by lists of questions. Intended<br />

for students of agriculture who already have high school training in chemistry.<br />

Rockwood, Elbert William. 547-9 R58<br />

Laboratory manual of physiological chemistry. Ed.4, rev. & enl.<br />

1919. Davis.<br />

Intended for students who are beginning their study of the subject. Although<br />

primarily a laboratory manual, has value as a text.<br />

Useful Arts<br />

Gurwitsch, L. r 66 5-5 G97<br />

Wissenschaftliche grundlagen der erdolbearbeitung. 1913-<br />

Keith, Max L. pub. 6 9° Kl6<br />

How to build it; a manual of construction, from Keith's architectural<br />

service.<br />

A non-technical practical guide which will be of service to the average property<br />

owner during the planning and erection of a dwelling. Does not include plans and<br />

specifications, but gives much helpful general information on available building materials,<br />

details of construction and finishing, choice of heating systems, water supply and<br />

plumbing, electric wiring, etc.


78 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Spicher, Craig Reno.<br />

655.3 S75<br />

Practice of presswork. 1919. Pittsburgh.<br />

"Bibliography," p.232.<br />

The same<br />

r 655.3 S75<br />

Excellent book, of value not only to the pressman but to all who are interested<br />

in printing. Wider in scope than the title indicates, giving general information on<br />

inks, hand and machine composition, and photo-engraving.<br />

Medicine, Physiology, Hygiene<br />

Blanton, Margaret Gray, & Blanton, Smiley.<br />

612.78 B53<br />

Speech training for children; the hygiene of speech. 1919. Century.<br />

United States—Library of Congress.<br />

qr 016.61371 U25<br />

List of references on physical training in relation to medicine, with<br />

special reference to convalescence. 1918.<br />

Mimeograph copy.<br />

Walsh, James Joseph.<br />

615.851 W18<br />

Health through will power. 1919. Little.<br />

"Meant to help in the restoration of the will to its place as the supreme faculty<br />

in life, above all the one on whose exercise more than any other single factor, depends<br />

health and recovery from disease." Preface.<br />

Engineering<br />

American Bureau of Engineering, Chicago.<br />

629.11018 A51<br />

Ford standard electrical equipment; starting, lighting, ignition.<br />

1919.<br />

Manual of instruction for those called upon to make repairs to the electrical<br />

equipment of Ford cars. Plentifully supplied with wiring diagrams.<br />

Davis, Charles Gerard.<br />

qr 623.831 D31<br />

Building of a wooden ship; ed. by T. W. Clarke and F. S. Drown.<br />

1918.<br />

Issued by the Industrial service section of the United States Shipping Board<br />

Emergency Fleet Corporation.<br />

Johnson, James Francis.<br />

621 J36<br />

Practical shop mechanics and mathematics. 1916. Wiley. (Wiley<br />

technical series.)<br />

Explains and illustrates, by means of numerous cuts and problems, the simpler<br />

mathematics of operations common to the machine shop.<br />

Langsdorf, Alexander Suss.<br />

621.312 L26<br />

Principles of direct-current machines. Ed.2, rev. & enl. 1919. Mc­<br />

Graw. (Electrical engineering texts.)<br />

Intended as a text for college students in electrical engineering. Makes free use<br />

of higher mathematics. Author makes a special effort to cover certain important features<br />

thoroughly, rather than to afford an exhaustive treatment of direct-current engineering.<br />

r 621.7202 P41<br />

Penton's foundry list; a directory of the gray and malleable iron, steel,<br />

brass and aluminum foundries in the United States and Canada, 1918/19.<br />

1918. Penton Pub. Co.<br />

The most comprehensive list available. Does not attempt to give information<br />

regarding the individual plants.


BOOKS ADDED—FEBRUARY 1920<br />

79<br />

Agriculture<br />

Deatrick, E. P<br />

Tjrr . c<br />

r 631.583 D34<br />

Effect of manganese compounds on soils and plants. 1919. (New<br />

York. (state)-Cornell agricultural experiment station. Memoir [emoir 19.) 19)<br />

Literature cited," p.399-402.<br />

Sanford, Albert Hart.<br />

630-973 S22<br />

Story of agriculture in the United States. 1016. Heath<br />

Instructive historical treatment intended primarily for the younger reader but<br />

tli* essentialfact's in ^ V " ^


So<br />

CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Nystrom, Paul Henry.<br />

658.612 Nsse<br />

Economics of retailing. Ed.2. 1919. Ronald Press Co.<br />

Bibliographies at the end of many of the chapters.<br />

Not intended to cover the processes, but to present broadly the general principles<br />

and theories which constitute the basis of retailing.<br />

Porter, John Thomas. 653.7 ^3<br />

Stem-vowel shorthand; a system in which the vowels are expressed<br />

in the consonant stems by making the latter of different lengths.<br />

1918. Art Engraving & Printing Co.<br />

"A new edition reconstructed on the original plan ; practically a new system, retaining<br />

the name of the first edition."<br />

Thomas, Arthur G. 658.31 T37<br />

Principles of government purchasing. 1919. Appleton. (Institute<br />

for Government Research. Principles of administration.)<br />

"The Institute for Government Research is an association of citizens for cooperating<br />

with public officials in the scientific study of government with a view to promoting<br />

efficiency and economy in its operations and advancing the science of administration."<br />

Present volume is the fourth in a series of studies published by the Institute. It<br />

sets forth fundamentals of purchasing as applied in government administration.<br />

The traffic field. 1919. La Salle Extension LTniversity. 658.62 T67<br />

Contents: Industrial traffic department, by J. W. Cobey.—Associated traffic<br />

management, by Brunner Robeson.—Community traffic management, by J. P. Haynes.<br />

—Public utility commission work, by J. H. Kane.—Railway traffic management, by<br />

N. D. Chapin.<br />

United States—Alaskan engineering commission. r 656.6798 U25<br />

Annual report, for the period from March 12, 1914 to Dec. 31, 1916.<br />

1916-17.<br />

The first report, covering the period March 12, 1914 to Dec. 31, 1915, is in two<br />

parts, pt.i being the text, pt.2, maps.<br />

Fine Arts<br />

Pennell, Joseph. qr 767 P39<br />

Etchers and etching; chapters in the history of the art, with technical<br />

explanations of modern artistic methods. 1919. Macmillan.<br />

(Graphic arts series for artists, students, amateurs & collectors.)<br />

Includes, among other methods, some, not previously described, which are in use.<br />

Limited to the work of etchers of unquestioned superiority. Not biographical.<br />

Watkins, Alfred. 770 W311<br />

Photography; its principles and applications. Ed.2, rev. 1918.<br />

Van Nostrand. ("Westminster" series.)<br />

Architecture<br />

Associated Metal Lath Manufacturers. - q 728 A84<br />

As a man liveth. 1918.<br />

Plans and plates of workmen's homes illustrating the thesis that "as a man liveth,<br />

so shall he work."<br />

Warren, Herbert Langford. 722 W24<br />

Foundations of classic architecture. 1919. Macmillan.<br />

Contents: Egypt.—Mesopotamia.—Persia.—The ^Egean.—Greece.


Drawing. Decoration<br />

BOOKS ADDED—FEBRUARY 1920 81<br />

American Walnut Manufacturers' Association.<br />

r 749 A51<br />

American walnut, "the cabinet-wood of the elect." [1919?]<br />

Bartlett, Frank W. & Johnson, T. W.<br />

744 627c<br />

Engineering descriptive geometry and drawing; a treatise on line<br />

drawing, descriptive geometry, and engineering or mechanical drawing,<br />

for the use of midshipmen at the United States Naval Academy.<br />

1919. Wiley.<br />

More comprehensive than the usual text. Treats of the essentials of mechanical<br />

drawing and descriptive geometry and of their application to engineering drawing.<br />

National Lead & Oil Company, Pittsburgh.<br />

qr 747 N15<br />

Painting, protective & decorative; designed to help the house-owner<br />

solve frequent and vexing problems. 1915. Pittsburgh.<br />

Windoes, Ralph Flagg.<br />

744 W78<br />

Shop sketching; a course of problems for mechanical drawing students.<br />

1919. Bruce Pub. Co.<br />

Series of plates, with explanatory text, presenting exercises in free-hand work,<br />

both perspective and orthographic.<br />

Music<br />

Armstrong, A. Joseph.<br />

782 A73<br />

Operatic performances in England before Handel. 1918. (Baylor<br />

University bulletin no.4.)<br />

"Bibliography," p.69-74.<br />

Thesis for Ph. D., University of Pennsylvania.<br />

Bostwick, Arthur Elmore.<br />

r 78o B64<br />

Popularizing music through the library. [1918.]<br />

Reprinted from M. T. N. A. Proceedings, 1918.<br />

Saint-Saens, Charles Camille.<br />

QM 787.1 SISC<br />

Concerto pour violon, avec accompagnement de piano.<br />

Op.20.<br />

Hamelle.<br />

Violin part in pocket.<br />

Literature<br />

Allem, Maurice, comp.<br />

4<br />

, 42<br />

fipigrammes franchises (i6e au i 9 e siecle); choisies et annotees.<br />

[1911.]<br />

. . r 888 A71W<br />

"works; tr. into English under the editorship of J. A. Smith [and]<br />

W D Ross, v.4-5- 1910-12. Clarendon Press.<br />

v. 4. Historia animalium, by D. W ompson. animalium. De inCessu<br />

v


82 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Hergesheimer, Joseph. r 823 Wi8zh<br />

Hugh Walpole; an appreciation, together with notes and comments<br />

on the novels of Hugh Walpole. 1919. Doran.<br />

Lanson, Gustave.<br />

r 016.84 L28<br />

Manuel bibliographique de la litterature frangaise moderne, 1500-<br />

1900. S pts. in 2v. 1911-14.<br />

pt.1-3. i6e siecle.—i7e siecle.—i8e siecle.<br />

pt.4-5. Revolution et I9e siecle.—Index general precede d'un supplement.<br />

Lathrop, Henry Burrowes.<br />

808.3 L35<br />

The art of the novelist. 1919. Dodd.<br />

Contents: The novel in modern life.—The sources of interest.—The fable.—Character.—Tragedy<br />

and comedy.—Setting.—The point of view.<br />

Maurice, Arthur Bartlett.<br />

809.3 M49<br />

The Paris of the novelists. 1919. Doubleday.<br />

"A wealth of bookish memories and anecdotes and a re-creating of vanished figures<br />

and environments. . .There are wanderings into rural France to the haunts of Tartarin,<br />

on the trail of the Musketeers and others, and a chapter on the Paris of some Americans."<br />

Booklist, igig.<br />

[Vetalapanchavimsati.]<br />

891.2 V28<br />

Twenty-two goblins; tr. from the Sanskrit by A. W. Ryder. 1917.<br />

Dent.<br />

"A collection of Sanskrit novelettes. . .The tales are of much interest, and the<br />

entire work bears a marked resemblance to the two other principal Sanskrit collections<br />

. . .Thirty-two Stories of the Lion-Throne. . .and. . .Seventy Stories of a Parrot." New<br />

international encyclopaedia.<br />

Poetry<br />

Aiken, Conrad Potter.<br />

811.09 A29<br />

Scepticisms; notes on contemporary poetry. 1919. Knopf.<br />

"Selective bibliography," p.297—300.<br />

First published as essays in the "Dial," the "New republic," the "North American<br />

review," the "Poetry journal" and the "Chicago daily news." A prefatory chapter<br />

and an appendix explain the author's psychological approach, after the manner of<br />

Freud and Kostyleff, to a critical estimate of present day poets.<br />

Drinkwater, John, b. 1882.<br />

Poems, 1908-19. 1919. Houghton.<br />

821 D82p<br />

Edgar, Mrs C M. Whyte-.<br />

811.08 E28<br />

Wreath of Canadian song, containing biographical sketches and<br />

numerous selections from deceased Canadian poets. 1910. Briggs.<br />

Fletcher, John Gould.<br />

811 F631<br />

Irradiations; Sand and spray [poems]. 1915. Houghton. (New<br />

poetry series.)<br />

Johnson, Mrs Ge<strong>org</strong>ia (Douglas).<br />

811 J3612<br />

The heart of a woman, and other poems, with an introduction by<br />

W. S. Braithwaite. 1918. Cornhill.<br />

Masefield, John.<br />

821 M44r<br />

Reynard the fox; or, The Ghost Heath run. 1919. Macmillan.<br />

"The very physical excitement of the hunt is in this poem, upon which Mr. Masefield<br />

has lavished the full powers of his visual gifts, his imagination, his earth-flavored<br />

speech, and his vigorous rhythm and rhymes." Boston evening transcript, igig.


BOOKS ADDED—FEBRUARY 1920 83<br />

Rittenhouse, Jessie Belle, comp. 811 08 R51S<br />

Second book of modern verse; a selection from the work of contemporaneous<br />

American poets. 1919. Houghton.<br />

Waley, Arthur tr. 8g5 Wi6m<br />

More translations from the Chinese. 1919. Knopf.<br />

Almost half the book is devoted to the poems of Po Chii-i.<br />

Drama. Theatre<br />

Bennett, Arnold.<br />

g22 B43J<br />

Judith; a play in three acts, founded on the apocryphal book of Judith.<br />

1919. Doran.<br />

Blancke, Wilton Wallace. r 872 P6 9 zb<br />

Dramatic values in Plautus. 1918. [Humphrey.]<br />

Contains bibliographical foot-notes.<br />

Thesis for Ph. D., University of Pennsylvania.<br />

Cestre, Charles.<br />

Bernard Shaw et son ceuvre. 1912.<br />

g 22 S534ZC<br />

"An addition to Shaviana—comprehensive, clear, and reasoned." Athenceum, 1912.<br />

Crosse, Gordon. 809.2 C8g<br />

The religious drama. [1913.] Mowbray.<br />

(Arts of the church.)<br />

Contents: The drama and the early church.—The liturgical drama.—The stage<br />

moves out of church.—The miracle plays.—The mediaeval morals.—Morals, interludes<br />

and the Elizabethan drama.—Some results of Puritanism.—The modern revival.<br />

"Bibliography," p.171-177.<br />

Galsworthy, John. 822 Gispl<br />

Plays. ist-3d ser. [3v.] 1916-19. Scribner.<br />

v.i.<br />

v.2.<br />

v.3.<br />

The silver box.—Joy.—Strife.<br />

The eldest son.—The little dream.—Justice.<br />

The fugitive.—The pigeon.—The mob.<br />

Hornblow, Arthur. 7g2 H7gh<br />

History of the theatre in America from its beginnings to the present<br />

time. 2v. 1919. Lippincott.<br />

"The plan followed has been to present a plain narrative of the principal events<br />

connected with the development of the drama in this country... describing the theatres<br />

built as well as the principal plays performed, and bringing back to life the great<br />

actors and actresses of the past." Preface.<br />

Stone, Mrs Jane (Dransfield). 812 S87<br />

The lost Pleiad; a fantasy in two acts. 1918. White.<br />

Based upon the Greek myth.<br />

thought and expression.<br />

Written in verse which at times rises to poetry in<br />

Tarkington, Newton Booth, & Wilson, H. L. 812 T2ig<br />

The Gibson upright [a play]. 1919. Doubleday.<br />

Tolstoi', Lyof Nikolaievitch, count. 891.72 Ts8r<br />

Redemption, and two other plays. 1919. Boni. (Modern library<br />

of the world's best books.)<br />

Other plays: The power of darkness.—Fruits of culture.


84 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Biography<br />

Fox, Ge<strong>org</strong>e. 92 F852J0<br />

Jones, Rufus Matthew. Story of Ge<strong>org</strong>e Fox. 1919. Macmillan.<br />

(Great leaders series.)<br />

Brief account of the life and work of the founder of the Society of Friends, intended<br />

for use in the class-room.<br />

Grenfell, Wilfred Thomason. 92 G875gr<br />

A Labrador doctor; the autobiography of Wilfred Thomason Grenfell.<br />

1919. Houghton.<br />

Story of the wonderful work of this medical missionary among the fisher folk of<br />

Labrador and Newfoundland, where he has devoted the greater part of his life to establishing<br />

schools, churches, hospitals. He also tells of his early life and education in<br />

England, his work in the London slums and his part in the European war.<br />

Holland, Henry Scott. 92 H7232I1<br />

Forty years' friendship; letters from Henry Scott Holland to Mrs<br />

Drew; ed. by S. L. Ollard. [1919.] Nisbet.<br />

Letters to Mrs Drew (Mary Gladstone), forming the record of a friendship based<br />

on deep agreement in religion, in politics, in art, in music and in literature. These<br />

interests as well as the personality of the author, will be found illustrated here. Condensed<br />

from Outlook (London), 1919.<br />

Keeling, Frederick Hillersdon. 92 Ki56k<br />

Keeling letters & recollections; ed. by E. T., with an introduction<br />

by H. G. Wells. [1918.] Allen.<br />

Keeling was an expressive specimen of the educated youth of the first decade of<br />

the 20th century. Plis letters, pervaded by his curious and interesting personality, form<br />

a picture of the state of English mentality in the period 1904-16. He died fighting<br />

bravely in 1916. His letters on the opening of the war and the events of his service are<br />

of much interest. Condensed from Preface by H. G. Wells.<br />

Rice, Henry Mower. qr 92 R395U<br />

United States—Congress. Statue of Henry Mower Rice erected in<br />

Statuary hall of the United States capitol by the state of Minnesota;<br />

proceedings in Statuary hall, in the Senate and in the House of representatives<br />

upon the unveiling, reception and acceptance of the statue<br />

from the state of Minnesota. 1917. (64th cong. Ist sess. Senate.<br />

Doc. no.425, v.40.)<br />

With this is bound "Statue of Zebulon Baird Vance."<br />

Riley, James Whitcomb. g2 R458d<br />

Dickey, Marcus. Youth of James Whitcomb Riley; fortune's way<br />

with the poet from infancy to manhood. 1919. Bobbs.<br />

Ruskin, John. r g2 R8 99 w<br />

Whitehouse, John Howard, cd. Ruskin centenary addresses, 8<br />

Feb. 1919. 1919. Oxford University Press.<br />

Contents: Addresses, by the Viscount Bryce, J. W. Mackail, Henry Wilson. Sir<br />

E. T. Cook, Alexander Wedderburn.—Communication, by Sir Herbert Warren.—Ruskin<br />

as a pioneer force in modern life, by J. H. Whitehouse.<br />

"Chronological table," p.67—75.<br />

Turgenief, Ivan Sergevitch. 92 T8sst<br />

Lettres a Madame Viardot, publiees et annotees par E. Halperine-<br />

Kaminsky. 1907.<br />

Written between 1846 and 1871. Monsieur and Madame Viardot, the one a literary<br />

artist, the other a celebrated musician, had a great influence upon Turgenief's life<br />

and in the development of his style.


BOOKS ADDED—FEBRUARY i 85<br />

Collected Biography<br />

Ginisty, Paul. , ~<br />

T •<br />

r 927 G43<br />

Tes artistes morts pour la patrie. [2v. in 1.] 1916-19<br />

etc ^W^V* Fl ' e \ Ch *>}" s ' sculptors, musicians, engravers, architects,<br />

etc., who lost their lives in the world war.<br />

qr 920 N47<br />

Nos contemporains; portraits et biographies des personnalites beiges<br />

ou residant en Belgique, connues par l'ceuvre litteraire, artistique ou<br />

scientifique, ou par l'action politique, par l'influence morale ou sociale<br />

1904.<br />

Travel and Description<br />

Europe<br />

Fouillee, Alfred Jules fimile. gi4. 4 F82<br />

Psychologie du peuple francais. 1914.<br />

Contents: Les facteurs des caracteres nationaux.—Les races europeennes et leur<br />

part dans le caractere francais.—Le caractere gaulois.—Le caractere frangais.—Degenerescence<br />

physiologique et psychologique, ou crise?<br />

United States<br />

Henderson, Helen Weston. 91744 H44<br />

A loiterer in New England. 1919. Doran.<br />

Contents: The New England island.—The jumping-on place; Provinceton.—Cape<br />

Cod; exploration and discovery.—The back side of the Cape.—Shifting sands; the<br />

Spit and the Hook.—The Province lands.—The "May flower's" voyage; the forefathers<br />

discover the Cape.—The Pilgrims at Plymouth.—Modern Plymouth.—Salem of<br />

the witches.—The "captains'" Salem.—Samuel Mclntire's Salem.—Boston; the pearshaped<br />

peninsula.—Beacon hill.—The bulfinch trail.—The kernel of the nut.—Old landmarks.—Monumental<br />

Boston.<br />

Jackson's Philadelphia year book for 1919. 1919. r 917.4811 P49Ja<br />

"Aims to be an informative, statistical and historical guide to the city's activities<br />

and a record of its progress during the past year."<br />

Mann, Albert William, ed. 917.446 B64m<br />

Walks & talks about historic Boston. 1916. Mann Pub. Co.<br />

The editor, a native and resident of Boston, has collected much interesting material<br />

about that city, its early history, its people, its churches and places of interest. Includes<br />

many illustrations.<br />

[Pittsburgh, Chamber of Commerce.] r 917.4886 P674ipi<br />

Pittsburgh, the gateway between East and West; the convention<br />

city. [1918. Pittsburgh.]<br />

Smith, Mrs Annie S. (Swan). 917.3 S64<br />

As others see her; an Englishwoman's impressions of the American<br />

woman in war time. 1919. Houghton.<br />

Other Countries<br />

915.6 A65<br />

The Arab of Mesopotamia. [1907?] Superintendent, Government<br />

Press.<br />

With this is bound "Asiatic Turkey," by G. L. Bell.<br />

A very able and informing little book, which gives in ten anonymous essays<br />

an account of the Arabs of Mesopotamia. Condensed from Spectator, 1918.


86 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

History<br />

Europe<br />

Gray, William Dodge.<br />

r 937 G81<br />

Study of the life of Hadrian prior to his accession. 1919. (Smith<br />

College studies in history, v.4, no.2.)<br />

Contents: Introduction.—Hadrian's early life and education.—Hadrian's later<br />

life and public career.—The Parthian war.—Was Hadrian adopted by Trajan?<br />

Contains bibliographical foot-notes.<br />

Vizetelly, Ernest Alfred.<br />

944-36 V35<br />

Paris and her people under the third republic. 1919. Chatto.<br />

The author refuses to believe that English readers care only for Parisian scandals<br />

and witticisms. He includes much statistical information and many allusions to authors,<br />

actors and other prominent people which will be useful to writers of history.<br />

Does not claim to be exhaustive.<br />

United States<br />

Brown University—John Carter Brown library. qr 016.97 B79<br />

Catalogue of the John Carter Brown library in Brown University.<br />

v.i. 1919. (Bibliotheca Americana.)<br />

This library is "the largest and most valuable independent Library of early Americana."<br />

Prefatory note.<br />

Dahlinger, Charles William.<br />

r 974.886 D150<br />

Old Allegheny. 1918. Privately printed. Pittsburgh.<br />

"References" at the end of each chapter.<br />

Reprinted from the "Western Pennsylvania historical magazine."<br />

A short history of the city of Allegheny.<br />

O'Brien, Michael Joseph.<br />

973-3 O12<br />

A hidden phase of American history; Ireland's part in America's<br />

struggle for liberty. 1919. Dodd.<br />

Contains bibliographical foot-notes.<br />

The subject matter of the book falls into three divisions; the first devoted to the<br />

Irish sympathy for the American colonies in their struggle for independence, the<br />

second to the Irish soldiers in the Revolutionary army, and the third to the early<br />

immigration from Ireland to America. Condensed from Introduction.<br />

Ohio—Adjutant-general.<br />

r 973.89 O18<br />

Offical roster of Ohio soldiers in the War with Spain, 1898-99.<br />

1916.<br />

Other Countries<br />

Kendall, Carlton Waldo.<br />

951.9 K17<br />

The truth about Korea. 1919. Korean National Assoc.<br />

"Bibliography," p.103-104.<br />

Brief account of Japanese autocratic rule in Korea and documents and proclamations<br />

setting forth Korea's claims for liberation from Japan, presented at the peace<br />

conference in 1919.<br />

European War<br />

Bairnsfather, Bruce. 940.918 Bi6f<br />

From mud to mufti; with old Bill ou all fronts. 1919. Putnam.


•<br />

BOOKS ADDED—FEBRUARY 1920 87<br />

Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh. r 016.940927 C21<br />

War welfare <strong>org</strong>anizations; a reading list. 1918. Pittsburgh.<br />

. Contents: Young Men's Christian Association.—Young Women's Christian Association.—Knights<br />

of Columbus.—Jewish Welfare Board.—American Library Association.—War<br />

Camp Community Service.—Salvation Army.<br />

Cosens, Monica.<br />

Lloyd Ge<strong>org</strong>e's munition girls. [1916.]<br />

Hutchinson.<br />

940.928 C83<br />

Dennett, Carl P. 940.917 D43<br />

Prisoners of the great war; authoritative statement of conditions<br />

in the prison camps of Germany. 1919. Houghton.<br />

Contents: Returning prisoners.—Suffering in German camps.—Finding the prisoners.—Food<br />

and clothing.—When a prisoner is captured.—Living conditions.—Reports<br />

by neutral delegates.—Escapes.—Human wreckage.—Appreciation.—Agreements<br />

and treaties.—Abuses.—Conclusion.<br />

Fribourg, Andre.<br />

940.918 F94C<br />

Croire; histoire d'un soldat. 1917.<br />

Contents: PRELUDE: Agadir (1911).—Le depart (1914).—Au Bois des chevaliers.<br />

—En Flandres.—Le retour.<br />

Harrison, Henry Sydnor.<br />

940.91 H298<br />

When I come back. 1919. Houghton.<br />

Brief record, interspersed with extracts from letters, of the experiences of an<br />

American soldier who was killed in France during the European war.<br />

r 940-924 H43<br />

Help to the devastated churches of France. [Librairie de l'Art Catholique.]<br />

Keyes, Sir Roger John Brownlow. 940.915 K23<br />

Ostend and Zeebrugge, April 23, May 10, 1918; the dispatches of<br />

Sir Roger Keyes, and other narratives of the operations; ed. by C. S.<br />

Terry. 1919. Oxford University Press.<br />

Mackenzie, William Douglas. 940.922 M18<br />

Christian ethics in the world war. 1918. Y. M. C. A. Press.<br />

Rickenbacker, Edward Vernon. 940.914 R43<br />

Fighting the flying circus. 1919. Stokes.<br />

Intimate thoughts and feelings of an American ace of aces, as he went out day<br />

after day to attack the champions of the German air service.<br />

, Roosevelt, Kermit. 940.913 R68<br />

War in the garden of Eden. 1919. Scribner.<br />

Account of the author's experiences with the British forces in Mesopotamia and<br />

with the American forces in France and Germany during the European war.<br />

Roosevelt, Theodore, b. 1887.<br />

940.918 R68<br />

Average Americans. 1919. Putnam.<br />

Lieutenant-Colonel Roosevelt combines with his own war-time experiences much<br />

that is of interest concerning his father and brothers. He indicates clearly the difficulties<br />

caused by our lack of preparedness and advocates universal training. The preface<br />

contains extracts from his father's letters dated 1917-18.<br />

Wyllie, William Lionel, & Wren, M. F.<br />

q 940.915 W98<br />

Sea fights of the great war; naval incidents during the first nine<br />

months. 1918. Cassell.


CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Miscellaneous<br />

Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh. r 352 C21<br />

Some facts and opinions concerning public improvements. [1919J<br />

Pittsburgh.<br />

Haverly, Jack.<br />

793-1 H35<br />

Negro minstrels; a complete guide to negro minstrelsy, containing<br />

recitations, jokes, cross-fires, conundrums, riddles, stump speeches,<br />

ragtime and sentimental songs, etc., including hints on <strong>org</strong>anizing and<br />

successfully presenting a performance. 1902. Drake.<br />

Koch, Theodore Wesley.<br />

027.6 K36b<br />

Books in the war; the romance of library war service. 1919.<br />

Houghton.<br />

A picture of the kind of work which the American Library Association did in<br />

home camps and overseas during the European war. Includes an account of British<br />

war libraries.<br />

Books for the Blind<br />

The Library has a collection of about 3,700 books and 75 periodicals for the blind.<br />

The Pennsylvania Home Teaching Society and Free Circulating Library for the Blind<br />

supports in this district a teacher, herself totally blind, who, under the direction of this<br />

Library, visits the adult blind in their homes and teaches them to read. This service<br />

and the use of the books are absolutely free to all the adult blind in Pittsburgh and western<br />

Pennsylvania and the Director requests that names and addreses of such persons be<br />

sent to him in order that the teacher may call upon them.<br />

American Braille<br />

United States. Constitution.<br />

E 342.7 U25<br />

Constitution of the United States of America. 1900. Illinois Institution<br />

for the Education of the Blind.<br />

Line Type<br />

Swinton, William.<br />

qE 909 Sg7<br />

Outlines of the world's history, v.2-3. 1881. Amer. Printing<br />

House for the Blind.<br />

Revised Braille with Contractions<br />

Roman Catholic church.<br />

qE 248 R6sm2<br />

Manual of prayers and devotions, by J. M. Stadelman; stereotyped<br />

and printed for the Xavier Braille Publication "Society for the Blind,<br />

Chicago. Xavier Free Pub. Soc. for the Blind.<br />

Young People's Books<br />

•ZEsop.<br />

qj 398.91 A25ae<br />

iEsop for children, with pictures by Milo Winter. 1919. Rand.<br />

Large type, full-page plates and other pictures in color.


BOOKS ADDED—FEBRUARY 1920 89<br />

Bachman, Frank Puterbaugh. j 609 B12<br />

Great inventors and their inventions. 1918. Amer. Book Co.<br />

Contents: Inventions of steam and electric power.—Inventions of manufacture<br />

and production.—Inventions of printing and communication.—Other famous inventors<br />

of to-day.<br />

Beard, Lina, & Beard, A. B. j 7g 0 6343m<br />

Mother Nature's toy-shop. 1918. Scribner.<br />

Contents: Wild flowers.—Grasses.—Green leaves.—Cultivated flowers.—Seedvessels.—Vegetables.—Fruit.<br />

Shows how to make clover wreaths and necklaces, fairy trees, grass houses, dolls<br />

and other toys. Many pictures and diagrams.<br />

Fillmore, Parker Roysted. j 398 F48<br />

Czechoslovak fairy tales; retold by Parker Fillmore, with illustrations<br />

and decorations by Jan Matulka. 1919. Harcourt.<br />

Fifteen folk tales. Among them, the fanciful tale of the wood maiden and the<br />

golden birch leaves, the story of the seer who went in quest of the flaming horse and<br />

of the charcoal-burner's son who married a princess.<br />

Hyde, Mary Kendall. j 361 H99<br />

Girls' book of the Red Cross. 1919. Crowell.<br />

Interesting account of the origin of the Red-cross Society, its service in times of<br />

national disaster and in the European war, including ambulance, hospital and canteen<br />

work, the care of refugees and orphans, camp and home service. Ends with a chapter<br />

on the future of the Red Cross.<br />

McFee, Mrs Inez Nellie (Canfield). j 940.91 M15<br />

Peep at the front; stories of the great war for boys and girls. 1919.<br />

Crowell.<br />

The separate chapters deal with various phases of the European war—trench fighting,<br />

the work of signalmen, airmen, army engineers, scouts and snipers, sappers and<br />

miners, the tank and the camouflage corps. Hospital and ambulance service is also included.<br />

McFee, Mrs Inez Nellie (Canfield). j 582 M15<br />

Tree book. 1919. Stokes.<br />

Chapters on the life and work of trees are followed by descriptions of the more<br />

common families. Legends and poetic fancies associated with trees are introduced<br />

and there is a concluding chapter on forestry. Photographic illustrations.<br />

Mijatovich, Mine Elodie Lawton, tr. j 398 M68<br />

Serbian fairy tales; tr. from the Serbian; illustrated by Sidney Stanley.<br />

1918. McBride.<br />

Mother Goose melodies. j 398.8 M93I<br />

The little Mother Goose, with illustrations by J. W. Smith. 1918.<br />

Dodd.<br />

Twelve color plates selected from those in "The Jessie Willcox Smith Mother<br />

Goose," but reduced in size. Includes 342 of the rhymes.<br />

Parsons, Geoffrey. j 353 P26<br />

Land of fair play; how America is governed. 1919. Scribner.<br />

The plan of the American government is compared with that of a base-ball game and<br />

the national laws are shown to be the same in principle as the playground laws of fair<br />

play. The constitution is given in full and there are chapters on "What the nation does<br />

for us," "Political parties and elections" and "The duties of an American."<br />

Phillips, Walter Shelley. j 398.097 P51<br />

The sandman; his Indian stories. 1918. Page. (Sandman stories.)<br />

Author spent much of his early life among the Indians and learned from them their<br />

legends and traditions. Folklore tales such as "Why the coyote has a rough gray coat"<br />

and "Why crawfish lives in the water" alternate with stories illustrating the life and<br />

customs of the Indians. Language is simple and type large.


Rules for Lending Books<br />

I. Hours. The adult Lending Rooms of the Central and branch<br />

libraries are open daily from 9 a. m. to 9 p. m., Sundays and holidays<br />

excepted. The Childrens Rooms in the branches are closed after 6 p. m.<br />

The Central Childrens Room is open daily except Sundays and holidays<br />

from 9 a. m. to 9 p. m.<br />

2. Borrowers. Any resident or taxpayer of Pittsburgh is entitled<br />

to borrow books from the Library by signing the proper application<br />

and agreement and receiving a borrower's card. In the case of a child<br />

under fourteen years of age the application must also be signed by the<br />

parent or guardian.<br />

Non-residents who can call at the Library for their books may<br />

obtain a borrower's card on payment of one dollar a year in advance.<br />

For non-residents who wish their books sent by mail or express the<br />

annual fee is two dollars. If a non-resident is employed or attending<br />

school in the city the guaranty of a resident tax-payer will be accepted<br />

instead of this fee.<br />

Temporary residents may borrow books on making a deposit of<br />

five dollars, or moreif deemed desirable, this sum to be returned to the<br />

depositor upon surrender of his borrower's card.<br />

3. Borrowers' cards. A borrower's card may be used at the Central<br />

and branch libraries.<br />

Each borrower is responsible for all books charged on his card.<br />

Change of residence must be reported immediately.<br />

Lost cards should be reported at once. Adult cards will be replaced<br />

fourteen days after notice of such loss. Juvenile cards will be replaced<br />

fourteen days after notice of loss is given upon the payment of a fine<br />

of five cents, or replaced without payment six months after notice of<br />

loss is given.<br />

4. Issue of books. Holders of adult cards may borrow as many<br />

books of non-fiction as are needed at one time, together with two books<br />

of fiction, only one of which shall have been published within the current<br />

or the preceding year. Holders of juvenile cards may borrow two<br />

juvenile books at one time.<br />

Books may be kept two weeks, except some new and popular<br />

books, which may be kept but seven days. Magazines are lent for<br />

seven days only.


RULES FOR LENDING BOOKS 91<br />

5. Renewals. Non-fiction and certain standard fiction may be<br />

once renewed for two weeks from the date on which the request for<br />

renewal is received.<br />

Requests for renewal may be made in person, by mail, or by telephone.<br />

In each case the call number of the book, the number of the<br />

borrower's card, and the date on which the book is due must be given.<br />

In return the borrower will receive a renewal card, which must be<br />

brought with the book when it is returned.<br />

6. Reserves. Books may be reserved at the Library by payment<br />

of one cent for a postal card notice. As soon as the book is returned<br />

to the Library, this postal card will be mailed to the person making<br />

the request, and the book will be reserved two days. Requests for<br />

reserves may be made by telephone, in which case the cost of the postal<br />

card will be collected when the borrower calls for the book.<br />

7. Fines. A fine of two cents a day (including Sundays and holidays)<br />

must be paid on each book kept overtime. The holder of a<br />

juvenile card may forfeit the use of his card for six months from the<br />

date upon which an overdue book is returned in place of payment of<br />

this fine. If a book is not returned within three weeks after the date<br />

on which it is due, a messenger will be sent for it. This messenger has<br />

authority to collect the fine incurred and an additional fee of twentyfive<br />

cents for messenger service.<br />

A borrower must pay for books lost or injured while charged on<br />

his card. No books may be borrowed until fines and claims for damages<br />

have been paid.<br />

No claim can be established because of the failure of the Post<br />

Office to deliver notices to or from the Library.


Schedule of Library Hours<br />

Central Library—Reference, Technology and Periodical Rooms<br />

open week days from 9 a. m. to 10 p. m.; Sunday from 2 to 6 p. m. Lending<br />

Room open week days from 9 a. m. to 9 p. m. Childrens Room open<br />

week days from 9 a. m. to 9 p. m. (See schedule of holiday hours below.)<br />

Branch Libraries—Open week days from 9 a. m. to 9 p. m. Childrens<br />

Rooms open from 9 a. m. to 6 p. m. (See schedule of holiday<br />

hours below.)<br />

New Year's Day. Central Library—Reading rooms open from 9 a. m.<br />

to 10 p. m. Lending Room closed. Branch Libraries—Reading rooms<br />

open from 2 to 6 p. m. No books issued for home use.<br />

Washington's Birthday. All departments open as usual.<br />

Good Friday. All departments open as usual.<br />

Memorial Day. All departments closed.<br />

July Fourth. All departments closed.<br />

Labor Day. All departments open as usual.<br />

Thanksgiving Day. Central Library—Reading rooms open from 9<br />

a. m. to 10 p. m. Lending Room closed. Branch Libraries—Reading<br />

rooms open from 2 to 6 p. m. No books issued for home use.<br />

Christmas. All departments closed from 6 p. m. December 24 to<br />

9 a. m. December 26.<br />

92


Publications of the Library Now in Print<br />

Prices. Where two prices are given, the first is that for which<br />

the publication is sold at the Library only. All prices are strictly net,<br />

except for individual publications ordered in lots of twenty or more.<br />

Remittances must be made in advance, payable to Carnegie Library of<br />

Pittsburgh. All publications not marked * may be had free at the<br />

Library, or will be sent postpaid for 5 cents each.<br />

•Classified Catalogue of the Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh.<br />

FIRST SERIES, 1895-1902. 1907. vol. 1-3. 3,890 pp. $12.00.<br />

SECOND SERIES, 1902-1906. 1908. vol. 4-5. 2,020 pp. $5.00.<br />

THIRD SERIES, 1907-1911. 1914. vol. 6-8. 3,475 pp. $8.00.<br />

Bound in buckram with gilt tops. Include full author and subject indexes.<br />

The same [in pamphlet form].<br />

FIRST SERIES, 1895-1902. 10 parts. 1903-07.<br />

Part 1. General Works. 1907. 67 pp. 10 cents, postpaid.<br />

Part 2. Philosophy and Religion. 1903. 223 pp. Out of print.<br />

Part 3. Sociology and Philology. 1904. 340 pp. 15 cents; postpaid, 25 cents.<br />

Part 4. Natural Science and Useful Arts. 1904. 598 pp. 35 cents; postpaid,<br />

50 cents.<br />

Part 5, Fine Arts. 1905. 351 pp. 15 cents; postpaid, 25 cents.<br />

Part 6. Literature. 1905. 308 pp. 15 cents; postpaid, 25 cents.<br />

Part 7. Fiction. 1906. 446 pp. 25 cents; postpaid, 40 cents.<br />

Part 8. History and Travel. 1907. 691 pp. 50 cents; postpaid, 65 cents.<br />

Part 9. Biography. 1907. 381 pp. 20 cents; postpaid, 30 cents.<br />

Part 10. Indexes, Title-pages, Contents, Preface and Synopsis of Classification.<br />

1907. 850 pp. $1.00; postpaid, $1.20.<br />

SECOND SERIES, 1902-1906. 5 parts. 1907-08.<br />

Part 1. General Works, Philosophy, Religion, Sociology and Philology. 1907.<br />

425 pp. Out of print.<br />

Part 2. Natural Science, Useful Arts and Fine Arts. 1907. 477 pp. 45<br />

cents ; postpaid, 60 cents.<br />

Part 3. Literature, English Fiction and Fiction in Foreign Languages. 1908.<br />

342 pp. 40 cents ; postpaid, 50 cents.<br />

Part 4. History and Travel, Collected Biography and Individual Biography.<br />

1908. 465 pp. 45 cents; postpaid, 60 cents.<br />

Part 5. Indexes, Title-pages, Contents, Preface and Synopsis of Classification.<br />

1908. 460 pp. 80 cents; postpaid, 95 cents.<br />

THIRD SERIES, 1907-191 I. 10 parts. 1912-14.<br />

Part 1. General Works, Philosophy, Religion. 1912. 372 pp. 40 cents;<br />

postpaid, 50 cents.<br />

Part 2. Sociology, Philology. 1912. 418 pp. 45 cents; postpaid, 60 cents.<br />

Part 3. Natural Science, Useful Arts. 1913. 623 pp. 60 cents; postpaid,<br />

75 cents.<br />

Part 4. Fine Arts. 1913- 237 pp. 25 cents; postpaid, 35 cents.<br />

Part 5. Literature. 1913. 271 pp. 30 cents; postpaid, 40 cents.<br />

Part 6. English Fiction, Fiction in Foreign Languages. 1913. 294 pp. 30<br />

cents ; postpaid, 40 cents.<br />

Part 7. History and Travel. 1914. 401 PP- 40 cents; postpaid, 50 cents.<br />

Part 8. Biography. 1914. 276 pp. 30 cents; postpaid, 40 cents.<br />

Part 9. Books for the Blind. 1914- 44 PP- 5 cents; postpaid, 10 cents.<br />

Part 10. Indexes, Title-pages, Contents, Preface and Synopsis of Classification.<br />

1914. 816 pp. 80 cents; postpaid, $1.00.<br />

FOURTH SERIES, 1912-1917. 10 parts. 1919.<br />

Part 1. General Works, Philosophy, Religion. 1919. 208 pp. Postpaid, 50<br />

cents.<br />

Part 2. Sociology, Philology. 1919- 360 pp. Postpaid, 80 cents.<br />

93


94 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Monthly Bulletin. 50 cents a year, postpaid.<br />

Not published in August and September.<br />

Annual Reports, ist-23d, 1896-1918. Sent free upon request.<br />

Except the 3d, 6th and 20th, which are out of print.<br />

Catalogue of the Carnegie Library School; a school for training in<br />

General Library Work, Library Work with Children and School<br />

Library Work. Sent free upon request.<br />

*Debate Index. 3d edition. 1919. 116 pp. 25 cents; postpaid, 30 cents.<br />

Periodicals and Other Serials Currently Received by the Carnegie<br />

Library of Pittsburgh. 7th edition. 1915. 42 pp.<br />

Books in the Library of the American Philatelic Society. 1910. 20 pp.<br />

Rules for Filing Cards in the Dictionary Catalogues of the Carnegie<br />

Library of Pittsburgh. Reprint of 2d edition. 1918. 32 pp.<br />

What a Public Library Finds to Do; by Elisa May Willard. 1917. 18 pp.<br />

Reference Lists<br />

History<br />

Books of Interest in Connection with the European War. 1914. 26 pp.<br />

Braddock's Expedition. 11 pp. (Monthly Bulletin, Nov. 1906.)<br />

England and the English; a Few Suggestions for Reading. 1918. 12 pp.<br />

Expeditions of General Forbes against Fort Duquesne. 1908. 20 pp.<br />

Expeditions of General Bouquet to the Ohio Country, 1763 and 1764.<br />

11 pp. (Monthly Bulletin, Dec. 1909.)<br />

Letters of General Forbes; Reprint of 35 Letters Relating to the Expedition<br />

against Fort Duquesne. 63 pp. 20 cents, postpaid.<br />

(Monthly Bulletin, Feb.-May 1909.)<br />

•Pennsylvania; a Reading List for the Use of Schools, with Special<br />

Reference to Indian Warfare and the Local History of Pittsburgh,<br />

1911. 83 pp. 20 cents; postpaid, 25 cents.<br />

Pittsburgh in 1816. 1916. 75 pp.<br />

Washington's Visits to Pittsburgh and the Ohio Country. 15 pp.<br />

(Monthly Bulletin, Feb. 1908.)<br />

The Whiskey Insurrection. 9 pp. (Monthly Bulletin, July 1906.)<br />

Biography<br />

Famous Royal Women; a Reading List for Girls. 1908. 11 pp.<br />

Lives and Letters; a Selected and Annotated List. 1910. 36 pp.<br />

*Men of Science and Industry; a Guide to the Biographies of Scientists,<br />

Engineers, Inventors and Physicians, in the Carnegie Library of<br />

Pittsburgh. 1915. 189pp. 20 cents; postpaid, 30 cents.<br />

Sociology<br />

Housing. 1912. 45 pp.<br />

Immigration. 1918. 12 pp.<br />

Vocational Guidance. Supplement. 10 pp. (Monthly Bulletin, Dec.<br />

1915-)


PUBLICATIONS OF THE LIBRARY 95<br />

Publications of Interest to Engineers<br />

Air-Brakes. 1915. 55 pp.<br />

Air Conditioning. 1914. 58 pp.<br />

Brick Manufacture and Bricklaying. 26 pp.<br />

(Monthly Bulletin, Jan.<br />

1912.)<br />

By-Product Coking. 1915. 40 pp.<br />

Case-Hardening. 1918. 10 pp.<br />

Electric Driving in Rolling-Mills and Foundries. 11 pp. (Monthly<br />

Bulletin, Nov. 1907.)<br />

Electric Heating and Cooking. 1910. 16 pp.<br />

Engineering Ethics. 1917. 17 pp.<br />

Floods and Flood Protection. 48 pp. (Monthly Bulletin, July 1908.)<br />

Floods and Flood Protection. Supplement. 1911. 19 pp.<br />

The Gyroscope. 1917. 23 pp.<br />

•Index to Proceedings of the Engineers' Society of Western Pennsylvania,<br />

Volumes 1 to 20, 1880-1904; Compiled by Harrison W.<br />

Craver. 1906. 144 pp. $1.00 postpaid.<br />

•Index to the Classified Catalogue of the Technology Department. 2d<br />

edition. 1916. 63 pp. 10 cents.<br />

Lampblack. 1919. 8 pp.<br />

List of Technical Indexes and Bibliographies Appearing Serially. 1910.<br />

17 PP-<br />

Market Prices Appearing Currently in Technical and Trade Journals.<br />

1918. 6 pp.<br />

•Men of Science and Industry; a Guide to the Biographies of Scientists,<br />

Engineers, Inventors and Physicians, in the Carnegie Library of<br />

Pittsburgh. 1915. 189 pp. 20 cents; postpaid, 30 cents.<br />

Metal Corrosion and Protection. 2d edition, revised and enlarged.<br />

58 pp. (Monthly Bulletin, July 1909.)<br />

Mica. 12 pp. (Monthly Bulletin, Oct. 1908.)<br />

One Hundred Recent Books on Agriculture. 1910. 19 pp.<br />

Refuse and Garbage Disposal. 1909. 39 pp.<br />

Road Dust Preventives. 1916. 39 pp.<br />

•Sand; Its Occurrence, Properties and Uses. 1918. 72 pp. 15 cents.<br />

postpaid.<br />

Scientific and Technical Reference Books. 19 pp. (Monthly Bulletin,<br />

Nov. 1916.)<br />

•Sewage Disposal and Treatment. 1910. 96 pp. 15 cents, postpaid.<br />

Smoke Prevention. 18 pp. (Monthly Bulletin, May 1907-)<br />

Sodium Nitrate Industry of Chile. 7 pp. (Monthly Bulletin, March<br />

1908.)<br />

Steam Turbines. 21 pp. (Monthly Bulletin, Nov. 1904.)<br />

•Technical Book Review Index, v.i-date, March 1917-date. 50 cents<br />

a year, postpaid.<br />

No. 1-3, March, April, May, published in the Monthly Bulletin of those months,<br />

5 cents each, postpaid.<br />

v.i, no.4-v.3, no.2 (July 1917-June 1919), issued separately, quarterly, 15 cents<br />

each, postpaid.


96 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Trees and Forestry. 1917. 18 pp.<br />

Water Softening. 8 pp. (Monthly Bulletin, June 1904.)<br />

Library Work with Children<br />

•Catalogue of Books, Annotated and Arranged, and Provided by the<br />

Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh for the Use of the First Eight<br />

Grades in the Pittsburgh Schools. 1907. 331 pp. 35 cents;<br />

postpaid, 50 cents.<br />

•Annotated Catalogue of Books Used in the Home Libraries and<br />

Reading Clubs. 1905. no pp. 20 cents; postpaid, 25 cents.<br />

Illustrated Editions of Children's Books. 1915. 20 pp.<br />

Patriotism Through Literature; by Elva S. Smith. 1919. 17 pp.<br />

(Monthly Bulletin, June 1919.)<br />

Story-Telling<br />

Stories from the Ballads of Robin Hood; Outlines for Story-Telling.<br />

1914. 38 pp.<br />

Stories from the Norse; Outlines for Story-Telling. 1914. 22 pp.<br />

•Stories to Tell to Children. 2d edition. 1918. 72 pp. 25 cents.<br />

Reading Lists<br />

Famous Royal Women; a Reading List for Girls. 1908. n pp.<br />

Favorite Books of Well-known People When They Were Boys and<br />

Girls. 2d reprint. 1918. 12 pp.<br />

"Foreign Lands Where Wonders Are." 1911. 14 pp.<br />

•Pennsylvania; a Reading List for the Use of Schools, with Special<br />

Reference to Indian Warfare and the Local History of Pittsburgh.<br />

1911". 83 pp. 20 cents; postpaid, 25 cents.<br />

February 10, igeo.


CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

MONTHLY BULLETIN<br />

VOL. 25 MARCH 1920 NO. 3<br />

WEST END BRANCH<br />

CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

PITTSBURGH<br />

CARNEGIE LIBRARY<br />

1920


Board of Trustees<br />

S. H. CHURCH, President<br />

ANDREW W. MELLON, Vice-President<br />

J. D. HAILMAN, Secretary<br />

JAMES H. REED, Treasurer<br />

E. V. BABCOCK DAVID B. OLIVER<br />

W. W. BLACKBURN H. K. PORTER<br />

JOHN H. DAILEY<br />

W. H. ROBERTSON<br />

W. Y. ENGLISH CHARLES L. TAYLOR<br />

ROBERT GARLAND<br />

J. J. TURNER<br />

JOHN H. HENDERSON<br />

H. D. WILLIAMS<br />

JOHN S. HERRON DANIEL WINTERS<br />

Library Committee<br />

J. J. TURNER, Chairman<br />

E. V. BABCOCK J. D. HAILMAN<br />

ROBERT GARLAND DANIEL WINTERS<br />

Director<br />

JOHN H. LEETE<br />

Central Library, Schenley Park<br />

Branch Libraries<br />

Lawrenceville Branch, 279 Fisk Street<br />

West End Branch, Wabash and Neptune Streets<br />

Wylie Avenue Branch, Wylie Avenue and Green Street<br />

Mount Washington Branch, 315 Grandview Avenue<br />

Hazelwood Branch, 4748 Monongahela Street<br />

East Liberty Branch, Station Street and Larimer Avenue<br />

South Side Branch, Carson and Twenty-second Streets<br />

Homewood Branch, Hamilton and Lang Avenues


Contents<br />

Page<br />

West End Branch - 101<br />

A Recent Gift; the Books of<br />

an Old Pittsburgh Library 102<br />

Current Terms Defined - - 104<br />

Easter - - - - - - 106<br />

Prices of Library Publications<br />

- - - - - - no<br />

The Bulletin Title-Page, Contents<br />

and Index - - - no<br />

Present Day Problems - - no<br />

Books Added, February 1 to<br />

March 1, 1920<br />

Agriculture - - - - - 125<br />

Amusements - - - - - 132<br />

Architecture - 128<br />

Biography - - - - - 135<br />

Botany - - - - - - 121<br />

Business. Communication - 125<br />

Chemical Technology - - 126<br />

Chemistry - - - - - 121<br />

Commerce. Communication 118<br />

Costume - - - - - - 118<br />

Domestic Economy - - 125<br />

Drama. Theatre - 134<br />

Economics - - - - - no<br />

Education - - - - - 118<br />

Electrical Engineering - 124<br />

Page<br />

Engineering - - - - - 123<br />

Ethics - - - - - - 114<br />

European War - 138<br />

Fiction - - - - - - m<br />

Fine Arts - - - - - - 127<br />

French Fiction - - - - 113<br />

History - - - - - - 137<br />

Immigration - - - - 116<br />

Language - - - - - - ny<br />

Law - - - - - - 117<br />

Literature _ - - - - 132<br />

Medicine, Physiology, Hygiene<br />

- - - - - - 122<br />

Music - - - - - - 129<br />

Philosophy - - - - - IT 3<br />

Poetry - - - - - - 133<br />

Politics and Government - 116<br />

Printing - - - - - 126<br />

Religion - - - - - - 114<br />

Science - - - - - -<br />

I20<br />

Sociology - - - - - H5<br />

Travel and Description - 137<br />

Useful Arts - - - - - 122<br />

Women - - - - - 119<br />

Young People's Books - - 139


Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh<br />

Monthly Bulletin<br />

Published monthly, except in August and September, by the Carnegie Library of<br />

Pittsburgh, Forbes Street and Bellefield Avenue, Schenley Park, Pittsburgh, Pa. President,<br />

S. H. Church, Carnegie Library, Forbes Street and Bellefield Avenue; Secretary,<br />

J. D. Hailman; Treasurer, James H. Reed, 1027 Carnegie Building; Director, John H.<br />

Leete, Carnegie Library, Forbes Street and Bellefield Avenue.<br />

Subscription 50 cents a year.<br />

Vol. 25 March 1920 No. 3<br />

West End Branch<br />

Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh<br />

The West End Branch Library, situated at Wabash and<br />

Neptune Streets, which was opened to the public on February<br />

1, 1899, is the smallest of the branches. It is in a residence<br />

district, on the edge of the main business section of the West<br />

End.<br />

The population served by this branch is largely American,<br />

although there are a number of Poles and Germans for whose<br />

use the Library has a small collection of easy readings in English<br />

and of books in Polish and German. The main part of the<br />

collection, however, is books in the English language.<br />

This branch does much reference work with women's clubs<br />

and also with the grade, parochial and high schools of the district,<br />

and has story-hours at which famous stories are told to<br />

groups of children, in the Library building in winter and in the<br />

near-by playground in summer. In addition, it carries on, of<br />

course, the usual work of lending to both adults and children,<br />

books for home use.<br />

101


102 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

A Recent Gift<br />

The Books of an Old Pittsburgh Library<br />

The Board of Directors of the Pittsburgh Library Association<br />

has turned over to the Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh<br />

the books, fifteen thousand or more, wdiich were the property<br />

of this old Pittsburgh library. As rapidly as possible, these<br />

books will be catalogued and made available to the public. At<br />

present no definite information can be given as to the resources<br />

of this collection which seems to be a general one; but that it<br />

will prove a valuable addition to the collection already in the<br />

Library, is practically certain.<br />

For many years these books have been stored in the second<br />

story of an old stable and few people knew that the collection<br />

was in existence. Some of the books have book-plates bearing<br />

the inscription ''Pittsburgh Library Association," while others<br />

have the older designation, "The Mercantile Library Association."<br />

Some are marked "Carnegie Scientific Alcove;" these<br />

were given by Mr. Andrew Carnegie and testify to his interest<br />

in libraries in the days before he was able to give the large gifts<br />

with which his name is connected.<br />

According to an article by Mr. A. L. Hardy, published in<br />

1913 in the Pittsburgh "Gazette Times" and reprinted in part<br />

in the "Monthly Bulletin" for December of that year, as far<br />

back as 1788 Pittsburgh had a small public subscription library<br />

established in a newspaper office, but after a few yearsit was<br />

obliged to suspend operations from want of patronage. Two<br />

subsequent attempts met a like fate and it was not until November<br />

of 1813 that the initial steps were taken for the formation<br />

of Pittsburgh's first real public library. It was <strong>org</strong>anized under<br />

the name, "The Pittsburgh Permanent Library Companv."<br />

Money was subscribed for the purchase of books, valuable volumes<br />

were either contributed or loaned by public spirited citizens,<br />

and the library was opened in rooms on Second Street.<br />

Here it remained until the county commissioners set aside a<br />

commodious room in the Court House for its use. There is no<br />

record at hand as to its eventual fate.<br />

In 1823, a library for the exclusive use of the apprentice<br />

boys in the mills and factories, was opened on Third Street.


A RECENT GIFT 103<br />

For a time it was fairly successful but in the late twenties, after<br />

fruitless efforts to make it popular, the books were disposed of<br />

at public auction.<br />

Several subsequent efforts to establish circulating libraries<br />

and reading rooms were only temporarily successful, until in<br />

1835 some of the city newspapers, after vainly endeavoring to<br />

arouse public interest in the subject, printed caustic comments<br />

on the lack of interest to be found in Pittsburgh in pursuits<br />

merely mental. These efforts finally resulted in an application<br />

for a charter under which "The Mercantile Library Association"<br />

was <strong>org</strong>anized in October 1835. Headquarters were<br />

established in rooms on Fourth Avenue near Wood Street, but<br />

there seems still to have been a lack of public interest and for<br />

ten years the library existed by sufferance rather than by use.<br />

During this period, however, the city made strides both in mercantile<br />

and educational affairs and in 1847 this library was<br />

re<strong>org</strong>anized under the name, "The Mercantile Library and Mechanics<br />

Institute." The directors rented rooms in the second<br />

story of a building on Market Street between Third and<br />

Fourth, furnished them plainly, erected the necessary shelving,<br />

and began the purchase of books. Although the library had<br />

nearly 4,000 volumes on its shelves and more than 50 newspapers<br />

and other periodicals for use in its reading rooms, it<br />

created little public interest until after the Civil War, when the<br />

completion of a new library building and the adoption of more<br />

modern methods made this library take more of a place in the<br />

community. A large part of this aroused sentiment in favor of<br />

the library was due to the efforts of the Hon. Felix R. Brunot,<br />

and it is interesting to note the remarkable statement which he<br />

made when he retired from the presidency of the Mercantile<br />

Library Association in 1864—a statement which seems like a<br />

prophecy, except that the present reality, which is all too small<br />

for Pittsburgh's needs, far outstrips his vision of what should<br />

be.<br />

He said: "We want a library of one hundred thousand<br />

volumes, rich and complete in every department of useful<br />

knowledge. We want in connection with it, a collection of art,<br />

curiosities in natural science, autographs, coins, etc., worthy of<br />

the library. We want a building adapted for their accumulation<br />

and preservation, containing halls suitable for literary en-


104 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

tertainments of a community which is capable of creating such<br />

a library and gallery for the elevation of themselves and their<br />

posterity."<br />

The man who made possible the realization of Mr. Brunot's<br />

dream, was at that time a resident of Pittsburgh, earning a<br />

nominal salary as assistant superintendent of a railway. As a<br />

mere boy he, along with other poor boys, had had access to the<br />

private library of Colonel James Anderson of Allegheny, who<br />

on Saturday nights lent his books and gave kindly and judicious<br />

advice to lads, a number of whom afterward became<br />

prominent Pittsburgh business men. The conception of the extensive<br />

domain of literature gained under the direction of<br />

Colonel Anderson has had a goodly share of influence in the<br />

development of Pittsburgh's present library system.<br />

Information is not at hand as to just when this old library<br />

ceased to function, but it was somewhere about the time when<br />

the Carnegie Library was opened to the public. The books<br />

which have just been turned over to the Carnegie Library<br />

should, and probably will, have among their number many<br />

which will be of value in showing the history of Pittsburgh.<br />

Current Terms Defined<br />

Various terms frequently seen in recent books, magazines<br />

and newspapers are of such recent use in the exact sense in<br />

which they are employed, that their meaning is vague to many<br />

readers. Explanations of some of these terms are given here.<br />

Soviet<br />

A soviet is a new chapter in government, the distinctive contribution<br />

of the Russian revolution to political <strong>org</strong>anization.<br />

It is the local government body of the Russian revolution, a sort<br />

of city council or township board. The central supreme governing body<br />

is the All-Russian Congress of Soviets, and the cabinet there chosen.<br />

Since the soviet is the local <strong>org</strong>anization of the peasants', workmen's<br />

and soldiers' deputies, only these classes vote for delegates.<br />

That's the distinguishing feature of the Soviets—thev represent working-class<br />

rule. The aristocrats and middle class have no vote.<br />

In any district, for example, the workmen of each shop and trade<br />

elect a delegate, or as many delegates as their numbers entitle them to


CURRENT TERMS DEFINED 105<br />

to the local soviet. So with the soldiers and so with the peasants in<br />

section surrounding the city.<br />

But the shop owners, the merchants, the bankers, the lawyers, the<br />

land owners have no vote and no representatives. They have been<br />

disfranchised. Burton Knisely in the Baltimore "Sun," 191S.<br />

A soviet is the executive committee of a labor union. The Bolsheviki<br />

are the people who are running the Russian Soviets. The former<br />

is a kind of political machinery derived from industrial <strong>org</strong>anizations.<br />

The latter is the particular party now in control of the machinery in<br />

Russia. It is the same difference as exists in our country between governmental<br />

institutions and political parties...<br />

The soviet is designed to sweep aside as unnecessary all such<br />

things as kings, presidents, parliaments, legislatures, courts, cabinets,<br />

capitalists, landlords, employees, armies, nations, classes, and boundary<br />

lines. We may call this as absurd, as impossible, or as wicked as<br />

we please, but since it is just now the only government of a hundred<br />

million Russians and fifty million Germans we are obliged to try to<br />

understand it. "Independent," 1918.<br />

Sinn Fein<br />

Seventeen years ago a clever young journalist named Arthur<br />

Griffith began to edit a small weekly paper in Dublin. His writings<br />

became popular with a certain section of the people as the result of his<br />

caustic treatment of economic problems in Ireland; but he developed<br />

into a person of local importance after the issue of his book entitled<br />

The Resurrection of Hungary. In this book Griffith pointed out that<br />

Hungary had lifted herself out of poverty into wealth, and had secured<br />

virtual independence by a policy of self-reliance. He showed that by<br />

withdrawing her members from the Parliament at Vienna, boycotting<br />

Austrian goods, fostering Hungarian industries, and generally acting<br />

when necessary on the principles of passive resistance, Hungary had,<br />

after an unsuccessful republican insurrection, freed herself from Austrian<br />

control. Griffith declared that what Hungary had done Ireland<br />

could do; and his arguments drew to him a great many thoughtful, and<br />

quite a number of wealthy, people. It was eventually decided by the<br />

persons associated with Arthur Griffith that a political party should be<br />

formed to carry out in Ireland the "Hungarian Policy." But as a<br />

foreign name was undesirable, the new party took for its designation<br />

the words Sinn Fein, which are pronounced Shin Fane, and mean "selfreliance."<br />

The first president of Sinn Fein was Mr. Edward Martyn, of Tulyra<br />

Castle, Co. Galway...The largest hall in Dublin was engaged for<br />

a day in November 1905, and under the chairmanship of Edward<br />

Martyn, Arthur Griffith expounded the "Sinn Fein Policy"...<br />

In spite of opposition the new movement seemed to be gaining<br />

ground until a by-election was fought on the issue, and the Sinn Fein<br />

candidate defeated. After that Sinn Fein died, and had practically been


106 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

extinct for seven years before its revival in October 1916.. . The Volunteer<br />

movement which culminated in the Easter Week Rebellion had<br />

nothing to do with Sinn Fein, though the name was applied to the Volunteers.<br />

..Mr. Redmond... called the Irish Volunteers Sinn Feiners as<br />

a nickname, and his object in doing this was to associate them with a<br />

proverbial failure. To call a man before October 1916 a Sinn Feiner<br />

was to call him a failure.<br />

When the Ulster Volunteer Force was formed by Sir Edward Carson,<br />

the National extremists, then a very negligible quantity, proposed<br />

the formation of Irish Volunteers to counterbalance the argumentative<br />

value of the Ulster force. But it is certain from the start that a few of<br />

them looked upon the formation of Volunteers as a means toward an<br />

end, and that end rebellion. Herbert Moore Pirn in "Nineteenth Century,"<br />

1919.<br />

Easter<br />

Easter calculations are so extraordinarily difficult as to lead to<br />

occasional mistakes, like that of 1818, when Easter was kept on the<br />

wrong day.<br />

It was determined, in the first place, that Easter must invariably fall<br />

on the first Sunday after the fourteenth day of the moon that happens<br />

to be reigning at the time of the vernal equinox. Then it was declared<br />

that the date of the equinox should be arbitrarily made March<br />

21, although the equinox really comes sometimes a little earlier or a<br />

little later than the 21st. For example, suppose the equinox moon is<br />

just fourteen days old on the 21st of March and that this day falls on<br />

Saturday; then the next day, Sunday, would fill the condition noted<br />

above, an,d consequently be Easter. The festival may thus be as early<br />

as March 22 or as late as April 25.. .When the right day for Easter is<br />

finally found, it determines a long series of ecclesiastical days, from<br />

Ash Wednesday to Trinity Sunday. William S. Walsh's "Curiosities of<br />

Popular Customs."<br />

Of all the festivals of the Christian year, Easter is the most important<br />

and most joyful. From of old it has been known as "the happiest<br />

of days," "the bright day," "the Sunday of joy" and "the festival<br />

of festivals." The early fathers used to speak of it as "the feast of<br />

feasts," "the queen of days," "the desirable festival of our salvation."<br />

And Pope Leo I called it "the day alone great."<br />

The names Easter and Ostern, the English and German names for<br />

the feast of the resurrection, were once thought to be derived from<br />

Ostara (Eostre), an ancient Teutonic goddess mentioned by the historian<br />

Bede in the seventh century. She was the personification of the Spring,<br />

of the rising sun, of all things new and fresh and full of hope. To her<br />

the month corresponding to our April, Eostur-monath, was supposed to<br />

be dedicated.


EASTER 107<br />

This is all very romantic and beautiful; but it is not true. Recent<br />

research has shown that Ostara, the goddess of the vernal equinox, originated<br />

nowhere but in the brain of the venerable Bede; and that Eosturmonath<br />

was named for the old heathen feast of Eostur or Easter which<br />

was so-called because the Spring sun had its new birth in the east.<br />

Many of the chief Easter customs and observances are derived,<br />

directly or indirectly, from this festival of spring-gladness in the heart<br />

of the ancient Teutonic forest. Such things as Easter-eggs, Easterfires,<br />

Easter-games and Easter-laughter all seem to have a heathen<br />

origin. . .<br />

When Christianity reached the Teutonic peoples, it was natural for<br />

them to think of their old heathen festival of the resurrection of the<br />

sun in connection with the new festival of the tesurrection of the Sun<br />

of Righteousness; and to graft upon the latter many of the customs<br />

and beliefs of the more ancient celebration which among heathen<br />

peoples from time immemorial has taken the form of an outburst of jubilation<br />

over the re-awakening of nature after her long, cold, death-like<br />

sleep.<br />

There is nothing to be found in the New Testament about the festival<br />

of Easter; yet it is the oldest of Christian festivals, and its observance<br />

began in the apostolic age. But as early as the second century<br />

A. D. a serious dispute arose between the Christians of Jewish and those<br />

of Gentile descent, as to the proper date of Easter. It led to a bitter<br />

but uninteresting series of age-long controversies which were waged<br />

with twice the zeal and rancor of those mediaeval schoolmen who used<br />

to fight about how many angels could pirouette simultaneously on the<br />

point of a needle.<br />

The history of this quarrel would fill page after page of the dreariest<br />

reading.. .<br />

In his "Curiosities of Popular Customs," Walsh gives a picturesque<br />

account of some old customs and superstitions connected with the celebration<br />

of Easter. "It was," he says, "the invariable policy of the early<br />

church to give a Christian significance to such of the extant pagan ceremonies<br />

as could not be rooted out. In the case of Easter the conversion<br />

was peculiarly easy. Joy at the rising of the natural sun, and at the<br />

awakening of nature from the death of winter, became joy at the rising<br />

of the sun of righteousness, at the resurrection of Christ from the<br />

grave. Some of the pagan observances which took place about the<br />

first of May were also shifted to correspond with the celebration of<br />

Easter. Many new features were added. It was a time of exuberant<br />

joy. Gregory of Nyssa draws a vivid picture of the joyous crowds who,<br />

by their dress (a feature still preserved) and their devout attendance<br />

at church, sought to do honor to the festival. All labor ceased, all<br />

trades were suspended. It was a favorite time for baptism, the law<br />

courts were closed, alms were given to the poor, slaves were freed.<br />

Easter Sunday became known as Dominica Gaudii ('Sunday of Joy').<br />

In the reaction from the austerities of Lent, people gave themselves up


108 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

to enjoyment, popular sports, dances, and farcical entertainments. In<br />

some places the clergy, to increase the mirth, recited from the pulpit<br />

humorous stories and legends for the purpose of exciting the risus<br />

Paschalis, or 'Easter smile.' People exchanged the Easter kiss and the<br />

salutation 'Christ is risen,' to which the reply was made, 'He is risen<br />

indeed,'—a custom kept up to this day in some parts of the world". . .<br />

The egg is the symbol of the germinating fertility of Spring and the<br />

Easter egg is undoubtedly a relic of heathen days. As it is identified<br />

with the Easter observance best known to Americans, the following account<br />

of it has been condensed from the quaint pages of Brand ["Observations<br />

on the Popular Antiquities of Great Britain"] :<br />

"In the north of England it is still the custom to send reciprocal<br />

presents of eggs at Easter to the children of families betwixt whom any<br />

intimacy exists.<br />

The learned Count de Gebelin, in his 'Religious History of the Calendar,'<br />

informs us that this custom of giving eggs at Easter is to be<br />

traced up to the theology and philosophy of the Egyptians, Persians,<br />

Gauls, Greeks, Romans, etc., among all of whom an egg was an emblem<br />

of the universe, the work of the supreme Divinity. Coles, in his<br />

Latin Dictionary, renders the Pasch, or Easter Egg, by Ovum Paschale,<br />

croceum, sen luteum. It is plain, from hence, that he was acquainted with<br />

the custom of dyeing or staining eggs at this season.<br />

Hutchinson, in his 'History of Northumberland,' speaking of Pasche<br />

Eggs, says, 'Eggs were held by the Egyptians as a sacred emblem of the<br />

renovation of mankind after the Deluge. The Jews adopted it to suit<br />

circumstances of their history, as a type of their departure from the<br />

land of Egypt, and it was used in the feast of the Passover as part of the<br />

furniture of the table, with the Paschal Lamb. The Christians have<br />

certainly used it on this day, as retaining the elements of future life,<br />

for an emblem of the Resurrection. It seems as if the egg was thus<br />

decorated for a religious trophy, after the days of mortification and<br />

abstinence were over, and festivity had taken place; and as an emblem<br />

of the resurrection of life, and certified to us by the Resurrection from<br />

the regions of death and the grave'.. .<br />

Le Brun, in his 'Voyages,' tells us that the Persians, on the 20th of<br />

March, 1704, kept the Festival of the Solar New Year, which he says<br />

lasted several days, when they mutually presented each other, among<br />

other things, with colored eggs.<br />

Easter, says Gebelin, and the New Year, have been marked by<br />

similar distinctions. Among the Persians, the New Year is looked<br />

upon as the renewal of all things, and is noted for the triumph of the<br />

Sun of Nature, as Easter is with the Christians for that of the Sun of<br />

Justice, the Savior of the World, over death, by His Resurrection. The<br />

Feast of the New Year, he adds, was celebrated at the Vernal Equinox,<br />

that is, at a time when the Christians, removing their New Year to the<br />

Winter Solstice, kept only the Festival of Easter. Hence, with the latter,<br />

the Feast of Eggs has been attached to Easter, so that eggs are no<br />

longer made presents of at the New Year.


EASTER 109<br />

Father Camelli, in his 'History of Customs,' tells us, that, during<br />

Easter and the following days, hard eggs, painted of different colors,<br />

but principally red, are the ordinary food of the season. In Italy, Spain,<br />

and in Provence, says he, where almost every ancient superstition is retained,<br />

there are in the public places certain sports with eggs. This<br />

custom he derives from the Jews or the Pagans, for he observesit common<br />

to both.<br />

The learned Hyde, in his 'Oriental Sports,' tells us of one with<br />

eggs among the Christians of Mesopotamia on Easter Day, and forty<br />

days afterwards.. .<br />

In the North of England, continues Hyde, in Cumberland and<br />

Westmoreland, boys beg, on Easter Eve, eggs to play with, and beggars<br />

ask for them to eat. These eggs are hardened by boiling, and tinged<br />

with the juice of herbs, broom-flowers, etc. The eggs being prepared,<br />

the boys go out and play with them in the fields, rolling them up and<br />

down, like bowls upon the ground, or throwing them up, like balls, into<br />

the air. Eggs, stained with various colors in boiling, and sometimes<br />

covered with leaf-gold, are at Easter presented to children, at Newcastle-upon-Tyne,<br />

and other places in the North, where these young<br />

gentry ask for their Paste Eggs at this season. Paste is plainly a corruption<br />

of Pasque, Easter.<br />

In a curious Roll of Expenses of the Household of Edward I, communicated<br />

to the Society of Antiquaries, 1805, is the following item in<br />

the Accounts of Easter Sunday: 'Four hundred and a half of eggs, eighteen<br />

pence'; highly interesting to the investigator of our ancient manners,<br />

not so much on account of the smallness of the sum which purchased<br />

them, as for the purpose for which so great a quantity was procured on<br />

this day in particular,i. e., in order to have them stained in boiling, or<br />

covered with leaf-gold, and to be afterwards distributed to the Royal<br />

Household." Robert Haven Schauffler in "Easter; Its History, Celebrati<br />

Spirit and Significance as Related in Prose and Verse."<br />

The connection between Easter and the hare springs from the latter's<br />

connection with the moon. Easter, inasmuch as its date depends<br />

upon the moon, is in a sense a lunar holiday. Now, from very ancient<br />

times the hare has been a symbol for the moon.. .<br />

Even in America we may see in the confectioners' windows the<br />

hare (or rather a rabbit) wheeling his barrow full of eggs or drawing<br />

one large one as a sort of triumphal chariot. In some parts of Europe<br />

the Easter eggs are made up into cakes in the shape of hares.. .<br />

Among English popular customs celebrating Easter are many<br />

traces of the hare myth.. .<br />

The Easter hare myth has reached America. Here, however, as in<br />

other countries where the hare is scarce or unknown,it has been transformed<br />

into its near relation the rabbit. Perhaps this was originally<br />

due to the confectioners, who are rarely experts in natural history.<br />

William S. Walsh's "Curiosities of Popular Customs."


CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Prices of Library Publications<br />

The list of "Publications of the Library Now in Print" at<br />

the back of this "Bulletin" gives the price of each. Any publication<br />

not marked * in that list will be sent postpaid on receipt<br />

of five cents.<br />

The Bulletin Title-Page, Contents and Index<br />

The title-page, contents and index to the "Monthly Bulletin"<br />

for 1919 were mailed to subscribers with the February<br />

number.<br />

Present Day Problems<br />

The books in this list are entered also, in fuller form and with annotations,<br />

under their proper headings in this issue of the "Bulletin."<br />

They are brought together here to show the additions of books which<br />

are of interest in connection with problems of the day. The date of<br />

publication is 1919 unless otherwise stated.<br />

Allied and Associated Powers (1914- ). Treaty with Germany,<br />

June 28, 1919. Treaty of peace with Germany. . .341.2 A43<br />

Antonelli, fitienne.Bolshevik Russia. 1920 947 A63<br />

Ashby, A. W. The rural problem. [1917.]<br />

r 304 A82<br />

Atlas Portland Cement Company. Information for home<br />

builders. 1918<br />

q 728 A88i<br />

Canby, H. S. Education by violence 940.919 C16<br />

Chesterton, G. K. Irish impressions. 1920 914.15 C42<br />

Clark, F. E. Our Italian fellow citizens in their old homes<br />

and their new<br />

325.1 C52<br />

Craftsman bungalows<br />

728 C85<br />

Foerster, R. F. Italian emigration of our times<br />

325.2 F68<br />

Gaines, R. L. Helping France<br />

940.917 G13I1<br />

Hamlin, W. A. Low-cost cottage construction in America.<br />

l 9*7<br />

r 728.6 H22<br />

Hawtrey, R. G. Currency and credit<br />

332 H36<br />

Hines, W. D. Extension of tenure of government and control<br />

of railroads<br />

r 38 5 Hs6e<br />

Hirst, E. W. Self and neighbor I7I H612<br />

Hodgson (E. F.) Co. Hodgson portable houses<br />

q 728.6 H66<br />

National Fire Proofing Company of Pittsburgh. Natco textile<br />

one-family house. 1917<br />

q 728 Nisna<br />

National Fire Proofing Company of Pittsburgh. Natco twoapartment<br />

house. 1916<br />

q j 2 g Nisn<br />

Ravage, M. E. The Jew pays 2g6 R 22<br />

Russell, Bertrand. Proposed roads to freedom<br />

335 Rgip<br />

Slattery, Margaret. The second line of defense. 1918 362.7 S631


Books Added to the Library<br />

February 1 to March 1, 1920<br />

An r or b prefixed to the call number indicates that the book must be<br />

called for and used in the Reference or the Technology Room; j that it<br />

especially suitable for children, and q that it is quarto sice or larg<br />

Fiction<br />

Baxter, Arthur Beverley. B33ib<br />

The blower of bubbles [and other stories]. Appleton.<br />

Other stories: Petite Simunde.—The man who scoffed.—The airy prince.—Mr<br />

Craighouse of New York, satirist.<br />

Bercovici, Konrad. B44gd<br />

Dust of New York [short stories]. Boni.<br />

Contents: Theresa the vamp.—The troubles of a perfect type.—How the Ibanezes<br />

love.—The little man of 28th street.—The newly-rich Goldsteins.—All in one wild<br />

Roumanian song.—Expensive poverty.—Why her name is Marguerite V. L. F. Clement.<br />

—Luleika, the rich widow.—Because Cohen could neither read nor write.—The marriage<br />

broker's daughter.—The new secretary r of the Pretzel-Painters' Union.—The gypsy blood<br />

that tells.—When Stark's cafe was closed.—Because of bookkeeping.—The strength of<br />

the weak.—Socialists! beware of Mrs Rosenberg.—A conflict of ideals.—The holy healer<br />

from Omsk.—Hirsh Roth's theory.—The tragedy of Afghan's living rug.—Babeta's dog.<br />

—The professor.—The pure motive.<br />

Clemenceau, Ge<strong>org</strong>es Eugene Benjamin. C562S<br />

The strongest (Les plus fort). Doubleday.<br />

The story of the struggle between the desire for power and wealth and the virtues<br />

of unselfishness and charity in the soul of a young girl surrounded by evil and good<br />

influences.<br />

Diver, Mrs Katherine Helen Maud (Marshall). D646S<br />

The strong hours. Houghton.<br />

A sequel to "Strange roads." Traces the development of Derek Blount from<br />

childhood to his maturity in the early days of the great war.<br />

Ervine, St. John Greer. E788a<br />

Alice and a family. Macmillan.<br />

A 15 year old Cockney girl steers the fortunes of a neighbor's family into a safe<br />

harbor. The story introduces the humorous side of impractical socialism.<br />

Foote, Mrs Mary (Hallock). F747g<br />

The ground-swell. Houghton.<br />

The wife of a retired army officer relates the story of her grown up daughters.<br />

ill


112 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Hannay, James Owen. H2370<br />

Our casualty, and other stories, by G. A. Birmingham [pseud.].<br />

Doran.<br />

Other stories: Getting even.—A matter of discipline.—The second bass.—Her right.<br />

—Journey's end.—His girl.—Sir Galahad.—A gun-running episode.—Ireland for ever.—<br />

Sir Timothy's dinner-party.—United Ireland.—Old Biddy and the rebels.—Civilized war.<br />

—The mermaid.—An upright judge.<br />

Hasbrouck, Louise Seymour. H338C<br />

Chokecherry island; a story for young people. Appleton.<br />

The same j H338C<br />

Story of a summer vacation on a small island in the St. Lawrence. Ted and his<br />

sisters, all badly spoiled, have mysterious experiences, make some real friends and<br />

learn much-needed lessons of self-reliance and true worth.<br />

Jerome, Jerome Klapka. J28ia<br />

All roads lead to Calvary. Dodd.<br />

"A novel so wise in substance and beautiful in temper as to put [the author] in<br />

the ranks of that minority which has understood the struggling spirit of its time."<br />

Nation, 1919.<br />

Johnston, Mary. J36g2m<br />

Michael Forth. Harper.<br />

A mystical story, autobiographical in form, beginning with the Civil war reconstruction<br />

period.<br />

Loti, Pierre, (pseud, of Julien Viaud). Lgi6ma<br />

Madame Prune; tr. from the French by S. R. C. Plimsoll. Stokes.<br />

Story of incidents of a visit made by the author, in the winter of 1900-1901, to<br />

Japan, Korea and China.<br />

Masefield, John. M444t<br />

A tarpaulin muster. Dodd.<br />

Contents: Edward Herries.—A white night.—Big Jim.—El Dorado.—The pirates<br />

of Santa Anna.—Davy Jones's gift.—Ghosts.—Ambitious Jimmy Hicks.—Anty Bligh.—<br />

On growing old.—A memory.—On the Palisades.—The rest-house on the hill.—Gentle<br />

people.—Some Irish fairies.—The Cape Horn calm.—A Port Royal twister.—In a<br />

fo'c'sle.—The bottom of the well.—Being ashore.—One Sunday.—A Raines law arrest.—<br />

The schooner-man's close calls.—The yarn of Happy Jack.<br />

Merrick, Leonard. M6395m<br />

The man who understood women, and other stories, with an introduction<br />

by W. J. Locke. Dutton.<br />

Other stories: A very good thing for the girl.—The woman who wished to die.—<br />

Frankenstein II.—The tale that wouldn't do.—The laurels and the lady.—Tbe child in<br />

the garden.—A letter to the duchess.—The prince in the fairy tale.—With intent to<br />

defraud.—Dead violets.—The favourite plot.—Time, the humorist.—The back of Bo<br />

hemia.—The lady of Lyons'.—The third M.—The bishop's comedy.—A reverie.—The<br />

reconciliation.—The call from the past.<br />

Pertwee, Roland. P4470I<br />

The Old Card. Boni.<br />

A novel giving incidents both humorous and pathetic in the life of an English<br />

actor.<br />

Richmond, Mrs Grace Louise (Smith). R425red<br />

Red and Black. Doubleday.<br />

Appeared in the "Ladies' home journal," v.36. March-Oct. 1919.<br />

Red Pepper Burns reappears in war time and with a black haired clergyman takes<br />

a prominent place in this sentimental story.


BOOKS ADDED—MARCH 1920 113<br />

Steiner, Edward Alfred. S822S<br />

Sanctus Spiritus and Company. Doran.<br />

"Dr. Steiner has given us a romance without thrills or sensational incidents; a<br />

sort of epic of the emigrant, done with humor, pathos and color; it depicts the clash<br />

and attrition of Old and New World ideas." New York Evening post, 1919.<br />

Twain, Mark, (pseud, of Samuel Langhorne Clemens). T8g7e<br />

Extract from Captain Stormfield's visit to heaven. Harper.<br />

Appeared in "Harper's magazine," v.i 16, Dec. 1907-Jan. 1908.<br />

Ward, Mrs Humphry. W214I1I<br />

Helena. Dodd.<br />

Entertaining story of English life. The heroine is the modern girl developed by<br />

the world war. A psychological study with a conventionally happy ending.<br />

French Fiction<br />

Vigny, Alfred Victor, comte de. 843 V32st<br />

Stello [in French].<br />

The author was a soldier, poet, writer of romance, in the early 19th century. "Military<br />

recollections" and "Stello" consist each of three touching and beautifully told<br />

stories, founded on fact, and recording his experiences as soldier and poet. Stello, a<br />

world-weary young poet, consults a mysterious "black doctor" of souls on the advisability<br />

of entering politics. The doctor tells him the stories of three young poets—<br />

Gilbert, who died mad under an absolute monarchy; Chatterton, the English boy genius,<br />

who committed suicide under a constitutional monarchy; and Andre Chenier, who died<br />

by the guillotine in the French democratic revolution. The doctor points from each story<br />

the lesson of abnegation for poets, under all social changes.<br />

Philosophy<br />

Doyle, Sir Arthur Conan.<br />

134 D77V<br />

The vital message. 1919. Doran.<br />

"In 'The New Revelation' the first dawn of the coming change has been described.<br />

In 'The Vital Message' the sun has risen higher, and one sees more clearly and<br />

broadly what our new relations with the Unseen may be." Author's preface.<br />

Kitch, Ethel May. qr 181 K29<br />

Origin of subjectivity in Hindu thought. 1917. University of<br />

Chicago Press. (Chicago University. Philosophic studies, no.7.)<br />

"Bibliography," p.80-82.<br />

Thesis for Ph. D., University of Chicago.<br />

Nicoll, Maurice. 135 N32<br />

Dream psychology. 1917. Frowde. (Oxford medical publications.)<br />

"Bibliography." p. 189-190.<br />

A discussion of the dream from the standpoint bf Dr Jung and the Swiss school,<br />

but without claiming their authority for all statements.<br />

Strong, Charles Augustus. 126 S92<br />

Origin of consciousness; an attempt to conceive the mind as a product<br />

of evolution. 1918. Macmillan.<br />

Waddle, Charles Wilkin. 136.7 Wu<br />

Introduction to child psychology. 1918. Houghton. (Riverside<br />

textbooks in education.)<br />

"Selected bibliography," at the end of each chapter.<br />

History of the development of child study. Intended to stimulate sane, scientific<br />

observation and thought.


114 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Guilly, E. Paul. 171 G96<br />

La nature et la morale. 1884.<br />

Ethics<br />

Hirst, Edward Wales. 171 H612<br />

Self and neighbour; an ethical study. 1919. Macmillan.<br />

An attempt to reconstruct or re-state traditional moral theory at a time [1919]<br />

when each nation seemed to distrust the principles of its opponents. Shows the vital<br />

interconnection of economics and politics with ethics, and the necessity of the spirit of<br />

brotherhood in any reconstruction of the social order.<br />

McCall, Anne Bryan, pseud. 170.4 M126<br />

The larger vision; Tower-room talks. 1919. Dodd.<br />

Contents: Towers.—The romance of life.—Estates in Spain.—Influence.—Valuable<br />

vanity.—Rich and poor.—Desires; Dreams fulfilled; Earning a living.—Failures<br />

and resolves.—A question of faith.—The graces of life.—The gift of courage.—Here<br />

and now.—Before the dawn.—The sincere life: Conventions; Do we cheat ourselves?—-<br />

About church-going.—The Christmas child.<br />

Reynolds, Mrs Harriet Contentment (Collins), comp. 179.3 R37<br />

Thoughts on humane education; suggestions on kindness to animals<br />

and notes on their habits and usefulness. 1919. Humane Pub. Co.<br />

Ross, John Elliot. 171 R73<br />

Christian ethics; a textbook of right living. 1919. Devin.<br />

Contents: Fundamental ethics.—Specific ethics.—Social ethics.<br />

"Literature," pref. p.6; "Suggested readings" at the end of each chapter.<br />

Rowntree, Joseph, & Sherwell, Arthur. r 178 R79<br />

State purchase of the liquor trade. 1919. Allen.<br />

Favors modification of war-time restrictions, with control transferred from the<br />

trade to the state.<br />

Ryland, Frederick. 171 Rg8e<br />

Ethics; an introductory manual for the use of university students.<br />

1914. Bell.<br />

"Books recommended," p.199-211.<br />

Religion<br />

Barton, Ge<strong>org</strong>e Aaron. 209 B28<br />

The religions of the world. 1919. University of Chicago Press.<br />

(Chicago University. Publications in religious education; handbooks<br />

of ethics and religion.)<br />

"Supplementary reading" at the end of each chapter.<br />

"Additional books for the use of the teacher," p.360-373.<br />

Grubb, Edward. 289.6 G94<br />

What is Quakerism? an exposition of the leading principles and<br />

practices of the Society of Friends, as based on the experience of "the<br />

inward light." 1917. Headley.<br />

Contents: The nature of the Quaker movement.—The inward light.—Worship and<br />

ministry.—The sacraments.—Church government.—Simplicity and truthfulness; judicial<br />

oaths.—The testimony for peace.—Quakerism and politics.—Philanthropy and<br />

social reform.—Friends and education.—Missionary enterprise.—The present outlook.<br />

"Suggestions for study groups," p.225-233 ; "Bibliography," p.234-240.


BOOKS ADDED—MARCH 1920 115<br />

Hodge, Ge<strong>org</strong>e B. r 26 7 . 3 H66<br />

Association data visualized; facts from the Association year books<br />

in graphic form. 1917. Y. M. C. A. Press.<br />

Ravage, Marcus Eli. 296 R22<br />

The Jew pays; a narrative of the consequences of the war to the<br />

Jews of eastern Europe and of the manner in which Americans have<br />

attempted to meet them. 1919. Knopf.<br />

Sociology<br />

Ashby, Arthur W. r 304 A82<br />

The rural problem. [1917.] Athenaeum. (Social reconstruction<br />

pamphlets, no.i.)<br />

"Bibliography," p. 37-40.<br />

"This pamphlet is intended chiefly for those who dwell in towns...The factory<br />

worker must be made to realize his obligations to his fellow worker on the land."<br />

Preface.<br />

Ellis, Havelock. 304 E532<br />

The philosophy of conflict, and other essays in war-time. 1919.<br />

Houghton.<br />

Contents: Europe.—Civilisation.—On a certain kind of war.—"Vas victoribus."—<br />

The origin of war.—The philosophy of conflict.—£lie.—Faure.—The star in the East.<br />

—Luther.—Herbert Spencer.—Eugenics in relation to the war.—Birth control and eugenics.—War<br />

and the sex problem.—The unmarried mother.—The mind of woman.—<br />

"Equal pay for equal work."—The politics of women.—Psycho-analysis in relation to<br />

sex.—The drink programme of the future.—Rodo.—Mr Conrad's world.—The human<br />

Baudelaire.—A friend of Casanova's.—Cowley.<br />

Nearing, Mrs Nellie Marguerite (Seeds). r 312 N18<br />

Education and fecundity. 1917. Chautauqua Print Shop.<br />

Reprint from Publication of American Statistical Association, June 1914.<br />

Abstract of thesis for Ph. D., University of Pennsylvania.<br />

Slattery, Margaret. 362.7 S631<br />

The second line of defense; a plea for the men and women of tomorrow.<br />

1918. Revell.<br />

An appeal to America to face the future, to cease to play the prodigal with the<br />

youth and children of the nation, those who constitute her second line of defense. The<br />

business men, parents, teachers and churchmen of the country are urged to assume<br />

their obligations and to strengthen, equip and train that line for future duty and future<br />

victory.<br />

United States—Adjutant-general's office. 353-6 U2532<br />

Regimental history of the United States regular army; chronological<br />

outline, 1866-1918. 1918. (War information series, no.18.)<br />

Issued by the Committee on public information of the United States.<br />

Limited to the development of the regiments, with no information concerning their<br />

achievements.<br />

Woolley, Reginald Maxwell. 394 W87<br />

Coronation rites. 1915. Cambridge University Press. (Cambridge<br />

handbooks of liturgical study.)<br />

"Bibliography," pref. p.11-16.<br />

Study of the history, structure and significance of the coronation rite as celebrated<br />

in various European countries since the time of the Roman empire.


116 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Immigration<br />

Clark, Francis Edward. 325.1 C52<br />

Our Italian fellow citizens in their old homes and their new. 1919.<br />

Small.<br />

A spirited appeal to Americans for an attitude of fair play toward Italian immigrants.<br />

The author recommends broader information and better acquaintance with a<br />

people evincing a rare adaptability to economic demands and a fine responsiveness to<br />

American ideals.<br />

Foerster, Robert Franz. 325.2 F68<br />

Italian emigration of our times. 1919. Harvard University Press.<br />

(Harvard economic studies.)<br />

Bibliographical foot-notes.<br />

An exposition of Italian migrations—their main currents, causes and distribution—<br />

and a study of the Italian people as one of the priceless assets of the world, in agriculture,<br />

the industries and the arts. The author, an assistant professor of social ethics in<br />

Harvard University (1919), has traveled extensively at home and abroad to collate bis<br />

material.<br />

Politics and Government<br />

Detroit. Charter. r 352 D483<br />

Charter of the city of Detroit; adopted by the people of the city of<br />

Detroit, June 25, 1918, filed with the secretary of state and in effect.<br />

June 27, 1918. [1918.]<br />

Massachusetts—General court. r 328.74 M455<br />

Manual for 1919; prepared under section 10 of chapter 9 of the revised<br />

laws, by H. D. Coolidge and J. W. Kimball. 1919.<br />

Economics<br />

Guaranty Trust Company of New York. qr 338.4 G95<br />

The fabric of civilization; a short survey of the cotton industry in<br />

the United States. 1919.<br />

Hawtrey, R. G. 332 H36<br />

Currency and credit. 1919. Longmans.<br />

Contents: Credit without money.—Metallic money.—Paper money and the quantity<br />

theory.—The foreign exchange.—Systems of note issue.—International currency<br />

movements.—The mechanism of foreign exchange.—A contraction of credit —Financial<br />

crises.—Money and coinage.—The theory of banking.—War finance.—War inflation —<br />

The assignats.—The bank restriction of 1797.—A change of standard.—The gold standard.—After<br />

the war.—Conclusion.<br />

Renard, Ge<strong>org</strong>es Francois. 338.6 R33<br />

Guilds in the middle ages; tr. by Dorothy Terry and ed. with an<br />

introduction by G D. H. Cole. 1919. Bell.<br />

"Author's bibliography," p.137-139; "Editor's bibliography of works in English"<br />

p.140.<br />

Russell, Bertrand. 335 Rgip<br />

Proposed roads to freedom; socialism, anarchism and syndicalism<br />

1919. Holt.<br />

Also published under the title "Roads to freedom."<br />

A study from the standpoint that the ideas of syndicalism are largely derived from<br />

anarchism ; that syndicalism may be regarded as the anarchism of the market place as


BOOKS ADDED—MARCH 1920 117<br />

Russell, Bertrand—continued. 335 Rgip<br />

opposed to the anarchism of isolated individuals ; and that in anarchist-syndicalism ,s<br />

to be found the same combination of ideal and <strong>org</strong>anization wdiich is found in socialist<br />

political parties. Condensed from introduction.<br />

Scott, William Rufus. 331.238 S43<br />

The itching palm; a study of the habit of tipping in America. 1916.<br />

Penn Pub. Co.<br />

Selden, Ge<strong>org</strong>e Charles. 332.6 S46<br />

The A B C of bond buying; how the ordinary investor may judge<br />

bond values. 1919. Magazine of Wall street.<br />

Trever, Albert Augustus. r 330.9 T73<br />

History of Greek economic thought. 1916. University of Chicago<br />

Press.<br />

"Bibliography," p.151-155.<br />

Thesis for Ph. D., University of Chicago.<br />

United States—Federal trade commission.<br />

r 338.2 U2532<br />

Anthracite and bituminous coal; letter transmitting in response to<br />

Senate resolutions adopted June 22, 1916 and April 30, 1917, respectively,<br />

a report and recommendations on the anthracite and bituminous<br />

coal situation and the relation of rail-and-water transportation to the<br />

present fuel problem. 1917. (65th cong. ist sess. Senate. Doc.<br />

no.50, v.3.)<br />

Law<br />

Allied and Associated Powers (1914- ). Treaty 3412 A43<br />

with Germany, June 28, 1919.<br />

Treaty of peace with Germany. 1919. (United States. 66th cong.<br />

ist. sess. Senate. Doc. 110.49.)<br />

The same<br />

r 341.2 A43<br />

The same. 1919 q 34i- 2 A43a<br />

Title reads "The treaty."<br />

Reprinted from "Boston evening transcript."<br />

Baker, Ray Stannard.<br />

341-6 B17<br />

What Wilson did at Paris. 1919. Doubleday.<br />

A defense of President Wilson's ideals and policies in connection with the peace<br />

treatv which closed the great war.<br />

r 342.74 M45b<br />

Massachusetts—Commission to compile information and data for the<br />

use of the Constitutional convention.<br />

Bulletins for the Constitutional convention, 1917-18. 2v. 1918-19.<br />

v.i. Bulletins, 1-6.<br />

v.2. Bulletins, 17-37.<br />

Massachusetts—Constitutional convention, 1917-18. r 342.74 M455<br />

Debates in the Massachusetts constitutional convention, 1917-18.<br />

2v. 1919.<br />

v.2 is devoted to debates on the initiative and referendum.


n8<br />

CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Education<br />

Bryce, James.<br />

r 375-8 B84<br />

Worth of ancient literature to the modern world. 1917. General<br />

Education Board. (General Education Board. Occasional papers,<br />

no.6.)<br />

Dobbs, Ella Victoria.<br />

372-5 D65P<br />

Primary handwork. 1919. Macmillan.<br />

Contents: Paper cutting and poster making.—Booklets.—Criticism and standards<br />

of workmanship.—The house problem.—The village street.—Sand tables and what to<br />

do with them.—Animals and toys.—Holidays.—General suggestions and summary.<br />

"References," p.123-124.<br />

"Designed for the use of grade teachers who have had little or no training in handwork<br />

processes but who appreciate the necessity of making worthy use of the child's<br />

natural activity and desire to do." Introduction.<br />

Holtz, Adrian Augustus.<br />

377 H74<br />

Study of the moral and religious elements in American secondary<br />

education up to 1800. 1917. Banta.<br />

"Bibliography," p.78-86.<br />

Thesis for Ph. D., University of Chicago.<br />

[Honline, Moses Alfred, & Athearn, W. S. comp.] r 016.377 H76<br />

Reference library for community training schools. 1918. International<br />

Sunday School Assoc. (Educational bulletin, 1918, no.6.)<br />

An annotated list largely of books for Bible study.<br />

Commerce. Communication<br />

Daish, John Broughton, ed.<br />

r 385 D15<br />

The Atlantic port differentials; the important and official documents<br />

pertaining to the adjustment of freight rates between the West<br />

and the north Atlantic ports, 1877-1917. 1918. Lowdermilk.<br />

Hines, Walker Downer.<br />

r 385 Hs6e<br />

Extension of tenure of government and control of railroads; statements<br />

before the Interstate commerce committee of the United States<br />

senate, Feb. 3-6, 1919. 1919.<br />

Costume<br />

Dennison Manufacturing Company.<br />

3gi D43<br />

Dennison's costume book.<br />

The same r 3QI rj 43<br />

Contains general directions for making crepe paper costumes and pattern shapes.<br />

Illustrated.<br />

Lante, Louis Marie.<br />

qr 3QI L29<br />

Costumes des femmes francaises du I2e au l8e siecle; nouvelle edition<br />

imprimee en taille-douce par Ch. Wittmann, coloriee a la main par<br />

Nervet. 1900.<br />

New edition by Pierre Lamesangere of "Galerie francaise de femmes celebres par<br />

leur talens, leur rang ou leur beaute; portraits en pied, dessines par M. Lante. la plupart<br />

dapres des originaux inedits; graves par M. Gatine et colories; avec des notices biographiques<br />

et des remarques sur les habillemens;" pub. in Paris in 1827.<br />

Reproductions in color of historic costumes of famous French women, with a brief<br />

account of each and the occasion on which the costume was worn.


BOOKS ADDED—MARCH 1920 119<br />

Women<br />

Grant, Robert, b. 1852.<br />

3g6.2 G78<br />

Law and the family. 1919. Scribner.<br />

Contents: Women and property.—The third generation and invested property.—<br />

Perils of will-making.—Feminism in fiction and real life.—Domestic relations and the<br />

child.—The limits of feminine independence.—Marriage and divorce.<br />

Hoerle, Helen Christene, & Saltzberg, F. B.<br />

396.5 H67<br />

The girl and the job. 1919. Holt.<br />

Contents: The business field.—Office workers. : —Department store workers.—<br />

Hotel workers.—Agency work.—Miscellaneous business opportunities.—The professional<br />

woman.—Arts and the girl.—The girl in industry.—The girl in business.<br />

Larcher, Louis Julien, comp.<br />

qr 396 L32<br />

La femme jugee par les grands ecrivains des deux sexes; ou, La<br />

femme devant Dieu, devant la nature, devant la loi et devant la societe;<br />

riche et precieuse mosaique de toutes les opinions emises sur la femme,<br />

avec une introduction de M. Bescherelle. [1854.]<br />

Language<br />

Cayotte, Louis.<br />

r 446 C29<br />

Dictionnaire des rimes; classees d'apres l'ordre alphabetique inverse<br />

et precede d'un traite de versification francaise. 1918.<br />

Chevob-Maurice, William, & Romero-Todesco, E. S.<br />

458 C42<br />

Corrispondenza commerciale, italiana-inglese, contenente modelli<br />

di frasi, lettere, circolari, documenti per affari, termini commerciali ed<br />

abbreviazioni, tavole di monete, pesi e misure, ecc. 1913. Marlborough.<br />

(La serie Marlborough di corrispondenza commerciale inglese<br />

ed estera.)<br />

Italian and English text.<br />

Dann, Joseph Th. & Courvoisier, F.<br />

448 D22<br />

French commercial correspondent, with English notes, explanatory<br />

and idiomatical; a glossary of commercial terms and general vocabulary,<br />

adapted for translation into English, together with tables of coins,<br />

weights and measures. Asher. (Asher's model books of foreign commercial<br />

correspondence, pt.3.)<br />

Harkavy, Alexander.<br />

428.2 H27e<br />

The English alphabet; or, The rudiments of English reading and<br />

writing. 1892. Hebrew Pub. Co.<br />

For the Yiddish student.<br />

Michaelis, Hermann, & Passy, P. E. comp.<br />

r 443 M66<br />

Dictionnaire phonetique de la langue francaise; complement necessaire<br />

de tout dictionnaire francais, avec preface de Gaston Paris. 1914.<br />

(Sammlung phonetischer worterbiicher.)<br />

"Liste des principaux ouvrages recommandes pour I'etude de frangais parle," p.32 2 -<br />

323; "Autres ouvrages de H. Michaelis [et de] P. Passy," p.324.<br />

Monvert, Adolphe de.<br />

448 M87<br />

Aux £tats-Unis; a French reader for beginners. 1919. Allyn.


120 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Monvert, Adolphe de.<br />

448 M87b<br />

La belle France; a French reader for beginners. 1916. Allyn.<br />

Contents: La belle France.—Poems.—Notes.—Questionnaire.—Vocabulary.<br />

Science<br />

Bell, William Osborne.<br />

511 B41<br />

Practical short methods in rapid calculation, containing many short<br />

ways of handling figures never before published, also all the best short<br />

methods now in common use, a number of which have been improved<br />

upon. 1915. Tiernan-Dart Printing Co.<br />

Contains a large number of methods which the author has used and which are<br />

claimed to be thoroughly dependable.<br />

Cirkel, Fritz.<br />

r 553.67 C4gam<br />

Amiante-chrysotile; gisements, exploitation, ateliers de preparation<br />

et usages; traduit de l'anglais, par Philippe Angers. Ed.2, enl. 1911.<br />

"Bibliographie," p.295-296.<br />

Issued by the Mines branch of the Department of mines of Canada.<br />

Collins, Archie Frederick.<br />

533-652 C69<br />

Boys' airplane book. 1919. Stokes.<br />

The same<br />

j 533.652 C69<br />

Directions for making gliders, flying boats and model aeroplanes. Also contains<br />

chapters on the evolution of the art of flying, the varied uses of aeroplanes, instruments<br />

used and record flights. Working drawings, diagrams and other illustrations.<br />

Esterline, John Walter.<br />

538 E85<br />

Permanent magnets. 1919. Esterline Co.<br />

Practical information on materials and characteristics. Author was formerly chairman<br />

of Committee on magnetic testing. American Society for Testing Materials.<br />

Lewis, Mrs Isabel Eleanor (Martin).<br />

523 L67<br />

Splendors of the sky. 1919. Duffield.<br />

Interesting popular articles on various astronomical subjects.<br />

Lodge, Sir Oliver Joseph.<br />

501 L76<br />

Continuity; the presidential address to the British Association [for<br />

the Advancement of Science] for 1913, supplemented by explanatory<br />

notes. 1914. Putnam.<br />

The same. 1914. (In British Association for the Advancement of<br />

Science. Report of the meeting, v.83, p. 1-42.) r 506 B75 v.83<br />

Mead, Daniel Webster.<br />

551-49 M55<br />

Hydrology; the fundamental basis of hydraulic engineering. 1910.<br />

McGraw.<br />

"Literature" at the end of each chapter.<br />

The same<br />

r 551.49 M55<br />

"The author believes, from his observations during more than 35 years of professional<br />

practice, that more failures have resulted in various hydraulic engineering projects<br />

from lack of adequate conceptions, on the part of the designing engineers, of the<br />

fundamental principles of hydrology and of the importance of hydrological factors than<br />

from defects in structural design." Preface.<br />

Petrunkevitch, Alexander.<br />

591.4 P46<br />

Morphology of invertebrate types. 1916. Macmillan.<br />

Shull, Aaron Franklin, and others.<br />

5 gi S56<br />

Laboratory directions in principles of animal biology. 1919. Mc­<br />

Graw.<br />

Bibliography at the end of some of the chapters.


BOOKS ADDED—MARCH 1920 121<br />

Thomson, John Arthur. 590.4 T38<br />

Secrets of animal life. 1919. Holt.<br />

"The first ten studies deal with individual animals; the next six have to do with<br />

the web of life; the ten that follow raise problems of development and behavior—two<br />

subjects more intimately related than appears at first sight; the remaining fourteen<br />

studies may be grouped round the concept of evolution. All the studies appeared in<br />

The New Statesman." Preface.<br />

Chemistry<br />

Ashley, Raymond Harman. 541-9 A82<br />

Chemical calculations. Ed.2, rev. 1918. Van Nostrand.<br />

Laboratory calculations in chemistry and physics. Many problems, in the solution<br />

of which logarithms and slide rule are recommended.<br />

Baskerville, Charles, & Curtman, L. J. 544 B29<br />

Course in qualitative chemical analysis. Rev. ed. 1919. Macmillan.<br />

Practical course for those beginning the subject. Omits the so-called rarer elements<br />

and some of the commoner ones also.<br />

Brakes, James. 546.3 B69<br />

Analysis of babbitt. 1919. Allen Book and Printing Co.<br />

Contents: Antimony.— Tin.— Lead.—Copper.—Miscellaneous analysis.— Babbitt<br />

metal.<br />

Bibliography at the end of each chapter; "Works of reference [on metallurgy.<br />

etc.] ," p.142—168.<br />

The same<br />

r 546.3 B69<br />

Selected methods. Includes brief information on manufacture of babbitt and on<br />

sampling. A large part of the book consists of bibliographies.<br />

Findlay, Alexander. 541-8 F4g<br />

Osmotic pressure. Ed.2. 1919. Longmans. (Monographs on in<strong>org</strong>anic<br />

and physical chemistry.)<br />

"Bibliography," p.107-111.<br />

"In most respects. . .the book deserves great commendation for its fair tone and<br />

the excellent style in which it is written." Transactions of the Faraday Society, 1919.<br />

Botany<br />

Johnson, Duncan Starr. qr 583-47 1 J35<br />

Fruit of Opuntia fulgida; a study of perennation and proliferation<br />

in the fruits of certain Cactaceae. 1918. (Carnegie Institution of<br />

Washington. Publication no.269.)<br />

"Literature cited," p.56.<br />

J<strong>org</strong>ensen, Ingvar, & Stiles, Walter. r 581.13 J43<br />

Carbon assimilation; a review of recent work on the pigments of<br />

the green leaf and the processes connected with them. 1917- Wesley.<br />

"Literature cited," p.170-180.<br />

Being "New phytologist reprint" no. 10.<br />

Rydberg, Per Axel. r 581.978 R96<br />

Flora of the Rocky mountains and adjacent plains; Colorado, Utah,<br />

Wyoming, Idaho, Montana, Saskatchewan, Alberta and neighboring<br />

parts of Nebraska, South Dakota, North Dakota and British Columbia.<br />

1917. Privately printed.<br />

The highest authority on the region covered and the only existing "western" flora<br />

which extends far enough east to connect with the range of Cray's "Manual" and Britton<br />

and Brown's "Illustrated flora."


122 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Useful Arts<br />

Cheney Brothers, South Manchester, Conn. r 677.3 C42S<br />

Short description of silk and silk manufacture.<br />

Pamphlet, giving some statistics and a very brief outline of processes.<br />

Handyside (Andrew) & Co. r 6 9 I -7 H2 3<br />

Works in iron. 1868.<br />

Illustrated description of some of this company's products, including bridges,<br />

engines, machinery, roofs and ornamental iron.<br />

National Lead & Oil Company, Pittsburgh. r 691.75 N15<br />

Protection of structural metal; a practical handbook upon the mixing<br />

and application of paint to iron or steel, tin and galvanized iron,<br />

together with a brief explanatory discussion of the causes of corrosion<br />

and remedies for it. 1912. Pittsburgh.<br />

Worst, Edward F. 689 W91<br />

Foot-power loom weaving. 1918. Bruce Pub. Co.<br />

Simple directions for the amateur.<br />

Medicine, Physiology, Hygiene<br />

Association of Life Insurance Medical Directors. qr 614.16 A84<br />

Medico-actuarial mortality investigation; comp. and pub. by the<br />

Association of Life Insurance Medical Directors and the Actuarial<br />

Society of America. Sv. 1912-14.<br />

v.3 deals with effect of occupation on mortality.<br />

Bush, Arthur Dermont. qr 615 B96<br />

Laboratory manual of pharmacology, including materia medica,<br />

pharmacopsedics and pharmacodynamics. 1919. Davis.<br />

Contains blanks for recording data from experiments.<br />

Kauffman, Ge<strong>org</strong>e Beecher, and others. 615.4 K14<br />

Simple course of laboratory practice in applied pharmacy. Ed.3.<br />

1918. Midland Pub. Co.<br />

One hundred and seventy-four laboratory exercises covering physical operations,<br />

galenical preparations, preparation and purification of chemicals, prescription practice,<br />

volumetric and gravimetric analysis, and pharmaceutical assaying.<br />

Leonardo da Vinci. qr 611 L62<br />

Quaderni d'anatomia; fogli della Royal Library di Windsor; pubblicati<br />

da O. C. L. Vangensten, A. Fonahn, H. Hopstock, con traduzione<br />

inglese e tedesca. 6v. 1911-16.<br />

v.i. Respirazione.—Cuore.—Yisceri addominali.<br />

v.2. Cuore, anatomia e fisiologia.<br />

v.3. Organi della generazione.—Embrione.<br />

v.4. Sangue.—Cuore.— Fonetica.—Varie altre materie.<br />

v.5. Vasi.—Muscoli.—Cervello e nervi.—Anatomia topografica e comparata.<br />

v.6. Proporzioni.—Funzioni dei muscoli.—Anatomia della superficie del corpo<br />

humano.<br />

"Many of Leonardo's anatomical representations are still unsurpassed. . .The artist's<br />

capacity for seeing the essential and representing it has combined with the keen eye of<br />

the scientist to produce magnificent drawings whether as respects scientific clearness<br />

or artistic beauty." Oszvald Siren's Leonardo da Vinci.


BOOKS ADDED—MARCH 1920 123<br />

Ringer, Paul Henry. 6l6 R 4?<br />

Clinical medicine for nurses. 1918. Davis.<br />

Lectures on medical diseases, dealing mainly with interpretation of symptoms and<br />

detection of complications. Treatment is dealt with only in a general way.<br />

Simon, Charles Edmund. 614.43 S59<br />

Human infection carriers; their significance, recognition and management.<br />

1919. Lea.<br />

"Bibliography" at the end of each chapter.<br />

Primarily for medical students, but of interest also to practitioners and health officers.<br />

Street, John Phillips, comp. r 614.27 S91<br />

Composition of certain patent and proprietary medicines. 1917.<br />

Amer. Medical Assoc.<br />

"Abbreviations of the authorities cited," p.3-4.<br />

Exhaustive compilation from drug and medical journals and the publications of<br />

state experiment stations, boards of health, etc. Includes a very large number of remedies,<br />

listed alphabetically, with accurate citation of sources of information.<br />

Travelers Insurance Company, Hartford, Conn. 614.8 T69<br />

Motor vehicles and safety. [Ed.2.] 1919.<br />

The same. 1915. (In its [Accident prevention].) r 614.8 T6gac<br />

Suggestions for the care and operation of motor cars and motor trucks, with a<br />

chapter on garage hazards.<br />

Engineering<br />

Carey, Alfred Edward, & Oliver, F. W. 627.52 C19<br />

Tidal lands; a study of shore prohlems. 1918. Van Nostrand.<br />

"Primarily concerned with those problems which underlie the maintenance of coastal<br />

and riparian lands, and, as a factor in such control, the extent to which horticulture<br />

may be enlisted in the cause of conservation." Preface.<br />

qr 622.33 C628<br />

Coal catalog, 1918; combined with Coal field directory; devised, comp.<br />

ed. and pub. annually by Keystone Consolidated Publishing Co. 1918.<br />

Pittsburgh.<br />

An extremely valuable reference work. The general information given includes<br />

discussion of geology and deposits of coal; classification of coals according to rank, use<br />

and physical structure; brief consideration of preparation, storage and analysis of coal;<br />

tabulations of fields, seams and counties according to rank or nature of the coal, according<br />

to the use to which it is best adapted, and according to physical structure. Under<br />

each state is given a sketch map of coal areas, with typical sections. Each seam is<br />

considered in detail with reference to extent, chemical composition, proper use of coal,<br />

producing mines, and shipping points.<br />

The "Coal field directory" is a comprehensive list of mines, with information regarding<br />

each.<br />

Ellis, William Waldron. r 621.725 E53<br />

The metal mixer; the easiest, simplest and most exact method of<br />

mixing iron by chemical analysis, with tables and ready made mixtures;<br />

indispensable to molders, melters and foundry men. 1919. [Progress<br />

Printing Co.]<br />

Gives evidence of care­<br />

Pamphlet considering mixtures to secure various results.<br />

lessness in preparation and editing.


124 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Jacobs, Frederic Burnham. r 621.92 J13<br />

Abrasives & abrasive wheels; their nature, manufacture and use; a<br />

practical handbook for engineers, factory superintendents, foundrymen,<br />

shop foremen and mechanics in general. 1919. Henley.<br />

Purely descriptive work, considering natural and artificial abrasives and their<br />

various applications.<br />

Kottcamp, John Paul. 620.1 K39<br />

Strength of materials; a text book for technical and industrial<br />

schools. 1919. Wiley.<br />

Eased on the author's course of instruction at Pratt Institute.<br />

Morrison, Lacy H. 621.43 M91<br />

Oil engines; details and operations. 1919. McGraw.<br />

Deals with construction, operation and operating costs of Diesel. semi-Diesel and<br />

low-compression engines.<br />

Porter, James Edward. r 016.628348 P83<br />

The activated sludge process of sewage treatment; a bibliography<br />

of the subject, with brief abstracts, patents, news items, etc.; comp.<br />

from current literature. 1917. General Filtration Co.<br />

Storrow, Charles Storer. r 628.1 S88<br />

Treatise on water-works for conveying and distributing supplies<br />

of water, with tables and examples. 1835. Hilliard.<br />

Stuart, Bernard. r 620.7 S92<br />

How to become a successful engineer; being hints to youths intending<br />

to adopt the profession. Ed.2. 1866. Nimmo.<br />

Well written and suggestive. Evidences recognition of many engineering problems<br />

which received but little attention until a much later date, and is still of interest in<br />

spite of its age.<br />

1919. Van Nos­<br />

Trinks, Willibald. 621.115 T74g<br />

Governors and the governing of prime movers.<br />

trand.<br />

"Bibliography" [compiled by the Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh], p.219-220.<br />

The same<br />

r 621.115 T74<br />

The first extensive treatment of the subject in the English language.<br />

with principles, and necessarily makes considerable use of mathematics.<br />

Concerned<br />

United States—Library of Congress. qr 016.62513 U25<br />

List of references on great European tunnels from an economic<br />

and historical viewpoint. 1919.<br />

Carbon copy.<br />

Electrical Engineering<br />

Dover, Alfred T.<br />

r 62I 333 Dy6<br />

Electric motors and control systems; a treatise on electric traction<br />

motors and their control. 1918. Pitman.<br />

Bibliographical foot-notes.<br />

For specialists and advanced students. Confined to electric traction motors, and<br />

is an amplification of part of the author's "Electric traction."


BOOKS ADDED—MARCH 1920 125<br />

James, Henry Duvall.<br />

621.3117 J16<br />

Controllers for electric motors; a treatise on the modern industrial<br />

controller, together with typical applications to the industries. 1919.<br />

Van Nostrand.<br />

The same<br />

r 621.3117 J16<br />

Methods considered are selected for the purpose of presenting fundamental principles.<br />

Affords a good general basis for intelligent use of special trade publications containing<br />

supplementary information on commercial types of industrial controller. Most<br />

of the material appeared originally in the "Electric journal."<br />

Agriculture<br />

Curtis Publishing Company, Philadelphia. 630 C93<br />

The farm market. 1918.<br />

Prepared by the Advertising department. Division of commercial research.<br />

The same<br />

r 630 C93<br />

Largely statistical, showing the possibilities in national advertising to reach agricultural<br />

communities.<br />

Gould, Harris Perley. 634.1161 G73<br />

Peach-growing. 1918. Macmillan. (Rural science series.)<br />

Comprehensive, practical work.<br />

Hodgson (E. F.) Co.<br />

q 636.5 H66<br />

Hodgson wigwarm portable houses for poultry and pet stock. 1919.<br />

Illustrated catalogue.<br />

Holbrook, Frederick Montgomery.<br />

r 636.9 H69<br />

Skunk culture for profit. 1915. Skunk Development Bureau.<br />

Mexico—Ministerio de fomento, colonizacion e qr 630.972 M65<br />

industria.<br />

Boletin oficial de la secretaria de agricultura y fomento, abril-octubre<br />

1918. v.3, no.4-10. 1918.<br />

v.3, no.5 wanting.<br />

Domestic Economy<br />

Kinne, Helen, & Cooley, A. M. 641 K27f<br />

Food and health; an elementary textbook of home making. 1918.<br />

Macmillan. (Home-making series.)<br />

Text for elementary schools.<br />

United States—Fuel administration.<br />

641.584 U25<br />

Conservation by correct use of natural gas for cooking. 1918.<br />

Reprint of Ohio State University bulletin no.^8, on the "Effect of gas pressures on<br />

natural gas cooking operations in the home."<br />

Business. Communication<br />

Kaufman, Herbert. 659 K14<br />

The clock that had no hands, and 19 other essays about advertising.<br />

1912. Doran.<br />

Forceful and convincing essays on the value of intelligent publicity.


126 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Library Bureau. 651.507 L68<br />

Filing as a profession for women. 1919.<br />

The same<br />

r 651.507 L68<br />

Presents the value of proper filing and outlines possibilities. Does not consider<br />

methods, but gives on pages 25-26 a list of publications dealing with the technique of<br />

filing.<br />

Perleberg, Hans Carl, comp.<br />

Art in advertising; 50 plates. Privately printed.<br />

qr 659 P43<br />

Reigner, Charles Gottshall.<br />

653.042 R3id<br />

Dictation course in business literature, with a vocabulary showing<br />

certain words and phrases of the text matter as they would appear<br />

when written in the Gregg system of shorthand, v.i. 1917. Rowe.<br />

United States—Signal office.<br />

654.1 U25<br />

Principles underlying radio communication. 1919. (Radio pamphlet<br />

no.40.)<br />

Prepared by the Bureau of standards under the direction of the Office of the chief<br />

signal officer of the army, Training section.<br />

Printing<br />

Kimball, Dorr.<br />

qr 655.25 K25<br />

Composing room management; a survey of present conditions and<br />

a discussion in detail of possible improvements. 1918.<br />

"Verbatim text of the document which was prepared for a certain printing firm,<br />

after making an exhaustive study of the operation of the composing room." Introduction.<br />

Perouze, G.<br />

655.38 P43<br />

Le livre de l'aveugle. 1917.<br />

A short, interesting account of the originators and the development of the touch system<br />

of reading. Describes handwriting and printing of Braille books, and the apparatus<br />

for both. Traces the history of French libraries for the blind, discusses libraries and<br />

collections, and names periodicals and books available for the blind.<br />

United Typothetae of America.<br />

655.07 U25<br />

Instruction in printing in public schools; recommendations of Committee<br />

on education. 1919.<br />

"Typographic technical series for apprentices," p.29-34.<br />

Brief consideration of proper methods and equipment.<br />

Chemical Technology<br />

Astruc, Marcel.<br />

r 669.1 A85<br />

La metallurgie a la portee de tous; la fonte. le fer, l'acier, les aciers<br />

speciaux. 1919.<br />

Semi-technical treatment of ferrous metallurgy.<br />

Bayonne Casting Company, Bayonne, N. J. qr 669.2451 B33m<br />

Monel metal; non-corrodible, strong as steel. [1919?]<br />

Trade literature.<br />

[Davids, Thaddeus.]<br />

r 66? 4 D2Q<br />

History of ink, including its etymology, chemistry and bibliography<br />

[i860.] Davids.


BOOKS ADDED—MARCH 1920 127<br />

Giolitti, Federico.<br />

r 66g iy Q^<br />

II trattamento termico preliminare degli acciai dolci e semi-duri per<br />

costruzioni meccaniche. 1918.<br />

"Elenco di alcune delle opere che trattano argomenti affini a quelli svolti nel<br />

presente volume, p.599-602.<br />

Giua, Michele, & Giua-Lollini, Clara.<br />

r 669.9135 G45<br />

Combinazioni chimiche fra metalli. 1917.<br />

"Bibliografia," p.424-427.<br />

Technical Considers thermal analysis, equilibrium diagrams, ternary compounds<br />

and compounds of metals with metalloids.<br />

Laucks, Irving Fink.<br />

gg, L 3 fj<br />

Commercial oils, vegetable and animal, with special reference to<br />

oriental oils. 1919. Wiley.<br />

Not highly technical. Considers, briefly, many kinds of oil, giving characteristics<br />

and practical trade information.<br />

Schenck, Rudolph.<br />

66g s 32p<br />

Physical chemistry of the metals; tr. and annotated by R. S. Dean.<br />

1919. Wiley.<br />

"A clear and orderly presentation of a subject that is too little understood by engineers<br />

in general." Mining and scientific press, 1919.<br />

Slosson, Edwin Emery.<br />

660 S63<br />

Creative chemistry; descriptive of recent achievements in the chemical<br />

industries. 1919. Century. (Century books of useful science.)<br />

"Reading references," p.297-308.<br />

Well written and non-technical. Originally appeared as a series of articles in "The<br />

Independent," 1917-18.<br />

Structural Materials Research Laboratory,<br />

r 666.9 S92<br />

Lewis Institute, Chicago.<br />

Bulletin, no.1-2. 1919.<br />

"Researches in the properties of concrete and concrete materials at the Structural<br />

Materials Research Laboratory are being carried out through the cooperation of the<br />

Lewis Institute and the Portland Cement Association."<br />

Fine Arts<br />

Baldridge, Cyrus Leroy.<br />

q 741 B19<br />

"I was there" with the Yanks on the western front, 1917-19, together<br />

with verses by H. R. Baukhage. 1919. Putnam.<br />

Sketches made by the author while a camion driver with the French army and<br />

afterwards while with the American expeditionary force as an infantry private, showing<br />

doughboy types—his courage, humor and suffering. Verses by Hilmar R. Baukhage are<br />

included.<br />

Carrick, Alice Van Leer.<br />

707.3 C23<br />

Collector's luck; or, A repository of pleasant and profitable discourses<br />

descriptive of the household furniture and ornaments of olden<br />

time. 1919. Atlantic Monthly Press.<br />

Contents: Collector's luck.—Stenciled furniture.—Pressed glassware.—Old woven<br />

coverlets.—Lustre pitchers and teacups.—Old lights and lamps.—Old valentines and<br />

silhouettes.—Old glassware.—Old white counterpanes.—Collector's luck in the city.—<br />

The friendly fireplace.—Old dolls and their furniture.<br />

Eberlein, Harold Donaldson, and others.<br />

747 E21<br />

Practical book of interior decoration. 1919. Lippincott.<br />

Contents: Historic period decoration in England, Italy, Spain and France.—Practical<br />

decoration and furnishing.—International inter-period decoration and furnishing.<br />

Comprehensive, interesting treatment. Handsomely illustrated.


128 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Ferguson, John Calvin. 7Q9-5 1 F38<br />

Outlines of Chinese art; the Scammon lectures for 1918; pub. for the<br />

Art Institute of Chicago. 1919. University of Chicago Press.<br />

Contents: Introduction.—Bronzes and jades.—Stones and ceramics.—Calligraphy<br />

and painting.—Painting.<br />

Fraprie, Frank Roy, cd. 77 I -4 F88<br />

Practical retouching. 1919. Amer. Photographic Pub. Co.<br />

French, Thomas Ewing, & Svensen, C L.<br />

744 Fg2m<br />

Mechanical drawing for high schools; a text with problem layouts.<br />

1919. McGraw.<br />

Haviland & Co. r 738 H36<br />

Haviland china; a history.<br />

New York (city), Metropolitan Museum of Art. qr 708.1 N26pi<br />

Pierpont M<strong>org</strong>an wing; a brief guide to the art of the renaissance,<br />

mediaeval and earlier periods. 1918.<br />

Woodbury, Charles Herbert. 750 W86<br />

Painting and the personal equation. 1919. Houghton.<br />

The author, an American painter, presents transcripts of lectures given before the<br />

students in his summer classes at Ogunquit, Maine. The book contains three sections:<br />

the painter; the student: the public. The second contains the gist of the book, the<br />

elaboration of the author's theory that the mind behind the eyes, the thought controlling<br />

the brush, is of more importance than technique.<br />

Architecture<br />

Atlas Portland Cement Company. . q 728 A88i<br />

Information for home builders. 1918.<br />

An illustrated pamphlet of information regarding the charming and substantial<br />

homes that can be built from cement.<br />

728 C85<br />

Craftsman bungalows; a collection of the latest designs. 1919. Yoho.<br />

Description, designs and illustrations of bungalows ranging in price from $600 to<br />

$5,000.<br />

Dana, William Sumner Barton. 728.7 D19<br />

The Swiss chalet book; a minute analysis and reproduction of the<br />

chalets of Switzerland, obtained by a special visit to that country; its<br />

architects and its chalet homes. 1913. Comstock.<br />

"Bibliography," p.151.<br />

Hamlin, Winthrop Abbott. r 728.6 H22<br />

Low-cost cottage construction in America; a study based on the<br />

housing collection in the Harvard Social Museum. 1917. Harvard<br />

University. (Harvard University—Social ethics department. Publications,<br />

no.7.)<br />

Hodgson (E. F.) Co. q ?28 6 H66<br />

Hodgson portable houses. 1919.


BOOKS ADDED—MARCH 1920 129<br />

Houdoy, Jules. qb 726 H83<br />

Histoire artistique de la cathedrale de Cambrai, ancienne eglise<br />

metropolitaine Notre-Dame; comptes, inventaires et documents inedits.<br />

1880. (Memoires de la Societe des Sciences, de l'Agriculture et des<br />

Arts de Lille.)<br />

Bibliographical foot-notes.<br />

Leon, Paul.<br />

b 720.944 L62<br />

La renaissance des ruines; maisons, monuments. 1918. (La guerre<br />

et l'architecture.)<br />

Contents: L'architecture rurale dans la France envahie.—Projets pour la reconstruction<br />

des habitations rurales.—La reconstitution monumentale de la France.— Les<br />

nouveaux monuments historiques; vestiges et souvenirs de guerre.<br />

National Fire Proofing Company of Pittsburgh.<br />

q 728 Nisna<br />

Natco tex-tile one-family house; a selection of designs submitted<br />

in competition by architects, with illustrations of houses built of Natco<br />

tex-tile, with articles treating of design, plan and construction of dependable<br />

houses of moderate cost. 1917. Rogers.<br />

National Fire Proofing Company of Pittsburgh.<br />

q 728 Nisn<br />

Natco two-apartment house; a selection of designs submitted in<br />

competition by architects, with illustrations of houses built of Natco<br />

hollow tile, with articles treating of design, plan and construction of<br />

dependable houses of moderate cost. 1916. Rogers.<br />

The same<br />

qr 728 N15<br />

Music<br />

Scores<br />

Bach, Johann Sebastian.<br />

qM 786.4 Bi2p<br />

Partitas for the pianoforte [no.1-6]; ed. and fingered by Czerny,<br />

Griepenkerl and Roitzsch. 2v. in 1. 1908. Schirmer.<br />

Bach, Johann Sebastian.<br />

qM 786.4 Bi2tw<br />

Two and three part inventions for the pianoforte, with reference to<br />

the execution and the composition analyzed and rev. by F. B. Busoni.<br />

2 pts. in iv. 1892. Breitkopf.<br />

Contents: 15 two part inventions.—15 three part inventions.<br />

Debussy, Achille Claude.<br />

Nocturnes, partition d'orchestre. 1909. Fromont.<br />

Contents: Nuages.—Fetes.—Sirenes.<br />

qM 785.3 D35<br />

Gounod, Charles Frangois.<br />

qM 783.21 G74<br />

Messe solennelle (St. Cecilia), for soli and chorus; ed. and the<br />

pianoforte accompaniment arranged by Joseph Barnby, vocal score.<br />

Schirmer.<br />

Latin and English words.<br />

Grieg, Edvard.<br />

qM 787-1 G89<br />

Sonata for piano and violin (no.1-3); ed. and fingered by Leopold<br />

Lichtenberg. [2v.] 1901-10. Schirmer.<br />

Contents: Op.8. F.—Op.13, G.—Op.45, C minor.<br />

v.l is piano part, v.2 is violin part.


130 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Lehmann, Elizabeth Nina Mary Frederika, afterward qM 784 L55<br />

Mrs Bedford.<br />

In a Persian garden; a song-cycle, for four solo voices (soprano,<br />

contralto, tenor and bass), with pianoforte accompaniment; the words<br />

selected from the Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam (Fitzgerald's translation).<br />

1896. Metzler.<br />

MacDowell, Edward Alexander.<br />

qM 786.4902 M14I1<br />

Hamlet, and Ophelia [for piano, four hands]. Op.22. Schirmer.<br />

MacDowell, Edward Alexander.<br />

qM 785.4 Mi4h<br />

Hamlet; Ophelia; zwei gedichte, fiir grosses orchester. Op.22.<br />

1885. Hainauer.<br />

MacDowell, Edward Alexander.<br />

qM 786.4902 M14S<br />

Die Sarazenen; Die schone Alda (The Saracens; Alda); zwei fragmente<br />

nach dem Rolandslied, fiir pianoforte zu vier handen. Op.30.<br />

1891. Breitkopf.<br />

Parker, Horatio William.<br />

qM 783.4 P23<br />

Hora novissima; the rhythm of Bernard de Morlaix on the celestial<br />

country; set to music for soli, chorus and orchestra [accompaniment<br />

for pianoforte]. Op.30. 1893. Novello.<br />

Latin and English words.<br />

Pergolesi, Giovanni Battista.<br />

qM 782.5 P42<br />

La serva padrona; intermezzi; opera completa per canto e pianoforte,<br />

riduzione di Michele Saladino. Ricordi.<br />

Italian words.<br />

Rimsky-Korsakov, Nicolai Andreievich.<br />

qM 786.4 R46<br />

Sheherazade, after the "Arabian nights;" symphonic suite for orchestra,<br />

arranged for piano, 2 hands; transcription for piano by P. Gilson;<br />

ed. and fingered by Constantin Sternberg. Op.35. 1918. Schirmer.<br />

Saint-Saens, Charles Camille.<br />

qM 782.6 S15<br />

Phryne; opera-comique en deux actes; poeme de L. Auge de<br />

Lassus, partition chant et piano reduite par I'auteur. 1893. Durand.<br />

French words.<br />

Schumann, Robert.<br />

qM 785.5 S3gf<br />

Fest-ouverture, mit gesang iiber das Rheinweinlied, fiir orchester<br />

und chor, partitur. Op.123. [1853?] Simrock.<br />

Sembrich, Marcella, comp.<br />

My favorite folk songs [high voice]. 1918. Ditson.<br />

qM 784.4 S47<br />

Texas University.<br />

M 784.8 T32<br />

University of Texas community song book; comp. by A. C. Ellis,<br />

with suggestions for directing group singing by F. L. Reed. 1918.<br />

(Bulletin no.1872.)<br />

Tiersot, Julien, ed.<br />

q M 784.4 T45<br />

Sixty folksongs of France, for medium voice. 1915. Ditson.<br />

(Musicians library.)<br />

English and French words.


BOOKS ADDED—MARCH 1920 ,3,<br />

Tschaikowsky Peter Ilyitch. qM ?86 T<br />

Franceses da Rimin,; fantasie pour orchestre [transc. pour piano a<br />

quatre mams]. Op.32. Mackar.<br />

Tschaikowsky, Peter Ilyitch. qM ?86 T ^<br />

Hamlet; ouverture, melodramen, marsche und eutr'-actes fur kleines<br />

orchester, arrangement fur pianoforte zu 4 handen von E. Langer Op<br />

67- [1895-] Rahter.<br />

Tschaikowsky, Peter Ilyitch. qM 786. 4902 T?8t<br />

Ca tempete" [fantaisie pour orchestre d'apres le drame de Shakespeare],<br />

piano a 4 mains par E. Langer. Op.18. 1891. [Jurgenson.]<br />

Wolf-Ferrari, Ermanno. qM ?82 6 wg3<br />

[Le donne cunose.] Inquisitive women (Die neugierigen frauen,<br />

Le donne curiose); a musical comedy in three acts, after Carlo Goldoni<br />

by Luigi Sugana, written by Hermann Teibler; tr. by A.J. du P. Coleman,<br />

vocal score. 1911. Weinberger.<br />

English words.<br />

Wolf-Ferrari, Ermanno. qM 782.5 W83<br />

Jewels of the Madonna (I gioielli della Madonna); opera in three<br />

acts on Neapolitan life (verse by C. Zangarini and E. Golisciani); English<br />

version by Claude Aveling [vocal score], 1912. Schirmer. '<br />

Italian and English words.<br />

Books About Music<br />

Chase, Mary Wood.<br />

786.3 C39<br />

Natural laws in piano technic. 1910. Ditson. (Music students library.)<br />

Duff, Mrs Sarah Robinson. 784.9 D87<br />

Simple truths used by great singers. 1919. Ditson.<br />

Contents: Breathing.—Tone placing.—Evening up the voice.—Vocalizing.—Resonance.—My<br />

first pupil [Mary Garden].<br />

Kotzschmar, Mrs Mary Ann (Torrey). 786.3 K39<br />

Half-hour lessons in music; class work for beginners at the piano.<br />

1907. Ditson. (Music students library.)<br />

Millien, Achille, comp. 784.4 M69<br />

Chants & chansons; recueillis et classes, avec les airs notes par J. G.<br />

Penavaire. 3v. in 2. 1906-10. (Litterature orale et traditions du<br />

Nivernais.)<br />

v.i. Complaintes.—Chants historiques.<br />

v.2-3. Chansons anecdotiques.<br />

Title of v.2-3 reads "Chants & chansons populaires."<br />

Tapper, Thomas.<br />

780.7 Tige<br />

Education of the music teacher. 1915. Presser.<br />

Contents: The fundamental requisites.—Music teaching as service.—Music teaching<br />

as profession.—Equipment and success.—Pedagogy.—Musical theory.—The pupil.<br />

—Music history and biography.—Music in the home.—Mechanical musical instruments.—Community<br />

music.—A type of community music in the United States.—Public<br />

school music.—Music in social settlement work.—Efficiency.—Self-expression in<br />

music.—Musical composition.—The basis of musical memory.—Teaching material.—<br />

Method and system.—The music club.—The measure of success.—Recapitulation.—<br />

Examinations in music.


i 3 2<br />

CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Wells, Howard. 786.3 W49<br />

Ears, brain and fingers; a text book for piano teachers and pupils.<br />

1914. Ditson.<br />

Amusements<br />

Glover, Ellye Howell. 793 G51<br />

"Dame Curtsey's" book of party pastimes for the up-to-date hostess.<br />

1917. McClurg.<br />

Guptill, Mrs Elizabeth Frances (Ephraim). 793 G97<br />

Complete Hallowe'en book. 1915. March.<br />

Invitations, decorations, games, pantomimes, amateur theatricals.<br />

Literature<br />

Baudelaire, Charles. 844 B32P<br />

Poems in prose; tr. by Arthur Symons. 1909. Mosher.<br />

Contents: The favors of the moon.—Which is true?—"L'invitation au voyage."—<br />

The eyes of the poor.—Windows.—Crowds.—The cake.—Evening twilight.—"Anywhere<br />

out of the world."—A heroic death.—Be drunken.—Epilogue.<br />

[Boyd, Andrew Kennedy Hutchison.] 824 B66c<br />

Critical essays of a country parson. 1867. Longmans.<br />

Contents: Archbishop Whately on Bacon.—Recent metaphysical works: Lewes,<br />

Maurice, Fleming.—Thorndale; or, The conflict of opinions.—James Montgomery.—<br />

Friends in council.—Edgar Allan Poe.—Ge<strong>org</strong>e Stephenson and the railway.—Oulita<br />

the serf.—The <strong>org</strong>an question.—Life at the water cure.<br />

Clemenceau, Ge<strong>org</strong>es Eugene Benjamin. 848 C56<br />

Les plus belles pages de Clemenceau; recueillies et annotees par<br />

Pascal Bonetti, introduction de M. C. Poinsot. [1908.]<br />

Contents: CLEMENCEAU CONTEUR: AU fil des jours; Aux embuscades de la vie.—<br />

CLEMENCEAU PHILOSOPHE SOCIAL: La melee sociale; Le grand Pan.—CLEMENCEAU<br />

JOURNALISTE ET CRITIQUE: Du patriotisme: La guillotine; Hommage a Edmond de<br />

Goncourt; Revolution de cathedrales; Constantin Meunier.—CLEMENCEAU ORATEUR:<br />

Fragments du discours du 16 mai 1876 (L'amnistie devant le parlement) ; Fragments<br />

du discours du 30 octobre 1902 (L'eglise, la republique et la liberte); Fragments du<br />

discours de la Roche-sur-Yon (30 septembre 1906) ; Fragments du discours d'Amiens<br />

(Inauguration du monument de Rene Goblet, 6 octobre 1907).<br />

Goldberg, Isaac. 860.9 G57<br />

Studies in Spanish-American literature, with an introduction by<br />

J. D. M. Ford. 1920. Brentano.<br />

Contents: The "Modernista" renovation.—Ruben Dario.—Jose Enrique Rodo.—<br />

Jose Santos Chocano.—Jose Maria Eguren.—Rufino Blanco-Fombona.<br />

Hopkins, Annette Brown, & Hughes, H. S. comp. 823 H78<br />

The English novel before the 19th century; excerpts from representative<br />

types. 1915. Ginn.<br />

Contents: Le morte Darthur, by Sir Thomas Malory.—Euphues ; the anatomy of<br />

wit, by John Lyly.—The countess of Pembroke's Arcadia, by Sir Philip Sidney.—The<br />

unfortunate traveller, by Thomas Nashe.—The pilgrim's progress, by John Bunyan.—<br />

Oroonoko, by Mrs Aphra Behn.—The life, adventures and piracies of the famous Captain<br />

Singleton, by Daniel Defoe.—Clarissa, by Samuel Richardson.—The history of<br />

Tom Jones, a foundling, by Henry Fielding.—The life and opinions of Tristram<br />

Shandy, gent, by Laurence Sterne.—The expedition of Humphry Clinker, by T. G.<br />

Smollett.—Evelina, by Fanny Burney.—The castle of Otranto, by Horace Walpole.<br />

The mysteries of Udolpho, by Mrs Ann Radcliffe.—The man of feeling, by Henry<br />

Mackenzie.—The history of Sanford and Merton, by Thomas Day.—Nature and art,<br />

by Mrs Elizabeth Inchbald.—Things as they are, by William Godwin.<br />

"Selected bibliography," pref. p.15-21.


BOOKS ADDED—MARCH 1920 133<br />

Lamborn, Edmund A. Greening. 809.1 L18<br />

The rudiments of criticism. 1917. Clarendon Press.<br />

Contents: What is poetry.—Rhythm and rime.—Poetry is music.—Sound and<br />

sense.—Stanza-form.—Pictures in poetry.—The figures of speech.—Other artifices<br />

and other arts.—Poetry is formal beauty.—Children's exercises.—SUPPLEMENT : Children's<br />

verses and essays ; Selected questions.<br />

Rutherford, Mildred Lewis. r 810.9 R93<br />

The South in history and literature; a hand-book of Southern authors<br />

from the settlement of Jamestown, 1607, to living writers. 1906.<br />

[Franklin.]<br />

"Reference books," pref. p.37-38.<br />

Poetry<br />

Barr, Mrs Amelia Edith.<br />

811 B259<br />

Songs in the common chord; songs for everyone to sing, tuned to<br />

the C major chord of this life; introduction by J. C. Lincoln. 1919.<br />

Appleton.<br />

811.08 B63<br />

A book of Princeton verse, [v.1-2.] 1916-19. Princeton University<br />

Press.<br />

v.i, covering the period 1910-16, ed. by Alfred Noyes; v.2, covering the period<br />

1917-19, ed. by Henry Van Dyke and others.<br />

Heidenstam, Carl Gustaf Verner von.<br />

839.71 H41<br />

Sweden's laureate; selected poems of Verner von Heidenstam; tr.<br />

from the Swedish, with an introduction by C. W. Stork. 1919. Yale<br />

University Press.<br />

Includes about one fourth of the poet's published works. Contains also a biography<br />

of the poet. Many of the translations are in the form of poetic prose brochures. The<br />

collection shows Heidenstam's appeal to the earnest thinkers of all races.<br />

Hills, Elijah Clarence, & Morley, S. G. ed.<br />

861.08 H56<br />

Modern Spanish lyrics, with introduction, notes and vocabulary.<br />

1913. Holt.<br />

Includes the work of both Spanish and Spanish-American poets arranged chronologically<br />

under countries.<br />

Lomax, John Avery, comp.<br />

811.08 L79S<br />

Songs of the cattle trail and cow camp, with a foreword by W. L.<br />

Phelps. 1919. Macmillan.<br />

Mason, Harrison Denning. r 811 M440<br />

The old path; some day-dreams and some familiar realities. 1919.<br />

[Murdoch-Kerr Co. Pittsburgh.]<br />

A collection of verse published by the author, a Pittsburgher, in memory of his son,<br />

Earle Dilworth Mason, an American soldier who fell in France in the great war.<br />

Masters, Edgar Lee.<br />

Starved Rock [and other poems].<br />

1919. Macmillan.<br />

A collection of lyric verse by the author of the "Spoon river anthology."<br />

811 M46st<br />

Nicholson, Daniel Howard Sinclair, & Lee, A. H. E. comp. 821.08 N31<br />

Oxford book of English mystical verse. 1917. Clarendon Press.<br />

The same<br />

r 821.08 N318


134 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Untermeyer, Louis, cd.<br />

811.08 U25<br />

Modern American poetry; an introduction. 1919. Harcourt.<br />

The editor claims that this verse shows a simpler, less stilted language than that of<br />

the middle 19th century, more vigor and energy. The collection includes seven poems<br />

in which appears the figure of Abraham Lincoln.<br />

W. B. in California; a tribute. 1919. Privately printed. 811.08 Wu<br />

Poems written for Witter Bynner by members of his class in verse-writing in the<br />

University of California in 1919, and poems addressed to him by members of the class<br />

and other friends.<br />

Drama. Theatre<br />

Calderon de la Barca, Pedro. q 862 C12C<br />

Comedias; coleccion mas completa que todas las anteriores; hecha<br />

e ilustradada por J. E. Hartzenbusch. 4v. 1910-18. (Biblioteca de<br />

autores espaiioles.)<br />

Churchill, Winston. 812 C46d<br />

Dr Jonathan; a play in three acts. 1919. Macmillan.<br />

Dearmer, Mrs Mabel (White). 822 D34<br />

Soul of the world; a mystery play of the nativity and the passion.<br />

1911. Mowbray.<br />

842 G96<br />

Guibour; a miracle play of Our Lady; version from the Old French by<br />

A. S. Macdonald. I9 T 9- Sunwise Turn. (Neighborhood playhouse<br />

plays, no.2.)<br />

Translation of "Un miracle de Nostre Dame, comment elle garda une femme d'estre<br />

arse."<br />

Jones, Henry Arthur. 822 J41H<br />

The lie; a play in four acts. 1915. Doran.<br />

MacClintock, Lander. 852.09 M13<br />

The contemporary drama of Italy. 1920. Little. (Contemporary<br />

drama series.)<br />

Contents: The foundations.—Giuseppe Giacosa.—The early realists.—Gabriele<br />

d'Annunzio.—The later realists.—Roberto Bracco.— Actors and acting; the popular<br />

theatre; the dialect theatre.—The younger generation.—Futurism and other isms<br />

Bibliography, p.263-302.<br />

Sayler, Oliver M. 7g2 S2?<br />

The Russian theatre under the revolution. 1920. Little.<br />

Contents: Plays within a play.—The world's first theatre.—"The blue bird" and<br />

Stanislavsky.—The plays of Tchehoff at the Art theatre.—From Turgenieff to Gorky<br />

at the Art theatre.—The studios of the Moscow Art theatre.—The Russian ballet in its<br />

own home.—The deeper roots of the Russian theatre.—The Kamernv, a theatre of revolt.—"balome"<br />

m cubist vesture.—A bacchanale and some others at the Kamernv —<br />

Here and there in Moscow theatres.—Meyerhold and the theatre theatrical —Yev'revnoff<br />

and monodrama.—Russian theories of the theatre.<br />

Scott, Mrs Constance Margaret (Brandon). 7g2 S425<br />

Old days in Bohemian London (recollections of Clement Scott).<br />

[1919.] Stokes.<br />

Contents: Clement Scott.—Warriors of the pen.—Edwin Arnold.—Henry Irving<br />

~?»r Au e ustus Drunolanus.—Humming birds.—W. S. Gilbert, Gee-Gee and others —<br />

Vvilham Ternss and the Adelphi theatre.—Practical joking in Bohemia.—Doubles—<br />

. lr L . a ,° 0u f here s-—Ellen Terry.—Wilson Barrett.—"Yours very faithfully 'Fife' "—<br />

Mr Alfred. —Ge<strong>org</strong>e Edwardes and others.—Beerbohm Tree and "Trilby "—Lewis


BOOKS ADDED—MARCH 1920<br />

I3S<br />

Scott, Mrs Constance Margaret (Brandon)— continued. 7Q2 S42.;<br />

r^,f ^TTH'T^- *"£ and ArthUr Pin «°—Charles Wyndham.-Mrs Patrick Camp<br />

" , d Leshe.-Victonen Sardou's "Dora."_Character sketches—Sarah Bernhardt—The<br />

strength of weakness.-Ge<strong>org</strong>e R. Sims—Bribery and temptation-La<br />

vie Boheme.— Clement Scott's prophecy.<br />

temptation. La<br />

Biography<br />

Agassiz, Mrs Elizabeth (Cary). Q2 A2623p<br />

Paton, Lucy Allen. Elizabeth Cary Agassiz; a biography. 1919.<br />

Houghton.<br />

Biography and letters of the first president of Radcliffe College. She was the<br />

wife of the great Cambridge naturalist, Louis Agassiz, and traveled with him in South<br />

America and Europe. Her letters tell of these travels, of her work at Harvard annex<br />

and Kadchffe College, her associations with many celebrities of the time and of her last<br />

years. t<br />

Butler, Samuel, 1835-1902. Q2 Bg78j<br />

Jones, Henry Festing. Samuel Butler, author of Erewhon (1835-<br />

1902); a memoir. 2v. 1919. Macmillan.<br />

v.i. To 1885.<br />

V.2. I88S-I9I6.<br />

"A short bibliography of the writings of Samuel Butler and of the books and articles<br />

concerning him," v.i, pref. p.21—30.<br />

A candid portrayal of an unhappy nature usually at odds with the rest of the<br />

world. Full of minute detail, entertaining in style, seldom critical.<br />

Havens, Catherine Elizabeth. g2 H3s8h<br />

Diary of a little girl in old New York. 1919. Brown.<br />

Written in 1849-50 in the naive manner of a child of ten. Tells of the life and<br />

customs, the streets and buildings of the old city.<br />

Heilprin, Michael. 92 H417P<br />

Pollak, Gustav. Michael Heilprin and his sons; a biography. 1912.<br />

Dodd.<br />

This memoir draws freely on the writings of Michael Heilprin, scholar and encyclopaedist,<br />

and his sons—Louis, also an encyclopaedist, and Angelo, a naturalist and<br />

traveler.<br />

"The standard of activity and attainment reached by these men is worthy of<br />

study." Literary digest, 1912.<br />

Lafayette, Marie Jean Paul Roch Yves Gilbert 92 Li44m<br />

Motier, marquis de.<br />

M<strong>org</strong>an, Ge<strong>org</strong>e. The true La Fayette. 1919. Lippincott. (The<br />

"true" biographies and histories.)<br />

Story of Lafayette's eventful life, beginning with his boyhood in Chavaniac, through<br />

the American and French revolutions, to his last revolution in 1830.<br />

Lafayette, Marie Jean Paul Roch Yves Gilbert 92 Li44r<br />

Motier, marquis de.<br />

Roberts, Octavia. With Lafayette in America. 1919. Houghton.<br />

Describes Lafayette's first coming to America with his offer to help the colonies<br />

in their struggle for liberty and his visit in 1824 as the nation's honored guest. A beautiful<br />

book, profusely illustrated with old cuts.<br />

Lauder, Sir Harry. 9 2<br />

L364I<br />

Between you and me. 1919. McCann.<br />

Written in a characteristically friendly, confidential style, using Scottish dialect.<br />

Mainly autobiographical.


136 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Meyer, Ge<strong>org</strong>e von Lengerke. 92 M654h<br />

Howe, Mark Antony De Wolfe. Ge<strong>org</strong>e von Lengerke Meyer; his<br />

life and public services. 1919. Dodd.<br />

Contents: Beginnings.—Affairs and politics in Boston and Massachusetts.—Ambassador<br />

to Italy.—Ambassador to Russia.—Postmaster general.—Secretary of the<br />

navy.—The final years.<br />

Olmsted, Arthur Ge<strong>org</strong>e. 92 O235S<br />

Stone, Rufus Barrett. Arthur Ge<strong>org</strong>e Olmsted, son of a Pennsylvania<br />

pioneer; boy orator of Ulysses; for the freedom of the slave; defense<br />

of the Union; development of the northern tier; citizen, jurist,<br />

statesman. 1919. Winston.<br />

This biography is an inspiring story of a noteworthy career.<br />

Roosevelt, Theodore. 92 R684S<br />

Sewall, William Wingate. Bill Sewall's story of T. R.. with an introduction<br />

by Hermann Hagedorn. 1919. Harper.<br />

Simple, direct narrative of an unusual friendship. Sewall was Theodore Roosevelt's<br />

Maine guide, manager of his Dakota ranch, and his devoted admirer.<br />

Taylor, James Monroe. 92 T2542I1<br />

Haight, Elizabeth Hazelton. Life and letters of James Monroe<br />

Taylor; the biography of an educator. 1919. Dutton.<br />

"Partial list of writings of James Monroe Taylor," p.380-387.<br />

Includes much that is of interest concerning Vassar College of which Dr Taylor<br />

was president from 1886 to 1914.<br />

Trollope, Thomas Adolphus. 92 T763t<br />

What I remember. 1888. Harper.<br />

Author's reminiscences from childhood to the death of his wife in 1865. Tells of<br />

his travels in America and Europe and of his associations with contemporary celebrities<br />

of the early Victorian period.<br />

Watterson, Henry. g 2 VV327W<br />

"Marse Henry;" an autobiography. 2v. 1919. Doran.<br />

Informal history of men and events of the past 60 or 70 years, as well as autobiography.<br />

Full of friendly humor.<br />

Collected Biography<br />

Academie Royale des Sciences, des Lettres et des r 920 A16<br />

Beaux-arts de Belgique, Brussels.<br />

Biographie nationale. v.1-21 in 11. 1866-1913.<br />

v. 1-2. A-Bre.<br />

v.3-4. Bre-Cor.<br />

v.5-6. Cos-Fay.<br />

v.7-8. Fea-Hel.<br />

v.9-10. Hel-Kuy.<br />

v.11-12. Lab-Lys.<br />

v. 13-14. Mab-Moe.<br />

v.i 5-16. Moe-Pep.<br />

v.i 7-18. Per-Rei.<br />

v. 19-20. Rei-Ryt.<br />

v.21. Sab-Sch.<br />

928 A51<br />

American literary yearbook; a biographical and bibliographical dictionary<br />

of living North American authors, a record of contemporary literary<br />

activity, an authors' manual and students' text book; ed. by Hamilton<br />

Traub, 1919. v.i. 1919. Traub.<br />

A r


BOOKS ADDED—MARCH 1920<br />

I37<br />

Marcosson, Isaac Frederick. g20 M 375<br />

Adventures in interviewing. 1919. Lane.<br />

Contents: Watterson and the early days.—New York and the World's work<br />

[W. H. Page].—A great American editor [G. H. Lorimer] .—The art of interviewing<br />

—Woodrow Wilson and Theodore Roosevelt.—The real Lloyd Ge<strong>org</strong>e.—Northcliffe<br />

the king-maker.—Haig and other British notables.—Kerensky and the revolutionmakers.—Pershing<br />

and Wood.—Foch and Clemenceau.—The Wall street sphinxes.—<br />

Some literary friendships.—Other literary associations.—The story of "The jungle."<br />

—Plays and players.<br />

Wheeler, Ethel Rolt.<br />

g22 W61<br />

Women of the cell and cloister. [1913.] Methuen.<br />

Contents: St. Mary of Egypt.—St. Brigid of Ireland.—Helolse—St. Clare.—Da<br />

me<br />

Juliana of Norwich.—St. Catherine of Siena.—St. Teresa.—The Mere Angelique<br />

Travel and Description<br />

(Includes Geography and Antiquities)<br />

Candler, Edmund.<br />

915.4 C17<br />

On the edge of the world. 1919. Cassell.<br />

Describes a journey through Kashmir, India, the Himalayas, with many pictures of<br />

native haunts, habits and pilgrimages. Full of entertaining episodes. The author, an<br />

Englishman, has written a number of books on travel in the Far East.<br />

Chesterton, Gilbert Keith.<br />

914.15 C42<br />

Irish impressions. 1920. Lane.<br />

Contents: Two stones in a square.—The root of reality.—The family and the feud.<br />

—The paradox of labour.—The Englishman in Ireland.—The mistake of England.—The<br />

mistake of Ireland.—An example and a question.—Belfast and the religious problem.<br />

Hammond (C. S.) & Co. pub.<br />

910 H22<br />

Hammond's business atlas of economic geography; a new series of<br />

maps showing relief of the land, temperature, rainfall, natural vegetation,<br />

productive and non-productive regions, mineral products, agricultural<br />

products, distribution of population, etc. 1919.<br />

Lofberg, John Oscar.<br />

r 913.38 L76<br />

Sycophancy in Athens. 1917. [Banta.]<br />

Contains bibliographical foot-notes.<br />

Thesis for Ph. D., University of Chicago.<br />

Tacoma, Wash.—Justice to the mountain committee. r 917.97 T119<br />

Brief submitted to the United States geographic board urging the<br />

official removal from America's most sublime mountain of the name<br />

Rainier and the perpetuation by official adoption of the original Indian<br />

name therefor in its most appropriate, euphonious and generally accepted<br />

form—Tacoma—May 2, 1917. 1917.<br />

"Authorities consulted," p.72-77.<br />

With this is bound "Is it 'Mt. Tacoma' or 'Rainier?' What do history and tradition<br />

say?" by James Wickersham.<br />

History<br />

General<br />

Crump, Charles Ge<strong>org</strong>e.<br />

9°7 C89<br />

Logic of history. 1919. Soc. for Promoting Christian Knowledge.<br />

(Helps for students of history.)<br />

"Bibliography," p.62-63.<br />

Principles and methods for writers and teachers of history.


138 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Marvin, Francis Sydney. 9°i M43I<br />

The living past; a sketch of western progress. 1917. Clarendon<br />

Press.<br />

Contents: Looking backward.—The childhood of the race.—The early empires—<br />

The Greeks.—The Romans.—The middle ages.—The renascence and the New World—<br />

The rise of modern science.—The industrial revolution.—The revolution, social and<br />

political.—Progress after revolution.—Looking forward.<br />

"Appendix on books," p.282-290.<br />

Europe<br />

Antonelli, fitienne. 947 A63<br />

Bolshevik Russia; tr. from the French by C. A. Carroll. 1920. Knopf.<br />

An analysis of Bolshevism—its philosophy, exponents, deeds. The author, a professor<br />

in the College libre des Sciences sociales (1920), with an intimate knowledge of<br />

Russia, believes the Russian revolution parallels in its course the French Reign of<br />

terror, that on the leveled ground there will be built up a pure democracy "out of the<br />

very stuff of the people."<br />

Leroy, Andre.<br />

943-44 L63<br />

Ce qu'il faut savoir de la question d'Alsace-Lorraine. 1918.<br />

Willmore, John Selden. 949-5 W75<br />

Story of King Constantine as revealed in the Greek white book.<br />

1919. Longmans.<br />

Contents: The situation at the beginning of the war.—The growth of German influence.—The<br />

sacrifice of Greek interests.—Treachery to the allies.—The retribution.<br />

United States<br />

Bassett, John Spencer.<br />

973-9132 B29<br />

Our war with Germany; a history. 1919. Knopf.<br />

The same<br />

r 973.9132 B2g<br />

The professor of American history, Smith College, gives a clear, non-partisan presentment<br />

of the participation of the United States in the great war, as a rare historical<br />

event giving direction to the progress of the world. The book deals with early effects<br />

of the war in the United States on economic conditions; the period of neutrality; German<br />

propaganda; influence on American ideals; preparations for war; <strong>org</strong>anization of national<br />

resources; war policy of the administration; operations of the American expeditionary<br />

forces; armistice; Treaty of Versailles.<br />

Esarey, Logan.<br />

r 977.2 E79<br />

History of Indiana. 2v. 1918. Bowen.<br />

v.i. From its exploration to 1850.<br />

v.2. From 1850 to the present.<br />

Contains bibliographical foot-notes.<br />

Smith, Justin Harvey. . 973-6 S65<br />

The war with Mexico. 2v. 1919. Macmillan.<br />

"Sources" at the end of each volume.<br />

The author, formerly professor of modern history at Dartmouth College, gives an<br />

exhaustive account of the war of 1846-48. The work is based on first hand sources,<br />

including 100,000 manuscripts, the author having, by special authorization, examined<br />

every pertinent document belonging to the two governments. The author considers the<br />

politics in the two countries at the period, the divergence in national temperament and<br />

ideals, and justifies the course of the United States.<br />

European War<br />

Canby, Henry Seidel.<br />

940.919 C16<br />

Education by violence; essays on the war and the future. 1919.<br />

Macmillan.<br />

Contents: On writing the truth. "Transport 106."—On tlie English. Blood and<br />

water.—On Irish literature. The Irish mind.—On the sense of race. Innocents abroad.


BOOKS ADDED—MARCH 1920<br />

Canby, Henry Seidel—continued. „,.„„,„ r *<br />

r\ , r. 940.919 CIO<br />

-On morale Spes un.ca.-On the uncommon man. Tanks—On the personal in<br />

home O<br />

E ," C a t l ° n , by vi0len «-On 'he next war. When Johnny come" mar ling<br />

home.—On salvage and waste. War's ending. ' " marcmng<br />

Connecticut—State council of defense. r 940.917 C75<br />

Report on war chest practice; presented to Connecticut state council<br />

of defense, by H. M. Wriston. [1918?]<br />

Derby, Richard. Q40 gi? ^<br />

"Wade in, Sanitary!"; the story of a division surgeon in France.<br />

1919. Putnam.<br />

Not without value from the medical side although non-technical.<br />

Gaines, Ruth Louise. 940.917 Gi3h<br />

Helping France; the Red Cross in the devastated area. 1919. Dutton.<br />

German prisoners in Great Britain. [1916? Tillotson.] q 940.917 G32<br />

The life of German prisoners at Donington hall, Alexandra palace and other prison<br />

camps. Illustrated.<br />

Langer, William L. & MacMullin, R. B. 940.913 L25<br />

With "E" of the First gas. 1919. [Holton Printing Co.]<br />

"The roster," p.105-111.<br />

History of Company E, First gas regiment, Chemical warfare service, from its<br />

embarkation for France in June 1918 to its return to America after the signing of the<br />

armistice.<br />

Magnes, Judah Leon. 940.916 M25<br />

Russia and Germany at Brest-Litovsk; a documentary history of<br />

the peace negotiations. 1919. Rand School of Social Science.<br />

"Sources," p.3-4.<br />

"Lays no claim whatever to completeness. It is only raw material for a structure,<br />

or, at best, the rough frame-work. .. No judgments are expressed and no conclusions<br />

are drawn." Preface.<br />

Maurice, Sir Frederick Barton. 940.913 M49I<br />

The last four months; how the war was won. 1919. Little.<br />

A narrative by the former director of military operations on the British staff, of<br />

Foch's last great campaign on the western front. The book enumerates causes necessitating<br />

the establishment of the Versailles Supreme War Council, and describes events<br />

leading to final victory. Foch's success is attributed to his essential difference of mind<br />

from that of German generals—Foch regarding war as an art depending on inspiration<br />

and circumstances; the Germans believing it entirely a science of planning and preparation.<br />

Perkins, Ge<strong>org</strong>e Walbridge. r 940.927 P43<br />

Report on activities of the Y. M. C. A. with the A. E. F. [1919-<br />

Y. M. C. A. Press?]<br />

Young People's Books<br />

Altsheler, Joseph Alexander. j A466I<br />

The lost hunters; a story of wild man and great beasts. Appleton.<br />

Follows "The great Sioux trail." The hero, Will Clarke, who was captured by a<br />

band of Sioux Indians, rises to high favor among them and is chosen one of a party of<br />

picked warriors sent on a perilous expedition.<br />

Andersen, Hans Christian. j A544fy5<br />

Fairy tales; tr. by Mrs E. Lucas and Mrs H. B. Paull; illustrated by<br />

E.P.Abbott. [1917.] Jacobs. (Washington square classics.)<br />

I3g


140 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Barham, Richard Harris, (pseud. Thomas Ingoldsby). j 821 B23<br />

Jackdaw of Rheims, from the Ingoldsby legends, with an accompaniment<br />

of drawings by G. W. Edwards. 1919- Houghton.<br />

An old legend retold in humorous verse.<br />

Branch, Mrs Mary Lydia (Bolles). j B6g6g<br />

Guld, the cavern king; illustrations by Maud and Miska Petersham.<br />

Bookshop for Boys and Girls.<br />

The little prince goes out among the cave-folk, the miners and the wood-cutters<br />

of kobold-land, gains the love and good will of his people, is chosen their ruler and<br />

leads them forth to a new kingdom.<br />

Canfield, Mrs Flavia A. (Camp). j Ci7i2r<br />

The refugee family; a story for girls. Harcourt.<br />

Experiences of a French family during the German occupation of northern France.<br />

Collins, Archie Frederick. j 533-652 C69<br />

Boys' airplane book. 1919. Stokes.<br />

Directions for making gliders, flying boats and model aeroplanes. Also contains<br />

chapters on the evolution of the art of flying, the varied uses of aeroplanes, instruments<br />

used and record flights. Working drawings, diagrams and other illustrations.<br />

De La Mare, Walter John. j 821 D38<br />

Peacock pie; a book of rhymes, with illustrations by W. H. Robinson.<br />

[1917.] Holt.<br />

Here one may read of poor Jim Jay "stuck fast in Yesterday," of little Lucy who<br />

lost her shoe and of old Tillie Turveycombe who swallowed the fern seed.<br />

"And look you once,<br />

And look you twice,<br />

Poor old Tillie<br />

Was gone in a trice."<br />

Gate, Ethel May.<br />

qj G23it<br />

Tales from the Secret kingdom. Yale University Press.<br />

Contents: The wonderful journey.—The magic sandals.—Silver & gold.—The enchanter's<br />

wife.—The two merry princes.—The Secret kingdom.—The whispering trees.<br />

—The fog princess.—The story of the ancient man.<br />

New fairy stories, each accompanied by a short poem. Illustrations in silhouette.<br />

Hall, Albert Neely, & Perkins, Dorothy. j 790 Hi6hn<br />

Handicraft for handy girls; practical plans for work and play. 1916.<br />

Lothrop.<br />

Suggestions for holiday and birthday gifts, for parties and entertainments, for<br />

camp craft and home decoration.<br />

Hasbrouck, Louise Seymour. j H338C<br />

Chokecherry island; a story for young people. Appleton.<br />

Story of a summer vacation on a small island in the St. Lawrence. Ted and his<br />

sisters, all badly spoiled, have mysterious experiences, make some real friends and<br />

learn much needed lessons of self-reliance and true worth.<br />

Joan of Arc. j 92 J32gt<br />

Twain, Mark, (pseud, of Samuel Langhorne Clemens). Saint Joan<br />

of Arc, with illustrations in color by Howard Pyle, decorations in tint<br />

by W. J. Jones. 1919. Harper.<br />

Short sketch, with four full-page plates.<br />

Kitchener, Horatio Herbert Kitchener, viscount. j 92 K297W<br />

Wheeler, Harold Felix Baker. Boys' life of Lord Kitchener.<br />

[1916.] Crowell. (Told through the ages series.)<br />

Chiefly a narrative of war; of Gordon and the Mahdi and the Khartoum campaign,<br />

of Briton and Boer in South Africa, of tlie first years of the European war.


BOOKS ADDED—MARCH 1920 I4,<br />

Lincoln, Abraham.<br />

Gordy, Wilbur Fisk. Abraham Lincoln. 1017. Scribner.^Herfes<br />

and leaders in American history.)<br />

to pr^e^irns^fiorlrZ"' " » V^ "5° W rked and StrUggled in the<br />

° backwoods<br />

to prepare Himself for greater usefulness; then as a man raised by his own merit to<br />

positions of responsibility; and, finally, as a leader of a great nation." p "<br />

Lippincott, Joseph Wharton.<br />

• L<br />

Red Ben, the fox of Oak ridge. Penn Pub. Co.<br />

""'<br />

Story of a red fox whose "wonderful luck seemed unending "<br />

Miller, Mrs Ellen Bell (Robertson).<br />

j S9578 M6g<br />

Butterfly and moth book; personal studies and observations of the<br />

more familiar species, with illustrations from drawings by the author<br />

and photographs by J. L. King and others. 1917. Scribner.<br />

Mother Goose melodies.<br />

qj 3g8. 8 Mg3bo<br />

Boyd Smith Mother Goose, with numerous illustrations in color<br />

and in black and white from original drawings by E. B. Smith; the<br />

text carefully collated and verified by Lawrence Elmendorf. 1919.<br />

Putnam.<br />

Includes a reprint of the original "Mother Goose's melody" as issued by John<br />

Newbery of London and Isaiah Thomas of Worcester; also "The pleasant history of<br />

little Jack Horner" and "The famous history of Tom Thumb."<br />

Olcott, Frances Jenkins, cd.<br />

j 398 O23W<br />

The wonder garden; nature myths and tales from all the world over,<br />

for story-telling and reading aloud and for the children's own reading,<br />

with illustrations by Milo Winter. 1919. Houghton.<br />

Contains a suggested list of nature tales suitable for each month; also a subject<br />

index.<br />

Pershing, Gen. John Joseph.<br />

j g 2 P447t<br />

Tomlinson, Everett Titsworth. Story of General Pershing. 1919.<br />

Appleton.<br />

Presents "the simple story of the struggles and achievements of a. . .typically successful<br />

American." Nearly half of the book deals with the European war.<br />

Richards, Mrs Laura Elizabeth (Howe).<br />

j 811 R4ii<br />

In my nursery. 1890. Little.<br />

Poems about children, and nonsense songs such as, The owl and the eel and the<br />

warming-pan.—Geographi.—The three little chickens who went out to tea.—The Outlandishman.<br />

Spyri, Johanna.<br />

j S772I<br />

Little Curly Head, the pet lamb; tr. by H. B. Dole. Crowell.<br />

Short story of some Swiss children and a pet lamb that was lost.<br />

Thatcher, Edward.<br />

j 680 T33<br />

Making tin can toys; drawings made and the author's models painted<br />

by Isabel Thatcher. 1919. Lippincott.<br />

Directions for making mechanical toys and useful articles such as trays and<br />

candlesticks. Materials required are plentiful and inexpensive, and tools needed few<br />

and simple.<br />

Zwilgmeyer, Dikken.<br />

j Z94W<br />

What happened to Inger Johanne, as told by herself; tr. from the<br />

Norwegian by Emilie Poulsson, illustrated by F. L. Young. Lothrop.<br />

Amusing account of the mischievous pranks of "the Judge's Inger Johanne," aged<br />

13, to whom queer things are always happening. "Christmas mumming," "Lost in the<br />

forest," "Traveling with a Billy-goat" and "When the circus came," are good chapters<br />

to read aloud.


142 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Publications of the Library Now in Print<br />

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•Classified Catalogue of the Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh.<br />

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PUBLICATIONS OF THE LIBRARY 143<br />

Catalogue of the Carnegie Library School; a school for training in<br />

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M4<br />

CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

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Metal Corrosion and Protection. 2d edition, revised and enlarged.<br />

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One Hundred Recent Books on Agriculture. 1910. 19 pp.<br />

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March 15, 1920.


CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

MONTHLY BULLETIN<br />

VOL. 25 APRIL 1920 NO. 4<br />

.-/-•sv... V-.---,<br />

WYLIE AVENUE BRANCH<br />

CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

PITTSBURGH<br />

CARNEGIE LIBRARY<br />

1920


Board of Trustees<br />

S. H. CHURCH, President<br />

ANDREW W. MELLON, Vice-President<br />

J. D. HAILMAN, Secretary<br />

JAMES H. REED, Treasurer<br />

E. V. BABCOCK DAVID B. OLIVER<br />

W.W. BLACKBURN<br />

H. K. PORTER<br />

JOHN H. DAILEY<br />

W. H. ROBERTSON<br />

W. Y. ENGLISH CHARLES L. TAYLOR<br />

ROBERT GARLAND<br />

J. J. TURNER<br />

JOHN H. HENDERSON<br />

H. D. WILLIAMS<br />

JOHN S. HERRON<br />

DANIEL WINTERS<br />

Library Committee<br />

J. J. TURNER, Chairman<br />

E. V. BABCOCK J. D. HAILMAN<br />

ROBERT GARLAND DANIEL WINTERS<br />

Director<br />

JOHN H. LEETE<br />

Central Library, Schenley Park<br />

Branch Libraries<br />

Lawrenceville Branch, 279 Fisk Street<br />

West End Branch, Wabash and Neptune Streets<br />

Wylie Avenue Branch, Wylie Avenue and Green Street<br />

Mount Washington Branch, 315 Grandview Avenue<br />

Hazelwood Branch, 4748 Monongahela Street<br />

East Liberty Branch, Station Street and Larimer Avenue<br />

South Side Branch, Carson and Twenty-second Streets<br />

Homewood Branch, Hamilton and Lang Avenues


Contents<br />

Page<br />

Wylie Avenue Branch - - 149<br />

The Pilgrim Tercentenary - 150<br />

Current Terms Explained - 153<br />

Alice Cary - 155<br />

Exhibition of Bookplates - 158<br />

New Publications of the Library<br />

- - - - - - 758<br />

Prices of Library Publications<br />

- - - - - - 159<br />

New Periodicals - - - - 159<br />

Present Day Problems - 159<br />

Books Added, March 1 to<br />

April 1, 1920<br />

Aerial Navigation - 174<br />

Agriculture - 178<br />

Amusements - - - - - 186<br />

Architecture - 182<br />

Biography - - - - - 187<br />

Blind, Books for the - - 193<br />

Business. Communication - 179<br />

Chemical Technology - - 180<br />

Chemistry - - - - - 174<br />

City Planning - - - - 182<br />

Commerce - - - - - 171<br />

Costume. Folklore - - 172<br />

Drama. Theatre - 187<br />

Economics - - - - 168<br />

Education - - - - - 170<br />

Electricity - - - - - 177<br />

Engineering - - - - - 177<br />

Page<br />

Ethics - - - - - - i(n<br />

European War - - - - 191<br />

Fiction - - - - - - Tg :<br />

Fine Arts - - - - - 181<br />

Forestry - - - - - - 179<br />

French Fiction - - - 163<br />

General Works - 163<br />

Geology - _ _ _ _ I74<br />

German Fiction - 163<br />

History - - - - - - 190<br />

Language - - - - - 172<br />

Literature - - - - - 186<br />

Mathematics - - - - - 173<br />

Medicine, Physiology, Hygiene<br />

- - - - - - 17S<br />

Military and Naval Science - 169<br />

Miscellaneous - 193<br />

Music - - - - - - 184<br />

Philosophy - 164<br />

Poetry - - - - - - 186<br />

Politics and Government - 167<br />

Religion - - - - - - 165<br />

Science - - - - - - 173<br />

Sociology - - - - - 167<br />

Spanish Fiction - - - 163<br />

Travel and Description - - 188<br />

Useful Arts - - - - 175<br />

Young People's Books - - 194<br />

Zoology - - - - - 174


Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh<br />

Monthly Bulletin<br />

Published monthly, except in August and September, by the Carnegie Library of<br />

Pittsburgh, Forbes Street and Bellefield Avenue, Schenley Park, Pittsburgh, Pa. President,<br />

S. H. Church, Carnegie Library, Forbes Street and Bellefield Avenue; Secretary,<br />

J. D. Hailman; Treasurer, James H. Reed, 1027 Carnegie Building; Director, John H.<br />

Leete, Carnegie Library, Forbes Street and Bellefield Avenue.<br />

Subscription 50 cents a year.<br />

Vol. 25 April 1920 No. 4<br />

Wylie Avenue Branch<br />

Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh<br />

The Wylie Avenue Branch Library was opened to the public<br />

on June I, 1899. It is situated at Wylie Avenue and Green<br />

Street in the congested Hill district, and has from its earliest<br />

days been the busiest of the branches. It has long been too<br />

small for the demands made upon it.<br />

The population of the district it serves is about half American<br />

and half foreign of many nationalities—Russian, Hungarian,<br />

Italian, Polish, Yiddish, German, French, Syrian, Greek.<br />

Of this population a large proportion is Jewish and colored<br />

people. This mixture of races necessarily affects the character<br />

of the book collection and makes necessary books in many languages<br />

as well as many books of easy English. It also makes<br />

very important the co-operation between the Library and the<br />

night schools for foreigners.<br />

This Branch does an extensive work with children and<br />

young people, both in lending books and in reference work for<br />

14')


150 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

them in connection with their studies in the high schools, grade<br />

schools and parochial schools, universities, colleges and technical<br />

schools. It also does much reference work for colored men<br />

and women in clubs and religious <strong>org</strong>anizations and co-operates<br />

with several social settlements. These and many other activities<br />

connected with the dissemination of information are in<br />

addition to the usual library work of lending books.<br />

The Pilgrim Tercentenary<br />

An event in American history important enough to call<br />

forth in England the elaborate plans for celebration which have<br />

been made there for commemorating the tercentenary of the<br />

landing of the Pilgrims at Plymouth in America, must necessarily<br />

be an event of unusual consequence to Americans. Just<br />

what is it that makes this so important an event in history?<br />

What is it that the Pilgrim Fathers gave to succeeding generations<br />

? The answer to these questions may be found by making<br />

a study of the Pilgrim Movement and of the subsequent history<br />

of the country which numbers them among its founders. The<br />

Pilgrim Fathers more than any other body of settlers, impressed<br />

upon this country as a whole, principles which have shaped its<br />

destiny; and the principles which in a short three hundred years<br />

have developed such a nation as the United States, must be<br />

principles worth studying and perpetuating.<br />

The occasion offers an opportunity for conserving and<br />

spreading American principles; for through celebrations<br />

planned with the idea of giving to both the new American and<br />

the foreigner in our midst, an understanding of the times and<br />

the achievements of the Pilgrims, much may be done toward<br />

preserving those things which have made the United States<br />

take the place in the world which it holds to-day.<br />

It is interesting to note the plans for the celebration of this<br />

event in England as outlined in an article by Lord Weardale,<br />

Chairman of Executive, Anglo-American Society, in the "Contemporary<br />

ReYiew" of November 1919. A sketch of the plan,


THE PILGRIM TERCENTENARY<br />

condensed from that article, is given here; but the part of the<br />

article which deals with the reasons for the celebration is of so<br />

much interest to Americans, as well as to the English, that a<br />

part of it is quoted in Lord Weardale's words.<br />

A committee of prominent English people have planned a<br />

widespread preparatory work in the way of lectures to explain<br />

to the English public the meaning and purpose of the celebration<br />

and to create a demand for knowledge about America, by<br />

activities throughout the churches, schools and colleges of the<br />

country. For the celebration proper they plan to have an<br />

American delegation visit in May and June the places in England<br />

connected with the origins of the Pilgrim Movement; to<br />

have special programs in those places; to send British delegates<br />

to America for the celebrations here next autumn; to endow<br />

Chairs for the purpose of stimulating the study of American<br />

history, literature and institutions in the universities of Great<br />

Britain; to found fellowships to give young British scholars an<br />

opportunity for research and study in America; and to encourage<br />

in various ways in the secondary and elementary schools<br />

an interest in American history.<br />

Lord Weardale says:<br />

Next year [1920] marks the Tercentenary of one of the great dates<br />

in history, for on September 16th, 1620, the Mayflower sailed from<br />

Plymouth, carrying the Pilgrim Fathers to New England. Three hundred<br />

years ago a seed was carried from these shores which was planted<br />

in the New World, and having grown to be a tree, spread into a forest.<br />

Such events are seen in their true importance through the perspective<br />

of history. To-day, the children's children of the Mayflower are included<br />

in a hundred million of white citizens of the United States. We<br />

look back with special interest to the original sources which grew into<br />

this vast stream of population, because we know that common origins<br />

imply some common leadings, and that a true friendship and understanding<br />

between the English-speaking peoples in America and Great<br />

Britain is of vital import to the world's peace and to the solution of so<br />

many of the problems of our present and future international life.. .<br />

What was there in the achievement of the Pilgrim Fathers (not<br />

f<strong>org</strong>etting the Pilgrim Mothers, also) which has made their name so<br />

famous in history, and which induces us now to celebrate in two continents<br />

the Tercentenary of their sailing in the Mayflower from Old to<br />

New Plymouth, from Old to New England' It is not a question o<br />

theology for the Pilgrims founded no special school of theological<br />

I5I


152 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

thought, nor is their memory to be appropriated by any one religious<br />

denomination. Their little settlement had an uneventful history, and<br />

was soon overshadowed by the greater size, wealth, culture, and power<br />

of Boston. The answer to our question is to be found elsewhere than<br />

in these things. In the first place, none can help but admire their unbounded<br />

courage, self-sacrifice, and fidelity to conscience. Mr. John<br />

Masefield (in his introduction to the Chronicles of the Pilgrim Fathers, in<br />

Everyman's Library) writes of them: "A generation fond of pleasure,<br />

disinclined towards serious thought, and shrinking from hardship, will<br />

find it difficult to imagine the temper, courage, and manliness of the<br />

emigrants who made the first Christian settlement of New England.<br />

For a man to give up all things and fare forth into savagery in order<br />

to escape from the responsibilities of life, in order, that is, to serve the<br />

devil, 'whose feet are bound by civilisation,' is common. Giving up all<br />

things in order to serve God is a sternness for which prosperity has unfitted<br />

us.i. .They were plain men of moderate abilities, who, giving up<br />

all things, went to live in the wilds, at unknown cost to themselves, in<br />

order to preserve to their children a life in the soul."<br />

In the second place, the Pilgrim migration determined, and gave<br />

character and direction to, the.. .character of North American civilisation.<br />

They proved the practicability of family life in the American<br />

wilderness. From 1630 onwards a great Puritan Migration to New<br />

England followed in their tracks.. .The Pilgrims and their Puritan successors<br />

were family-builders and State-builders. They were workers<br />

who built up settlements. They increased and multiplied. And so it<br />

was that they gave their language, laws and institutions to the greater<br />

part of the North American continent. In his book, The American as<br />

He Is.. .President Nicholas Murray Butler, of Columbia University...<br />

speaks of "the extraordinary persistence of the Anglo-Saxon impulse,<br />

which brought the United States of America into existence... It is the<br />

original Anglo-Saxon impulse which finds expression in the early<br />

colonial life of America, and which gives form alike to the Mayflower<br />

Compact of 1620, to the Declaration of Rights of 1765, to the Declaration<br />

of the Causes and Necessity of Taking up Arms of 1775, to the Declaration<br />

of Independence of 1776, to the Ordinance for the Government<br />

of the North-west Territory of 1787, and finally to the Constitution<br />

of the United States itself. This impulse persists to this day, and<br />

is tlie underlying and controlling fact in American life. It has furnished<br />

the warp through which the shuttle of time and of changing<br />

events has carried the threads which are American history. Despite<br />

the large Irish, German, Slav, Italian, Scandinavian, and Jewish additions<br />

to the original American population, the Anglo-Saxon impulse<br />

holds its own...The English language overrules the immigrant's native<br />

tongue, if not in the first generation, certainly in the second; and<br />

the English common law, with its statutory amendments and additions,<br />

displaces the immigrant's customs of life and trade with a rapidity that<br />

is truly astonishing..."


CURRENT TERMS EXPLAINED , 53<br />

The approaching celebration of the Tercentenary of the Mayflow<br />

has something more than an historical or antiquarian interest " Gov<br />

ernor Bradford wrote of the Pilgrim exodus and settlement "Out of<br />

small beginnings great things have been produced, and as one small<br />

candle may light a thousand, so the light here kindled hath shone to<br />

many." The Old World gave to the New a precious cargo in the May<br />

flower. The New World has returned the gift, in our time, with interest.<br />

Current Terms Explained<br />

Various terms frequently seen in recent books, magazines<br />

and newspapers are of such recent use in the exact sense in<br />

which they are employed, that their meaning is vague to many<br />

readers. Explanations of some of these terms are given here,<br />

the authorities for the extracts being named in each case.<br />

Plebiscite<br />

Originally, a decree enacted in the Roman comitia tributa, or assembly<br />

of the plebs. The erroneous identification of the Roman plcbs with<br />

the modern people led to the employment of the term "plebiscite" to designate<br />

a decree of the people obtained by an appeal to universal suffrage.<br />

In a broad sense it is synonymous with the term "referendum."<br />

There is, however, a tendency to confine its use to appeals to the people<br />

in respect to questions of vital constitutional change, change of sovereignty,<br />

etc. New International Encyclopaedia.<br />

Nationalism<br />

Nationality.. .is an elusive idea, difficult to define. It cannot be<br />

tested or analysed by formulae, such as German professors love. Least<br />

of all must it be interpreted by the brutal and childish doctrine of racialism.<br />

Its essence is a sentiment; and in the last resort we can only<br />

say that a nation is a nation because its members passionately and<br />

unanimously believe it to be so. But they can only believe it to be soif<br />

there exist among them real and strong affinities; if they are not divided<br />

by any artificially maintained separation between the mixed races<br />

from which they are sprung; if they share a common basis of fundamental<br />

moral ideas, such as are most easily implanted by common religious<br />

beliefs; if they can glory in a common inheritance of tradition:<br />

and their nationality will be all the stronger if to these sources of unity<br />

they add a common language and literature and a common body of law.<br />

If these ties, or the majority of them, are lacking, the assertion of nationality<br />

cannot be made good. For, even if it be for the moment shared


CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

by the whole people, as soon as they begin to try to enjoy the freedom<br />

and unity which they claim in the name of nationality, they will fall<br />

asunder, and their freedom will be their ruin. From Ramsay Muir's<br />

"Nationalism and Internationalism."<br />

Collectivism<br />

[Collectivism is] a term used to denote the economic principle of<br />

the ownership by a community of all the means of production in order<br />

to secure to the people collectively an equitable distribution of the produce<br />

of their associated labour. Encyclopaedia Britannica.<br />

Freedom of the Seas<br />

"Freedom of the Seas" has been floating about in the literature of<br />

diplomacy for more than a hundred years without any clear understanding<br />

among nations or in international law texts as to what it means.<br />

Plainly such "freedom" in time of peace is a very different thing from<br />

"freedom" in time of war.. .<br />

That'the high seas are a common highway and the common property<br />

of mankind is one of those self-evident truths that has required a<br />

lot of argument. The prime disturbers of this idea were the pirates,<br />

who for ages plied their semi-respectable trade in all seas.. .<br />

The second obstacle to the free use of the seas in time of peace is<br />

the control of the ports of the world by nations who regulate the vessels<br />

and the cargoes which shall go in and out.. .<br />

A third obstacle to actual freedom of the seas at any time is the<br />

control of several most important sections of the sea which are hemmed<br />

in by the land [i.e., the Dardanelles, the Suez Canal, the Panama Canal,<br />

etc.] .. .<br />

Another interference with freedom of the seas is the desire of various<br />

nations for "inclosed waters" [i.e., Chesapeake Bay, St. Ge<strong>org</strong>e's<br />

Channel, etc.] .. .<br />

When the war began, the theory of the United States was that<br />

American ships could continue to go to any port in the world, subject<br />

to the two restrictions known to what might be called "Common International<br />

Law," namely, contraband and blockade.. .<br />

This limited freedom of the seas, which was all we had a right to<br />

claim, was thereupon very much diminished by new principles laid<br />

down by Great Britain... It felt at liberty to enlarge the contraband<br />

list until it included almost everything that could possibly be of use to<br />

Germany.. .<br />

The enlargement of contraband was accompanied by a system of<br />

restriction of shipments to or through neutrals of pretty much anything<br />

that might eventually reach Germany. This the British sometimes<br />

called "blockade".. .<br />

The international right of Great Britain to capture German ships<br />

and German cargoes drove German commerce off the seas in a few


ALICE CARY<br />

I55<br />

weeks. . .Germany provisioned and supported by its own merchantmen<br />

Germany still enjoying the freedom of the sea, would be a Germany today<br />

extending to Paris and perhaps London and laying down the law<br />

of the land and the sea to the United States. Albert Bushnell Hart in<br />

Outlook, 1919.<br />

Alice Cary<br />

The twenty-sixth day of April of this year is the hundredth<br />

anniversary of the birth of Alice Cary whose name, together<br />

with that of her sister Phoebe, has been for more than a generation<br />

a household word. In Hudson's "Alice and Phoebe Cary,"<br />

Mary Clemmer Ames writes the biographies of these sisters,<br />

and from that book, some brief extracts are quoted here to give<br />

an idea of the characters of these women who made so strong<br />

a mark on the age in which they lived.<br />

In a brown house, "low and small," on a farm in the Miami Valley,<br />

eight miles north of Cincinnati, Ohio, Alice Cary was born on the 26th<br />

day of April, 1820. In the same house, September 4, 1824, was born her<br />

sister and life-long companion, Phoebe.. .<br />

It is impossible to estimate either sister without any reference to<br />

the other...<br />

Alice Cary was remarkable for the fullness and tenderness of her<br />

emotional nature, and for the depth and fidelity of her affections;<br />

through these she was all softness and gentleness. But mentally she<br />

was a strong woman—strong in will, energy, industry, and patience;<br />

through these she faced fate with a masculine strength of courage and<br />

endurance. It was not easy, but her will was strong enough to compel<br />

her life to do noble service.<br />

Phoebe, mentally and emotionally, was in every attribute essentially<br />

feminine. The terror of her mortal life was responsibility. It seemed<br />

absolutely necessary to her existence to know that somebody stood<br />

between her and all the inexorable demands and exigencies of this<br />

world. "I believe a consciousness of responsibility could kill Phrebe,<br />

even if she were in perfect health," said Alice.. .<br />

Notwithstanding the unity of their pursuits, the identity of their<br />

interests, their utter devotion to each other, outside of this dual life<br />

each sister lived distinctly and separately her own existence. Each respected<br />

absolutely the personal peculiarities of the other, and never<br />

consciously intruded upon them. . .<br />

Both had ways that at times were not altogether satisfactory to the<br />

other. Each accepted them as a part of the cross that she must bear for


156 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

her sister, and she did not complain, nor did it cause any bitterness.<br />

For example, Alice's tireless energy and unswerving will at times<br />

wearied Phcebe, though she found in both the staff and support of her<br />

life, while Phoebe's inertia was a much more perpetual trial to Alice.<br />

She recognized the fact that she could not make the active law of her<br />

being that of Phoebe's, and acquiesced, but not always with inward resignation.<br />

According to Phoebe's own testimony, Alice used mind and body<br />

unsparingly whenever she could compel them to obey her will. With<br />

all a woman's softness, she met the responsibilities of life as a man<br />

meets them. She never stopped to inquire whether she felt like doing<br />

a task, no matter how disagreeable it might be. If it was to be done<br />

she did it, and without words and without delay.<br />

It was Phoebe, the protected and sheltered one, who consulted her<br />

moods. Perhaps this was scarcely a fault; she obeyed the law of her<br />

being and the law of her life in this. Had she compelled her powers<br />

to produce a given amount of work, as Alice did, without doubt it would<br />

proportionately have depreciated in quality. Absolute necessity did<br />

not force her to such toil, therefore she instinctively avoided it. Beside,<br />

a most touching humility always held her back from testing her<br />

powers to the utmost.<br />

The same self-depreciation was strong in Alice; but her aspiration,<br />

her will to do her best, with the impelling demands of life, were so<br />

much stronger that neither brain nor hand were ever for a moment idle.<br />

In an appreciation of Alice and Phoebe Cary, written for<br />

Parton's volume of brief biographies entitled "Eminent Women<br />

of the Age," which was published in 1868, Horace Greeley<br />

says:<br />

Their first decided literary venture—a joint volume of poems most<br />

of which had already appeared in sundry journals—was published in<br />

Philadelphia early in 1850, before they had abandoned "Clovernook,"<br />

their rural Western home, for the brick-and-mortar whirl of the American<br />

Babel [New York]. Probably the heartiness of its welcome fortified,<br />

it did not stimulate, their resolve to migrate eastward; though it<br />

is a safe guess that no direct pecuniary advantage accrued to them from<br />

its publication. But the next year witnessed the "coming out" of<br />

Alice's first series of "Clovernook Papers;" prose sketches of characters<br />

and incidents drawn from observation and experience, which won immediate<br />

and decided popularity. The press heartily recognized their<br />

fresh simplicity and originality, while the public bought, read, and admired.<br />

Several goodly editions were sold in this country, and at least<br />

one in Great Britain, where their merits were generously appreciated<br />

by the critics. A second series, published in 1853, was equally successful.<br />

"The Clovernook Children"—issued in 1854 by Ticknor & Fields,<br />

and addressed more especially to the tastes and wants of younger<br />

readers—has been hardly less commended or less popular.


ALICE CARY<br />

"Lyra and other Poems," published by Redfield in 1853, was the<br />

first volume of verse wherein Miss Cary challenged the judgment of<br />

critics independently of her sister. That it was a decided success is<br />

sufficiently indicated by the fact that a more complete edition, including<br />

all the contents of Redfield's, with much more, was issued by Ticknor<br />

& Fields in 1855. "The Maiden of Tlascala," a narrative poem of<br />

seventy-two pages, was first given to the public in this Boston edition.<br />

Her first novel—"Hagar; a Story of To-Day"—was written for<br />

and appeared in "The Cincinnati Commercial," appearing in a book<br />

form in 1852. "Married, not Mated," followed in 1856, and "The Bishop's<br />

Son," her last, was issued by Carleton, in 1867. Each of these<br />

have had a good reception, alike from critics and readers; though their<br />

pecuniary success has, perhaps, been less decided than that of her<br />

poems and shorter sketches.<br />

Of her "Pictures of Country Life," brought out by Derby & Jackson<br />

in 1859, "The Literary Gazette" (London), which is not accustomed<br />

to flatter American authors, said:—<br />

"Every tale in this book might be selected as evidence of some<br />

new beauty or unhackneyed grace. There is nothing feeble, nothing<br />

vulgar, and, above all, nothing unnatural or melodramatic. To the analytical<br />

subtlety and marvellous naturalness of the French school of<br />

romance she has added the purity and idealization of the home affections<br />

and home life belonging to the English; giving to both the American<br />

richness of color and vigor of outline, and her own individual<br />

power and loveliness."<br />

Except her later novels, Miss Cary's works have in good part appeared<br />

first in periodicals,—"The Atlantic Magazine," "Harpers'," "The<br />

New York Ledger," and "The Independent;" but many,if not most of<br />

them, have generally been afterward issued in her successive volumes,<br />

along with others not previously published. "Lyrics and Hymns," issued<br />

in 1866 by Hurd & Houghton, "The Lover's Diary," admirably<br />

brought out by Ticknor & Fields in 1867, and "Snow Berries; a Book<br />

for Young Folks," by the same house, are her latest volumes. Nearly<br />

all of her prose works have been reprinted in London, and have there,<br />

as well as here, received a cordial and intelligent welcome.<br />

Few American women have written more than Miss Cary, and<br />

still fewer have written more successfully. Yet she does not write<br />

rapidly nor recklessly, and her works evince conscientious, painstaking<br />

effort, rather than transcendent genius or fitful inspiration...<br />

Phebe has writen far less copiously than Alice; in fact, she has<br />

for years chosen to bear alone the burden of domestic cares, in order<br />

that her more distinguished sister should feel entirely at liberty to devote<br />

all her time and strength to literature. And, though she had been<br />

widely known as the author of good newspaper prose, as well as far<br />

more verse, I think the critical public was agreeably surprised by the<br />

quality of her "Poems of Faith, Hope, and Love," recently issued by<br />

Hurd & Houghton. There are one hundred pieces in all, covering two<br />

I57


158 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

hundred and forty-nine pages; and hardly one of the hundred could well<br />

be spared, while there surely is no one of them which a friend would<br />

wish she had omitted from the collection. There are a buoyant faith,<br />

a sunny philosophy evinced throughout, with a hearty independence<br />

of thought and manner, which no one ever succeeded in affecting, and<br />

no one who possesses them could afford to barter for wealth or fame. . .<br />

If I have written aright this hasty sketch, there are hope and comfort<br />

therein for those who are just entering upon responsible life<br />

with no more than average opportunities and advantages. If I have<br />

not shown this, read the works of Alice and Phebe Cary, and find it<br />

there!<br />

Exhibition of Bookplates<br />

During the month of May, the 131 designs which make up<br />

the fifth annual exhibition of contemporary bookplates of the<br />

American Bookplate Society, will be shown in the Central Library.<br />

New Publications of the Library<br />

The Function of the Public Library in a Democracy<br />

The Library has recently issued a twenty page pamphlet,<br />

"The Function of the Public Library in a Democracy." This<br />

pamphlet will be sent where requested, on receipt of five cents,<br />

or may be had free at the Library.<br />

Catalogue of the Carnegie Library School<br />

The "Catalogue of the Carnegie Library School" for the<br />

year 1920-21, the twentieth year of the school, is ready for<br />

distribution and will be sent free on request.<br />

Technical Book Review Index<br />

The number of the "Technical Book Review Index" which<br />

lists material for the three months ending with September 30,<br />

1919, is off the press. This number contains ninety-two pages.


LIBRARY NOTICES<br />

159<br />

Prices of Library Publications<br />

The list of "Publications of the Library Now in Print" at<br />

the back of this "Bulletin" gives the price of each. Any publication<br />

not marked * in that list will be sent postpaid on receipt<br />

of five cents.<br />

New Periodicals<br />

The following periodicals have recently been added to the<br />

list of those regularly received in the Periodical Room:<br />

American Railroads. New York.<br />

El Arte Tipografico. New York.<br />

Bulletin of the National Research Council. Washington.<br />

Children's Costume Royal. New York.<br />

Everyday Engineering. New York.<br />

La Francaise. Paris.<br />

Golden Age. New York.<br />

Investors' Book of Booklets. New York.<br />

Journal of the Society of Automotive Engineers. New York.<br />

London Mercury.<br />

Mining Congress Journal. Washington.<br />

Monthly List of Publications issued by the Department of Commerce.<br />

Washington.<br />

Official Statement of the United States Wheat Director. New<br />

York.<br />

Parks and Recreation. East St. Louis, 111.<br />

Printers' Ink Monthly. New York.<br />

Swedish-American Trade Journal. New York.<br />

Taxation. New York.<br />

Present Day Problems<br />

The books in this list are entered also, in fuller form and with annotations,<br />

under their proper headings in this issue of the "Bulletin. '<br />

They are brought together here to show the additions of books which<br />

are of interest in connection with problems of the day. The date of<br />

publication is 1919 unless otherwise stated.<br />

Adams, Henry. Degradation of the democratic dogma 901 A2132<br />

American Academy of Political and Social Science. Industries<br />

in readjustment 33° 5


160 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Aronovici, Carol. Americanization<br />

325-73 A76<br />

Basset, W. R. When the workmen help you manage 33I-I B29<br />

Carver, T. N. War thrift<br />

qr 940.923 C24<br />

Cheng, Sih-Gung. Modern China 951 C42<br />

Clark, N. M. Common sense in labor management 331 C524<br />

Emery, J. A. & Williams, N. B.<br />

affecting business. 1918<br />

Gauvain, Auguste. La question yougoslave. 1918<br />

Goldstein, David, & Avery, Mrs M. G. (Moore).<br />

its cure<br />

Hadley^ A. T. Moral basis of democracy<br />

Hobson, J. A. Taxation in the new state<br />

Governmental war agencies<br />

r 940.923 E58<br />

r 949.7 G24<br />

Bolshevism;<br />

335 Gs8b<br />

172.1 Hi2m<br />

336.2 H65<br />

Keynes, J. M. The economic consequences of the peace.<br />

1920 330.9 K23<br />

Leacock, S. B. The unsolved riddle of social justice. 1920. . . .301 L44<br />

McKenzie, F. A. Korea's fight for freedom. 1920 951-9 Mi7k<br />

Man, Henri de. Remaking of a mind<br />

940.919 M32<br />

Middleton, P. H. Industrial Mexico 917.2 M67<br />

Moore, F. F. Siberia to-day<br />

Reiss, Richard. The home I want. 1918<br />

Sandiford, Peter, ed. Comparative education. 1918<br />

915.7 M87<br />

331.83 R32<br />

370.9 S21<br />

Sayler, O. M. Russia, white or red 947 S27<br />

Smith, J. F. Our neighborhood; good citizenship in rural<br />

communities. 1918 309.1 S65<br />

United States—Working conditions service. Treatment of<br />

industrial problems by constructive methods r 331.8 U2532<br />

United States Shipping Board Emergency Fleet Corporation.<br />

Training of shipyard workers<br />

r 623.807 U25<br />

Weber, G. A. Organized efforts for the improvement of<br />

methods of administration in the United States 350 W37<br />

White, Bouck. The free city<br />

321.021 W63


Books Added to the Library<br />

March 1 to April 1, 1920<br />

An r or b prefixed to the call number indicates that the book must be<br />

called for and used in the Reference or the Technology Room; j that it is<br />

especially suitable for children; and q that it is quarto she or larger.<br />

Fiction<br />

Alcott, Louisa May.<br />

A35sm<br />

A modern Mephistopheles, and A whisper in the dark. Little.<br />

Austin, Mrs Mary (Hunter). A93720<br />

Outland [a novel]. Boni.<br />

A strange, imaginative love story, full of the fragrance and mystery of lonely redwood<br />

forests.<br />

Bacheller, Irving. Bi27mn<br />

Man for the ages; a story of the builders of democracy. Bobbs.<br />

Appeared in "Everybody's magazine," v.41-42, July 1919-Jan. 1920.<br />

"Mr. Bacheller has rendered a notable service in depicting, popularly, what may<br />

be called the most American phase of Lincoln's life and character—a life and character<br />

that typifies American qualities most perfectly and are unlike those which any<br />

other country ever has produced or can produce." Albert J. Beveridge, in New York<br />

times, 1919.<br />

Beach, Rex Ellingwood. 63422b<br />

The barrier. Burt.<br />

Beach, Rex Ellingwood. B3422si<br />

The silver horde. Burt.<br />

Beach, Rex Ellingwood. B3422S<br />

The spoilers. Burt.<br />

Appeared in "Everybody's magazine," v.13-14, Dec. 1905-May 1906.<br />

B4675D<br />

Best short stories of 1919, and the Yearbook of the American short<br />

story; ed. by E. J. O'Brien. Small.<br />

Contents: The kitchen gods, by G. F. Alsop.—An awakening, by Sherwood Anderson.—Willum's<br />

vanilla, by E. S. Babcock.—A night among the horses, by Djuna<br />

Barnes.—Long, long ago, by F. O. Bartlett.—Dishes, by A. M. Brownell.—The bloodred<br />

one, by M. S. Burt.—The wedding-jest, by J. B. Cabell.—The wrists on the door,<br />

by Horace Fish.—"Government goat," by 'Susan Glaspell.—The stone, by Henry<br />

Goodman.—To the bitter end, by R. M. Hallet.—The Meeker ritual, by Joseph Hergesheimer.—The<br />

centenarian, by W. E. Ingersoll.—Messengers, by Calvm Johnston.—<br />

Mrs Drainger's veil, by H. M. Jones.—Under a wine-glass, by E. N. La Motte.—A<br />

thing of beauty, by Elias Lieberman.—The other room, by M. H. Vorse.— The fat<br />

of the land," by Anzia Yezierska.<br />

Yearbook contains Index of short stories for 1919.<br />

161


162 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Black, Alexander. B5i3g<br />

The great desire. Harper.<br />

The story of a dreamer's quest to learn what every individual most desires.<br />

Burnham, Mrs Clara Louise.<br />

Bg36i<br />

In apple-blossom time; a fairy-tale to date. Houghton.<br />

A love story ending happily in an aeroplane wedding journey.<br />

Cobb, Irvin Shrewsbury.<br />

C62gf<br />

From place to place. Doran.<br />

Contents: The gallowsmith.—The thunders of silence.—Boys will be boys.—The<br />

luck piece.—Quality folks.—John J. Coincidence.—When August the second was<br />

April the first.—Hoodwinked.—The bull called Emily.<br />

Dane, Clemence.<br />

D214I<br />

Legend [a novel]. Macmillan.<br />

Life story of a woman of genius, presented through the medium of the individual<br />

and varying impressions of persons influenced by her.<br />

Davies, Ellen Chivers.<br />

D3i22t<br />

Tales of Serbian life. Dodd.<br />

Contents: The little house at Novo Selo.—The Villa Golub.—Stefan the cowherd.<br />

The same<br />

j D3i2t<br />

FarnoL Jeffery.<br />

F245be<br />

Beltane the smith. Little.<br />

Appeared in "McClure's magazine," v.45-46. May 1915-March 1916 under the title<br />

"Beltane the strong."<br />

A tale of high adventure in mediaeval days of lord and vassal, fire and sword.<br />

Fletcher, Joseph Smith.<br />

F635mi<br />

The Middle Temple murder. Knopf.<br />

A detective story in which an alert English newspaper reporter solves the mystery.<br />

Grey, Zane.<br />

G8872m<br />

The man of the forest; a novel. Harper.<br />

A story of adventure and romance.<br />

Huzard, Mme Antoinette (de Bergevin), (pseud. Colette Yver). Hg87m<br />

Mirabelle of Pampeluna; tr. by L. H. Smith. Scribner.<br />

"Charming story of French life, caught up for a while in the mad rush of war."<br />

Dial, 1919.<br />

McCutcheon, Ge<strong>org</strong>e Barr.<br />

M143S<br />

Sherry. Dodd.<br />

A middle West story whose hero, a rather undesirable character in the beginning,<br />

rehabilitates himself and in the end recovers his self respect though not his fortune.<br />

O'Byrne, Dermot.<br />

O129W<br />

Wrack, and other stories. Talbot Press.<br />

Other stories: Before dawn.—"From the fury of the O'Flaherty's."—A coward's<br />

saga.—The invisible city of Coolanoole.—The king's messenger.—The vision of St.<br />

Molaise.<br />

Ollivant, Alfred.<br />

0234t<br />

Two men; a romance of Sussex. Doubleday.<br />

Two brothers differ greatly in mentality and physique. This results in an antagonism<br />

which irritates without ending in definite rupture, and which brings out the<br />

best as well as the worst in them and in their associates.<br />

Oppenheim, Edward Phillips.<br />

026sbo<br />

The box with broken seals. Little.<br />

German and Sinn Fein intrigue, matched against the English secret service, furnish<br />

a plot with a surprising climax.


BOOKS ADDED-APRIL ,920<br />

J(i<br />

Post, Melville Davisson. ' ' 3<br />

The mystery at the Rlne. „;iu r 1 , P8483m<br />

Other in^The new IdmLIHon^Th ^ T ^ 1 ApPk ' t0 "<br />

-The stolen life.- The girl from Galad Th * ' egend - T1 * laughter of Allah<br />

The Witch of the Lecca.-The miner oOste^dT.'""?'"'!^ S' eUth of the s tars-<br />

W.nton's adventure.-The wage-earneTs Th , g ' r ,'" the villi >-The ally.-Lord<br />

-Behind the stars.<br />

earne.s.-The sunburned lady.-The Baron Starkheim.<br />

Wodehouse, Pelham Grenville<br />

A damsel in distress. Doran<br />

W8 3 2d<br />

"A satisfying novel of the lighter description." Times (London). ,gig.<br />

German Fiction<br />

Seidel, Heinrich.<br />

Leberecht Huhnchen, with notes and vocabulary bv ArnoSwer'<br />

ner-Spanhoofd. Heath. (Modern language series.)<br />

French Fiction<br />

Ardel, Henri.<br />

Mon cousin Guy.<br />

843 A6?<br />

Story of faithful love that endures trials and tribulations, but ends happily<br />

Feval, Paul Henri Corentin. g 43 p .<br />

Le poisson d'or.<br />

Greville, Henry, (pseud, of Mme Alice Marie Celeste Henry<br />

(Fleury) Durand).<br />

Le vceu de Nadia.<br />

843 G88v<br />

H 7 ard '/' - 8 43 H44<br />

Cceurs trangais, consciences anglaises; le reveil; roman.<br />

A story of the European war. A French woman and her English husband pass<br />

through a deep spiritual experience of heart and conscience.<br />

Jammes, Francis. g 43 j I?<br />

Monsieur le cure d'Ozeron; roman.<br />

Spanish Fiction<br />

Camba, Francisco.<br />

El amigo Chirel; novela.<br />

863 C14<br />

General Works<br />

The Bellman. " r 051 B416<br />

The Bellman according to his kindly friends; extracts from certain<br />

letters written after his departure and a few press comments, with an<br />

introduction by his former editor. 1919.<br />

Martin, Frank Lee.<br />

r 079 M42<br />

Journalism of Japan. 1918. (Missouri University. Bulletin; journalism<br />

series, 16.)<br />

A brief history from 1045, when two publications appeared with reports of current


i64<br />

CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Philosophy<br />

Jones, Ernest.<br />

130 J39<br />

Papers on psycho-analysis. 1918. Bailliere.<br />

Contents: General papers.—Papers on dreams.—Papers on treatment.—Clinical<br />

papers.—Papers on education and child-study.<br />

Contains bibliographical foot-notes.<br />

Jung, Carl Gustav.<br />

130 J52C<br />

Collected papers on analytical psychology; authorised translation<br />

ed. by C. E. Long. 1917. Bailliere.<br />

Contents: On the psychology and pathology of so-called occult phenomena.—The<br />

association method.—The significance of the father in the destiny of the individual.—<br />

A contribution to the psychology of rumour.—On the significance of number-dreams.<br />

—A criticism of Bleuler's "Theory of schizophrenic negativism."—Psychoanalysis.—<br />

On psychoanalysis.—On some crucial points in psychoanalysis.—On the importance of<br />

the unconscious in psychopathology.—A contribution to the study of psychological<br />

types.—The psychology of dreams.—The content of the psychoses.—Foreword to new<br />

edition.—The psychology of the unconscious processes.—The concept of the unconscious.<br />

Seashore, Carl Emil.<br />

Elementary experiments in psychology. 1908. Holt.<br />

Sellars, Roy Wood.<br />

Essentials of logic. 1917. Houghton.<br />

"References" at the end of each chapter.<br />

152 S43<br />

160 S46<br />

Swedenb<strong>org</strong>, Emanuel.<br />

128 S97<br />

The soul; or, Rational ps3 r chology; tr. and ed. by Frank Sewall.<br />

[1887.] New-Church Press.<br />

A treatise on the nature of the soul—its manifestations in the body as affecting<br />

the senses, intellect and affections; and its state after the death of the body.<br />

Trueman, Anita.<br />

150 T77<br />

Suggestions for students of psychology; a simple statement of essential<br />

truths concerning the powers of man and the laws of their activities.<br />

1903. Ogilvie.<br />

Ethics<br />

[Berenger, Laurent Pierre.]<br />

170.4 B45<br />

La morale en action; ou, Elite de faits memorables et d'anecdotes<br />

instructives, propres a faire aimer la sagesse, a former le cceur des<br />

jeunes gens par l'exemple de toutes les vertus et a orner leur esprit des<br />

souvenirs de I'histoire; ouvrage utile aux eleves des ecoles secondaires,<br />

des lycees et maisons d'education del'.un et de l'autre sexe. 1810.<br />

Chapman, Elizabeth Rachel.<br />

173 C368<br />

Marriage questions in modern fiction, and other essays on kindred<br />

subjects. 1897. Lane.<br />

Other essays: The disparagement of women in literature.—Marriage rejection and<br />

marriage reform.—The decline of divorce.—St. Paul and the woman movement.—Why<br />

we should oppose divorce.—The indissolubility of marriage.<br />

[Delessert, Benjamin, baron, comp.]<br />

170.8 D39<br />

Le guide du bonheur; ou, Recueil de pensees, maximes et prieres.<br />

i860.


BOOKS ADDED—APRIL 1920 165<br />

Groves, Ernest Rutherford. 171 G945<br />

Moral sanitation. 1916. Y. M. C. A. Press.<br />

Contents: Introduction.—The method of Freud.—Moral education.—Cravings.—<br />

Repentance.—The moral importance of the home.—The moral significance of work.—<br />

.Happiness and asceticism.—Moral sanitation and the study of conduct.<br />

"Freudian literature of value to the moral worker," p. 126-128.<br />

Hadley, Arthur Twining.<br />

172.1 Hi2m<br />

Moral basis of democracy; Sunday morning talks to students and<br />

graduates. 1919. Yale University Press.<br />

Robinson, Ezekiel Gilman. 171 R549<br />

Principles and practice of morality; or, Ethical principles discussed<br />

and applied. 1888. Silver.<br />

Contents: Essential principles of ethics.—Theoretic morality.—Practical morality.<br />

Stork, Theophilus Baker.<br />

171 S885<br />

Hints toward a theory of ethics. 1907. Lutheran Pub. Soc.<br />

Varona y Pera, Enrique Jose. 171 V21<br />

Conferencias sobre el fundamento de la moral. 1917.<br />

Religion<br />

Batten, Loring Woart.<br />

233 B31<br />

Good and evil; a study in biblical theology. 1918. Revell. (Paddock<br />

lectures for 1917-18.)<br />

Contents: The source of good and evil.—The governing principle.—The pragmatic<br />

test.—A rift between pain and sin.—A tendency towards dualism.—Deferred rewards<br />

and punishments.<br />

Bigelow, John, 1817-1911. 289.4 B47<br />

The Bible that was lost and is found. 1912. New-Church Board of<br />

Publication.<br />

Narrative of the author's spiritual experience leading to his faith in Swedenb<strong>org</strong><br />

as an interpreter of the Scriptures.<br />

Blackie, John Stuart. 204 B515<br />

Ideal of humanity in old times and new. Revell.<br />

Contents: David king of Israel.—On Christian unity.—Wisdom.—Women.—St.<br />

Paul and the epistle to the Romans.—The Scottish Covenanters.<br />

Braithwaite, William Charles. 289.6 B6gs<br />

The second period of Quakerism, with introduction by R. M. Jones.<br />

1919. Macmillan.<br />

Contains bibliographical foot-notes.<br />

Sequel to "The beginnings of Quakerism." Begins with the period of the restoration<br />

in England.<br />

Cleveland, Catharine Caroline.<br />

269 C58<br />

The great revival in the West, 1797-1805. 1916. University of Chicago<br />

Press.<br />

"Bibliography," p.206-215.<br />

Thesis for Ph. D., University of Chicago.


166 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Davies, Trevor H.<br />

240 D31<br />

Spiritual voices in modern literature. 1919. Doran.<br />

Contents: Francis Thompson, "The hound of heaven;" an epic of love that will<br />

not let us go.—Ibsen, "Peer Gynt;" the ignominy of half-heartedness.—John Ruskin,<br />

"The seven lamps of architecture;" a proclamation of the laws of life.—Tennyson,<br />

"In memoriam;" a poet's plea for faith.—"The letters of James Smetham;" the use<br />

of imagination in religion.—Wordsworth, "Ode to duty;" freedom and restraint.—Morley,<br />

"Life of Gladstone;" the creative power of Christian faith.—Robert Browning,<br />

"Saul;" the heart's cry for Jesus Christ.—Nathaniel Hawthorne, "The scarlet letter;"<br />

the fact of sin.—John Masefield, "The everlasting mercy ;" the fact of conversion.<br />

Donne, John. 252 D72<br />

Sermons; selected passages, with an essay by L. P. Smith. 1919.<br />

Clarendon Press.<br />

Enelow, Hyman Gerson. 220.8 E62<br />

The war and the Bible. 1919. Macmillan.<br />

Contents: The spiritual problems of the war.—The attitude of the Bible toward<br />

war.—The ethics of war in the Bible.—Some great wars of the Bible.—Heroes of war<br />

in the Bible.—The war poetry of the Bible.—War prayers in the Bible.—Parallels to<br />

the war in the Bible.—The peace ideals of the Bible.<br />

Haldeman, Isaac Massey. r 232 H15<br />

Morality or immortality? 1918. Philadelphia School of the Bible.<br />

Sermon preached in the First Baptist Church, New York city.<br />

Discussion of the question, Did Jesus suffer on the cross to make men moral or<br />

immortal?<br />

Hill, Thomas. 210 H55<br />

Postulates of revelation and of ethics. 1899. Ellis.<br />

Two courses of lectures which aim to establish a basis for Christian doctrines,<br />

including a survey of natural religion. Author (1818-91) was president of Harvard<br />

University and lecturer on theology and ethics in Meadville Theological School.<br />

Holmes, John Haynes, & Olf, Mrs Lillian (Browne), comp. 237 H73<br />

Grail of life; an anthology on heroic death and immortal life. 1919.<br />

Dodd.<br />

"Sources," p.281-291.<br />

Planned to meet some of the spiritual problems of persons bereaved by war.<br />

McLean, H. A. r 285.1 M19<br />

Historical address delivered at the 175th anniversary of the Brandywine<br />

Manor Church. [1910?]<br />

Seibel, Ge<strong>org</strong>e. 298 S45<br />

The Mormon saints; the story of Joseph Smith, his golden bible and<br />

the church he founded. 1919. Lessing. Pittsburgh.<br />

Contents: An American Islam.—"Joe Smith, prophet."—The Book of Mormon.—<br />

Birth of a new religion.—Nauvoo the beautiful.—To the promised land.—Mormon beliefs<br />

and practices.—The Mormon war.—In Solomon's footsteps.—Scheming for statehood.—Acts<br />

of the apostles.—What will be the end?<br />

United States—Library of Congress. qr 016.28 U25<br />

Brief list of references on church unity and federation. 1919.<br />

Type-written copy.<br />

Wallace, Helen Bruce, cd. r 285.1 W17<br />

Historic Paxton, her days and her ways, 1722-1913; family recipes<br />

contributed by the Woman's Aid Society of Paxton Church, with historical<br />

sketches. 1913. Privately printed.


BOOKS ADDED—APRIL 1920 167<br />

Sociology<br />

Cronau, Rudolf.<br />

3g6 C89<br />

Woman triumphant; the story of her struggles for freedom, education<br />

and political rights. 1919. Privately printed.<br />

Contents: Women during the remote past.—Women during the ages of antiquity.—<br />

Women during the middle ages.—Women in modern times.<br />

Denmark—Statens statistiske bureau.<br />

Statistisk aarbog; annuaire statistique, 1918. 1918.<br />

Danish and French text.<br />

qr 314.8 D42<br />

Leacock, Stephen Butler.<br />

301 L44<br />

The unsolved riddle of social justice. 1920. Lane.<br />

Contents: The troubled outlook of the present hour.—Life, liberty and the pursuit<br />

of happiness.—The failures and fallacies of natural liberty.—Work and wages.—<br />

The land of dreams; the Utopia of the socialist.—How Mr Bellamy looked backward.<br />

—What is possible and what is not.<br />

A review of present conditions and socialistic proposals, concluding with a program<br />

for amelioration.<br />

Mounts, Lewis Hendrix.<br />

r 360 M94<br />

Dependents, defectives and delinquents in Iowa; a study of the<br />

sources of social infection. [1919.] Iowa University. (Iowa University.<br />

Studies in the social sciences, v.7, no.2.)<br />

"Notes and references," p.160-166.<br />

Smith, John Franklin.<br />

309.1 S65<br />

Our neighborhood; good citizenship in rural communities. 1918.<br />

Winston.<br />

A text-book for boys and girls.<br />

Spiller, Gustav.<br />

304 S75<br />

Faith in man; the religion of the 20th century. 1908. Sonnenschein.<br />

Contents: The essence of religion.—What is art?—Ethics and science.—The new<br />

faith and social reform.—The relation of the new faith to philosophy.—The test of<br />

progress.—A democratic basis for education.—The ethical movement.<br />

Politics and Government<br />

Aronovici, Carol.<br />

325.73 A76<br />

Americanization. 1919. Keller.<br />

A study of Americanization work among immigrants. The author, a foreign born<br />

citizen of twenty years' standing, as social worker and as chairman of the Minnesota<br />

state committee on Americanization, has had unusual opportunities to observe the methods<br />

of the movement.<br />

Rightor, Chester E.<br />

352.021 R45<br />

City manager in Dayton; four years of commission-manager government,<br />

1914-17, and comparisons with four preceding years under<br />

the mayor-council plan, 1910-13 [written] in collaboration with D. C.<br />

Sowers and Walter Matscheck. 1919. Macmillan. (Library of economics,<br />

politics and sociology.)<br />

Thompson, Carl Dean.<br />

r 352 T37<br />

Municipal electric light and power plants in the United States and<br />

Canada. 1917. (Public Ownership League of America. Bulletin no.i.)


168 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Weale, B. L. Putnam, (pseud, of Bertram Lenox Simpson). 327.51 W35<br />

Truth about China and Japan. 1919. Dodd.<br />

Essays, reprinted from the magazine "Asia," concerning the causes of conflict<br />

between China and Japan. The author has written many books, political and romantic,<br />

on problems of the Far East.<br />

Weber, Gustavus Adolphus. 350 W37<br />

Organized efforts for the improvement of methods of administration<br />

in the United States. 1919. Appleton. (Institute for Government<br />

Research. Studies in administration.)<br />

Contents: Agencies for research in government.—Organs of central administrative<br />

control.—Legislative reference and bill-drafting agencies.<br />

White, Bouck. 321.021 W63<br />

The free city; a book of neighborhood. 1919- Moffat.<br />

A history and interpretation of municipality and a plea for a world confederacy<br />

of small republics as the only political form suited to the human race as a whole.<br />

Economics<br />

American Academy of Political and Social Science. 338 A51<br />

Industries in readjustment. 1919.<br />

Contents: Industries in readjustment.—Capital and labor in readjustment.—Economic<br />

utilization of industrial equipment.—Standardization of industrial equipment.—<br />

The industrial and financial outlook.<br />

v.82, March 1919, of the "Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social<br />

Science."<br />

The same. (In American Academy of Political and Social Science.<br />

Annals, v.82.) r 306 A51 v.82<br />

Barber, Herbert Lee. 332.6 B23<br />

Making money make money; or, A primer of investing. 1916. Munson.<br />

Tries to answer the question, Why do the rich become richer and the poor poorer? and<br />

to show that benefits can become universal when the workers have unionized their investments<br />

as they have unionized themselves.<br />

Basset, William Rupert. 33i-i B29<br />

When the workmen help you manage. 1919. Century.<br />

Contents: The new basis of industry.—Skillful management vs. welfare work.—<br />

Have we reached the limit of wages?—Harnessing the creative instinct.—Making the<br />

workman proud of his job.—When the workmen help to manage.—Providing steady jobs<br />

for your men.—Preserving the wage system.—Why profit-sharing fails.—Striking the<br />

balance between capital and labor.—The system of representation.—In conclusion.<br />

Clark, Neil M. 331 C524<br />

Common sense in labor management. 1919. Harper.<br />

Contents: The new thought in management.—How far can industrial democracy<br />

go?—Working conditions and industrial unrest.—Living conditions and industrial unrest.—The<br />

money incentive.—The worker's security in the job.—Can workers be<br />

craftsmen instead of machines?—What makes a good suggestion system?—The employer<br />

and the union.—The fallacy of panaceas.—APPENDICES: The International<br />

Harvester Company's industrial council plan; The wage policy of the Oneida Community,<br />

Ltd.<br />

"Bibliography," p.213-218.<br />

Goldstein, David, & Avery, Mrs M. G. (Moore). 335 Gs8b<br />

Bolshevism; its cure. 1919. Boston School of Political Economy.<br />

Analysis and indictment of Bolshevism as a development of socialism in a phase of<br />

wide-spread and destructive activity.


BOOKS ADDED—APRIL 1920 169<br />

Hobson, John Atkinson. 336.2 H65<br />

Taxation in the new state. [1919.] Methuen.<br />

Contents: Principles of tax reform.—Emergency finance.<br />

An attempt to establish certain intelligible principles of taxation and to apply them<br />

with reference to emergency finance.<br />

Keynes, John Maynard. 330.9 K23<br />

The economic consequences of the peace. 1920. Harcourt.<br />

The author was official representative of the British treasury at the Paris peace<br />

conference (1919) and a deputy on tlie Supreme Economic Council. He explains his<br />

objections to the policy of the conference toward the economic problems of Europe and<br />

proposes a remedial program.<br />

Reiss, Richard. 331.83 R32<br />

The home I want. 1918. Hodder.<br />

"List of books and reports dealing with questions of housing and town planning,"<br />

p.167-169.<br />

"Presents, within a small compass, information of practical use to housing reformers<br />

trying to improve the conditions of their own town or village." Chapter I.<br />

Fitted to conditions in England, but has general value.<br />

United States—Federal trade commission. r 338.4 U2532r<br />

Report on leather and shoe industries, Aug. 21, 1919. 1919.<br />

United States—Working conditions service. r 331.8 U2532<br />

Treatment of industrial problems by constructive methods. 1919.<br />

Urban, Henry. 330.g U27<br />

L'effort de demain; les grands problemes economiques. 1917.<br />

Contents: Introduction.—Ce que sera la vie economique apres la guerre.—La politique<br />

commerciale.—La grande industrie.—Marine merchande et colonies.—-Nos ressources<br />

futures (considerations generales).—Quelques idees sur les finances generales.<br />

—Role et devoirs de I'etat.—Role et devoir des banques.—Conclusions.<br />

"Bibliographie," pref. p.9-10.<br />

Bibliographical foot-notes.<br />

Military and Naval Science<br />

Candler, Edmund. 355-954 C17<br />

The sepoy. 1919. Murray.<br />

A sympathetic, uncritical study of sixteen types of sepoys serving as soldiers in<br />

the Indian army in Mesopotamia. Illustrated.<br />

Devine, Edward Thomas. 351.5 D49<br />

Disabled soldiers and sailors pensions and training [written with<br />

the assistance of] Lilian Brandt. 1919. Oxford University Press,<br />

Amer. branch.<br />

Issued in the series Preliminary economic studies of the war by the Division of<br />

economics and history of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.<br />

Nevill, Ralph.<br />

qr 355.14 N25<br />

British military prints. 1909. Connoisseur Pub. Co.<br />

"List of military prints and books with plates of military interest," by W. G. Menzies,<br />

p.65-72.<br />

Brief account of the origin and meaning of British military costumes. Illustrations<br />

and colored prints.<br />

United States—Adjutant-general's office.<br />

r 355.62 U2532<br />

Personnel system of the United States army; developed by the Committee<br />

on classification of personnel in the army (subsequently the Classification<br />

division, Adjutant-general's department). 2v. 1919.<br />

v.r. History of the personnel system.<br />

v.2. The personnel manual.


170 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Education<br />

Alexander, Carter. 379-73 A37<br />

School statistics and publicity. 1919- Silver. (Beverley educational<br />

series.)<br />

"Selected and annotated bibliography," p.317-321.<br />

"References for supplementary reading," at end of moat of the chapters.<br />

Provides for school superintendents and administration classes a study of statistical<br />

theory and its application to school data for publicity purposes. Condensed from<br />

Author's preface.<br />

Bennett, Guy Vernon.<br />

The junior high school. 1919. Warwick.<br />

Answers objec­<br />

"Bibliography," p.208-220.<br />

A brief account of its history, courses of study, administration.<br />

tions and gives suggestions.<br />

379-17 B43<br />

Buisson, Ferdinand Edouard, & Farrington, F. E. ed. 370.9 B86<br />

French educational ideals of today; an anthology of the molders of<br />

French educational thought of the present. 1919. World Book Co.<br />

A collection of texts from representative French educators, voicing the educational<br />

ideals prevailing in France in the last four decades.<br />

Dushkin, Alexander Mordecai.<br />

296 Dg4<br />

Jewish education in New York cit}-. 1918. Bureau of Jewish Education.<br />

"Bibliography," p.547-559-<br />

Bibliographical foot-notes.<br />

A history of the origin, activities, management, curriculum and tendencies.<br />

Hobson, Elsie Garland.<br />

r 37g.i4 H65<br />

Educational legislation and administration in the state of New York<br />

from 1777 to 1850. 1918. University of Chicago. (Supplementary educational<br />

monographs, v.3, no.i.)<br />

"Bibliography," p.260-264.<br />

Supplementary educational monographs are published in conjunction with the<br />

"School review" and the "Elementary school journal."<br />

Montessus de Ballore, Robert Fernand Bernard, r 378 M85<br />

vicomte de, ed.<br />

Universitatum et eminentium scholarum index generalis; annuaire<br />

general des universites. 1919.<br />

Title-page in Latin, French and English.<br />

Newton, Alfred W.<br />

379-4 2 N29<br />

The English elementary school; some elementary facts about it.<br />

1919. Longmans.<br />

Sandiford, Peter, ed. 370.9 S21<br />

Comparative education; studies of the educational systems of six<br />

modern nations, by H. W. Foght [and others]. 1918. Dent.<br />

Contents: United States, by W. F. Russell.—Germany, by I. L. Kandel.—England,<br />

by Peter Sandiford.—France, by A. H. Hope.—Canada, by Peter Sandiford.—Denmark,<br />

by H. W. Foght.<br />

"Bibliography" at the end of each chapter.


BOOKS ADDED—APRIL 1920 171<br />

Commerce<br />

American Commerce Association. r 385 A5122<br />

Application of tariffs within and from the official and Canadian<br />

classification territories. 2 pts. in 2v. 1916-19. (Traffic library.)<br />

v.2 is by T. D. Fitzgerald.<br />

American Commerce Association.<br />

r 385 A5122C<br />

[Classification of property for transportation. 2 pts. in 2v.] 1915-<br />

18. (Traffic library.)<br />

v.i. Principles of classification.<br />

v.2. Classification of property ; application of principles.<br />

Bell, Charles Erie.<br />

r 385 B39<br />

Application of tariffs within and from the Southern classification<br />

territory, also application of import and export tariffs and effect of<br />

state regulation upon the application of intrastate rates. 1916. (Traffic<br />

library.)<br />

Issued by the American Commerce Association.<br />

Carr, E. L. & Lutz, S. G.<br />

r 385 C22<br />

Construction and interpretation of tariffs. 1919. (Traffic library.)<br />

Issued by the American Commerce Association.<br />

England—Trade board.<br />

r 387 E644<br />

Reports of the Departmental committee appointed by the Board of<br />

trade to consider the position of the shipping & shipbuilding industries<br />

after the war. 1918.<br />

Contents: The German control stations and the Atlantic emigrant traffic.—Shipbuilding<br />

and marine engineering.—Final report.<br />

Fitzgerald, Thomas D. r 385 F57<br />

Application of tariffs between and from points in Western classification<br />

territory. 2 pts. in 2v. 1916-17. (Traffic library.)<br />

Issued by the American Commerce Association.<br />

Martin, Edward J.<br />

r 385 M42<br />

Interstate commerce law. 4 pts. in 4v. 1917. (Traffic library.)<br />

v.i. Principles of regulation.<br />

v.2-3. Administrative interpretation.<br />

v.4. Practice and procedure of Commission.—Appendices.<br />

Issued by the American Commerce Association.<br />

Martin, Edward J.<br />

r 385 M42I<br />

Law of common carriers, abridged; the common and statutory law<br />

of common carriers, state regulation of railroads. 1918. (Traffic library.)<br />

Issued by the American Commerce Association.<br />

Rea, Samuel.<br />

r 385 R24<br />

Statement presented Feb. 20, 1919, to the Committee on interstate<br />

commerce of the United States senate in support of the plan for the<br />

future management and regulation of the railroads proposed by the Association<br />

of Railway Executives. [1919.] Allen.


1/2 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Costume. Folklore<br />

Ellsworth, Evelyn Peters. 39* E53<br />

Textiles and costume design. 1917. Elder.<br />

"Bibliography," p.79-85.<br />

Brief treatment adapted to school use.<br />

Spence, Lewis.<br />

Legends & romances of Brittany. [1917J Stokes.<br />

398 S74<br />

Folk tales, legends and hero stories of Brittany, including history of monuments,<br />

customs and costumes. Illustrated.<br />

Language<br />

425 B17CO<br />

[i9!9-] Cor­<br />

Baker, Josephine Turck.<br />

Correct English, simplified grammar and drill book.<br />

rect English Pub. Co.<br />

Baker, Josephine Turck.<br />

428.3 B17<br />

The correct word; how to use it; a complete alphabetic list. [1919.]<br />

Correct English Pub. Co.<br />

The same<br />

r 428.3 B17<br />

Bennett, Charles Edwin.<br />

Latin grammar. 1908. Allyn.<br />

475 B43<br />

Mindel, Abraham Simon.<br />

491-7 M72<br />

Russian commercial correspondence; letters, idioms, grammatical<br />

notes and full vocabulary. 1918. Manchester University Press.<br />

Nutting, Herbert Chester. • 475 N54<br />

Latin primer. 1911. Amer. Book Co.<br />

Ping, Lilian G.<br />

448 P62<br />

Jeux frangais. 1913. Dent. (Dent's modern language series.)<br />

Contents: JEUX GYMNASTIQUES: Concours de tir a l'arc; La balle cavaliere; La<br />

balle en posture; La mere Garuche.—JEUX D'ESPRIT: L'aerostiche; Les elements; L'echo;<br />

Le jardin du roi; Les trois regnes.<br />

[Saur, Christoph, 1721-84.]<br />

r 428.2 S25<br />

Eine nutzliche anweisung; oder, Beyhiilffe vor Deutsche um englisch<br />

zu lernen; wie es vor neu-ankommende und andere im land gebohrne<br />

land- und handwerksleute, welchen in der englischen sprache<br />

erfahrene und geiibte schulmeister und prasceptores ermangelen, vor<br />

das bequemste erachtet worden, mit ihrer gewohnlichen arbeit und<br />

werkzeug erlautert, nebst einer grammatic vor diejenigen, welche in<br />

andern sprachen und deren fuudamenten erfahren sind. 1772.<br />

Gedruckt und zu bekommen bey Christoph Saur. Germanton.<br />

Williams, Sir Monier Monier-, comp.<br />

qr 491.2 W74<br />

Dictionary, English and Sanskrit. 1851. Allen.<br />

r 423 W79<br />

Winston simplified dictionary, including all the words iu common use<br />

defined so that they can be easily understood; ed. by W. D. Lewis and<br />

E. A. Singer. 1919. Winston.


BOOKS ADDED—APRIL 1920 173<br />

Science<br />

Australia—Advisory council of science and industry. r 507 A93<br />

Pamphlet, no.l-date. 1918-date.<br />

Chapman, Robert William.<br />

522 C36<br />

Elements of astronomy for surveyors. 1919. Griffin.<br />

Elementary, practical manual. Contains problems for examination for licensed<br />

surveyors in Australia.<br />

Dana, Samuel Trask.<br />

qr 551.562 D19<br />

What the national forests mean to the water user. [1919.]<br />

Issued by the United States forest service.<br />

Eason, Joshua Lawrence, & Weseen, M. H. ed.<br />

507 E18<br />

English, science and engineering; a collection of expository essays<br />

for students of science and engineering. 1919. Doubleday.<br />

Papers and addresses on various scientific subjects, engineering education and engineering<br />

ethics.<br />

Hanausek, Thomas Franz.<br />

r 578.7 H23m<br />

Microscopy of technical products; rev. by the author and tr. by A. L.<br />

Winton, with the collaboration of Kate Barber Winton. 1916. Wiley.<br />

Bibliographical foot-notes.<br />

Discusses equipment and technique and considers in some detail the microscopy<br />

of important raw materials—mainly of vegetable origin, though some animal and mineral<br />

products are included.<br />

M<strong>org</strong>an, Thomas Hunt.<br />

qr 577.8 M89<br />

Genetic and operative evidence relating to secondary sexual characters.<br />

1919. (Carnegie Institution of Washington. Publication<br />

110.285.)<br />

"Bibliography," p.100-105.<br />

Sturtevant, Alfred Henry.<br />

Analysis of the effects of selection.<br />

of Washington. Publication no.264.)<br />

"Bibliography," p.53-54-<br />

qr 575.4 S93<br />

1918. (Carnegie Institution<br />

Weaver, John Ernest.<br />

qr 581.43 W36<br />

Ecological relations of roots. 1919. (Carnegie Institution of Washington.<br />

Publication no.286.)<br />

"Bibliography," p.128.<br />

Mathematics<br />

Dickson, Leonard Eugene.<br />

qr 512.81 D55<br />

History of the theory of numbers, v.i. 1919. (Carnegie Institution<br />

of Washington. Publication no.256, v.i.)<br />

v.i. Divisibility and primality.<br />

A scholarly work. Exhaustive treatment with copious citation of references.<br />

Palmer, Claude Irwin.<br />

5" P*9P<br />

Practical mathematics for home study, being the essentials of arithmetic,<br />

geometry, algebra and trigonometry. 1919. McGraw.<br />

Consolidation of the author's four-volume "Practical mathematics," with some<br />

material added for the purpose of producing a work better adapted to self-instruction.


1/4 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Aerial Navigation<br />

Card, Stanton Freeland.<br />

533- 6 C19<br />

Air navigation; notes and examples. 1919. Longmans.<br />

Sketchy, elementary treatment, requiring only arithmetic and a slight knowledge of<br />

geometry. Treatment too brief and superficial to be of great value.<br />

Smith, Laurence Yard.<br />

533-6og S65<br />

Romance of aircraft. 1919. Stokes.<br />

"Reading list," p.256-258.<br />

Popular work, chiefly historical, but contains chapters on "Training of an aviator"<br />

and "Future story of the air."<br />

Chemistry<br />

Price, Thomas Slater.<br />

546 P94<br />

Per-acids and their salts. 1912. Longmans. (Monographs on in<strong>org</strong>anic<br />

and physical chemistry.)<br />

"Literature references," p.111—119.<br />

"The field covered. . .is a very interesting one and the literature in regard to it is so<br />

scattered that the author has done a distinct service in getting it together and in giving<br />

us a clear account of the present state of our knowledge." Wilder D. Bancroft, in Journal<br />

of physical chemistry, 1912.<br />

Smith, Edgar Fahs, & Van Haagen, W. K.<br />

qr 541.2 S64<br />

Atomic weights of boron and fluorine. 1918. (Carnegie Institution<br />

of Washington. Publication no.267.)<br />

Geology<br />

Ashley, Ge<strong>org</strong>e Hall.<br />

qr 557.4885 A82<br />

The McKeesport gas pool [a preliminary report]. 1920.<br />

Issued by the Pennsylvania topographic and geologic survey commission.<br />

Mimeograph copy.<br />

Evans, John William, ed.<br />

r 554.2 E94<br />

Geology of the British Isles, by P. G. H. Boswell [and others], with<br />

an appendix: The Channel islands, by John Parkinson. 1918. Nijhoff.<br />

Contains many bibliographies. "General bibliography," p.341-343.<br />

Wyer, Samuel S.<br />

r 553.28 W98<br />

Present and prospective supply of natural gas available in Pennsylvania,<br />

with attached Smithsonian Institution bulletin no.102, pt. 7, on<br />

Natural gas, its production, service and conservation. 1918.<br />

Zoology<br />

Castle, William Ernest.<br />

qr 591.157 C27st<br />

Studies of heredity in rabbits, rats and mice. 1919. (Carnegie Institution<br />

of Washington. Publication 110.288.)<br />

"Bibliography," p.56.<br />

Hegner, Robert Wilhelm.<br />

590 H41<br />

College zoology. 1919. Macmillan.<br />

"Sources," pref. p.7-8.<br />

"Differs from many of the college textbooks of zoology now on the market in<br />

several important respects: (1) the animals and their <strong>org</strong>ans are not only described.


BOOKS ADDED—APRIL 1920 175<br />

Hegner, Robert Wilhelm—continued.<br />

590 H41<br />

but their functions are pointed out; (2) the animals described are in most cases native<br />

species; and (3) the relations of the animals to man are emphasized. Besides serving<br />

as a textbook, it is believed that this book will be of interest to the general reader,<br />

since it gives a bird's-eye view of the entire animal kingdom as we know it at the<br />

present time." Preface.<br />

Hudson, William Henry, C. M. Z. S. 590.4 H88<br />

Book of a naturalist. 1919. Doran.<br />

A collection of charmingly written papers. Some are reprinted from British<br />

journals while others appear for the first time.<br />

Step, Edward. 595-7 S82<br />

Insect artizans and their work. [1919.] Dodd.<br />

Contents: Spinners and weavers.—Miners.—Masons.—Carpenters and wood-workers.—Upholsterers.-—Wax-workers.—<br />

Paper-makers.—Tailors.—Horticulturists.— Sanitary<br />

officers.—Musicians.—Burglars.—Lamp-bearers.<br />

Whitman, Charles Otis. qr 598.65 W64<br />

Posthumous works. 3v. 1919. (Carnegie Institution of Washington.<br />

Publication no.257, v.1-3.)<br />

v.i. Orthogenetic evolution in pigeons; ed. by Oscar Riddle.<br />

v.2. Inheritance, fertility and the dominance of sex and color in hybrids of wild<br />

species of pigeons ; ed. by Oscar Riddle.<br />

v.3. Behavior of pigeons; ed. by H. A. Carr.<br />

Useful Arts<br />

Asbestos and Mineral Corporation, New York city. qr 677.511 A79<br />

Asbestos, from mine to finished product. 1919.<br />

Trade literature enriched by excellent illustrations in photogravure.<br />

National Association of Corporation Schools. r 607 Ni552b<br />

Bulletin; monthly, June 1914-date. [v.l], no.4-date. 1914-date.<br />

Numbers for Aug.-Oct. 1914, April 1915, wanting.<br />

Ruder, William Ernst. r 691.75 R83<br />

Protection of metals from oxidation at high temperatures, v.l.<br />

1918. Calorizing Corporation of America.<br />

Devoted mainly to methods and results of "calorizing." Includes "Protective coatings<br />

for metals," by L. A. Hawkins & H. B. C. Allison, briefly reviewing various rustproofing<br />

methods.<br />

Standardized Housing Corporation, New York city. qr 691.3 S78<br />

Manufacture of standardized houses; a new industry (the Atterbury<br />

system of hollow block construction). 1918.<br />

Trade literature.<br />

Medicine, Physiology, Hygiene<br />

Bayliss, William Maddock. 612 B33<br />

Introduction to general physiology, with practical exercises. 1919.<br />

Longmans.<br />

Fairly technical, requiring knowledge of chemistry and physics.<br />

Benedict, Francis Gano, and others.<br />

qr 612.391 B43h<br />

Human vitality and efficiency under prolonged restricted diet. 1919-<br />

(Carnegie Institution of Washington. Publication no.280.)


176 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Colyer, J. F.<br />

r 617.6 C72<br />

Dental surgery and pathology. Ed.4. I9'9- Longmans.<br />

Bibliographies at the end of many of the chapters.<br />

Flack, Martin, & Hill, L. E.<br />

Textbook of physiology. 1919. Longmans.<br />

Comprehensive, advanced text, primarily for medical students.<br />

r 612 F59<br />

Harris, James Arthur, & Benedict, F. G.<br />

qr 612.0153 H29<br />

Biometric study of basal metabolism in man. 1919. (Carnegie Institution<br />

of Washington. Publication no.279.)<br />

Bibliographic foot-notes.<br />

Heinemann, Paul Gustav.<br />

614.32 H41<br />

Milk. 1919. Saunders.<br />

"Bibliography" at the end of each chapter.<br />

Rather full treatment of production, properties, hygiene and products. Includes a<br />

chapter on ice-cream and ices.<br />

Hoffman, Frederick Ludwig.<br />

r 614.1 H67<br />

[Papers and addresses.] 1910-18.<br />

Contents: Fatal accidents in coal mining.—Significance of a declining death rate.—<br />

Economic progress of the United States during the last -5 years.—Chances of death and<br />

the ministry of health.—Practical statistics of public health nursing and community sickness<br />

experience.—Industrial accidents and trade diseases in the United States.—Industrial<br />

accidents in the United States and their relative frequency in different occupations.<br />

—American public-health problems.—Cancer from the statistical standpoint.—Leprosy as<br />

a national and international problem.—On the physical care of children.—Sanitary progress<br />

and vital statistics of Hawaii.—Army anthropometry and medical rejection statistics.—Mortality<br />

from degenerative diseases.<br />

Miles, Walter Richard. qr 612.82144 M 68<br />

Effect of alcohol on psycho-physiological functions. 1918. (Carnegie<br />

Institution of Washington. Publication no.266.)<br />

Red-cross Society (United States. American<br />

qr 614.0945 R26<br />

National Red Cross.)<br />

Report of the commission for tuberculosis. American Red Cross in<br />

Italy; an attempt to establish a method of international cooperation in<br />

public health and welfare work. [1919.]<br />

Contents: General report, by W. C. White.—Supplementary report on nursing, by<br />

M. L. Gardner.—Supplementary report on statistics, by Knud Stouman.<br />

r 610.5 R36<br />

Review of war surgery and medicine [monthly], March T9i8-June 1919.<br />

v.l-v.2, no.6. 1918-T9.<br />

Prepared in the United States surgeon-general's office.<br />

No more published.<br />

Ribbert, Hugo.<br />

r 613.9 R38<br />

Heredity, disease and human evolution; tr. from the German by<br />

Eden and Cedar Paul. 1918. Critic and Guide Co.<br />

Stiles, Percy Goldthwait.<br />

612 S85<br />

Human physiology; a text-book for high schools and colleges. Ed.<br />

2, rev. 1919. Saunders.<br />

"Suggestions for collateral reading." p.411-414.<br />

An excellent elementary text-book, with useful suggestions to the teacher.<br />

United States—Surgeon-general's office.<br />

Manual of neuro-surgery. 1919.<br />

r 617.48 U25


BOOKS ADDED—APRIL 1920 177<br />

Warren, Benjamin S. & Bolduan, C F. r 614.0973 W24<br />

War activities of the United States public health service. 1919.<br />

Reprint no.531 from the "Public health reports" of the United States public health<br />

service, June 6, 1919.<br />

Wright, Florence Swift. 610.7 W93<br />

Industrial nursing, for industrial, public health and pupil nurses,<br />

and for employers of labor. 1919. Macmillan.<br />

"Bibliography," p.169-174.<br />

Electricity<br />

Alden, Ge<strong>org</strong>e Ira. 537 A 3 r<br />

Study of electricity by the deductive method. 1919. Commonwealth<br />

Press.<br />

An attempt to set forth a comprehensive analogy for the transmission of electri<br />

cal energy by assuming that "the transmission of energy by electricity is like the<br />

transmission of energy by an endless shaft of negligible mass, perfectly flexible with<br />

regard to bending, but reasonably rigid and elastic with regard to torsion and revolving<br />

about its geometric axis."<br />

r 621.3302 M16<br />

McGraw electric railway directory; pub. semi-annually, Feb. 1919-date.<br />

1919-date. McGraw.<br />

Volume for Feb. 1919 has title "McGraw electric railway list."<br />

Underwriters' Laboratories. r 621.3157 U25I<br />

Laboratories' data, Feb. 1919. no.i. 1919.<br />

Supersedes "Electrical data."<br />

Engineering<br />

Hayes, Leslie David. 621 H37<br />

Empirical design. 1915. Carpenter.<br />

"There are...two classes of parts in the design of which empirical methods are<br />

likely to cqntinue, e.g., those parts of such complex form that it is very difficult. ..to<br />

discover and apply the principles involved, and that large class of parts in use in so<br />

many sizes of similar proportions that. . .the intermediate sizes are much more cheaply<br />

designed by empirical means based upon the proportions for the extreme sizes. The<br />

discussion of the first of these two classes is beyond the scope of this book but an<br />

attempt will be made to discuss some of the parts falling within this second class and<br />

to study the empirical methods used." Preface.<br />

International Railway Fuel Association. r 621.1331 I24<br />

Proceedings of the annual convention (loth-date), 1918-date.<br />

Knight, William Ge<strong>org</strong>e. 621.13 K34<br />

Practical questions on locomotive operating. 1913.<br />

Author is traveling engineer of the Boston & Maine Railroad. In this book he takes<br />

up nearly all the essential questions asked in examinations for engineers in the "Eastern<br />

district."<br />

Nicol, Ge<strong>org</strong>e. 623.8 N32<br />

Ship construction and calculations, with numerous illustrations and<br />

examples, for the use of officers of the mercantile marine, ship superintendents,<br />

draughtsmen, etc. [Ed.3, enl.] 1918. Brown.<br />

Includes useful information on behavior of ships at sea, on loading and ballasting,<br />

and on ship repairs.


178 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

bsterreichischer Verein fiir Kalteindustrie, qr 621.55 O29<br />

Vienna.<br />

Festschrift fiir den Internationalen Kaltekongress (3.), Washington-<br />

Chicago, 15.-24. September, 1913; iiber auftrag des komitees redigiert<br />

von Alois Schwarz. [1913.]<br />

Perrigo, Charles Oscar Eugene. r 621.94 ?44*<br />

Les tours; construction, essais, emploi, exemples pratiques de travaux;<br />

traduction, de la deuxieme edition americaine par Maurice Varinois.<br />

1918.<br />

Poussin, Guillaume Tell. qr 626.9 P86<br />

Travaux d'ameliorations interieures, projetes ou executes par le<br />

gouvernement general des £tats-Unis d'Amerique de 1824 a 1831. 1834.<br />

Atlas. 1834<br />

qr 626.9 P86 a<br />

Robson, Arthur G.<br />

621.9 R56<br />

Engineering machine tools and processes; a text-book for engineers,<br />

apprentices and students in technical institutes, trade schools and continuation<br />

classes. 1919. Longmans.<br />

British text for elementary instruction. The field covered is so broad that only<br />

general principles and operations are included, excluding details of specialized shop<br />

work.<br />

Sprague, Ernest Headly.<br />

624.042 S76<br />

Moving loads by influence lines and other methods; a textbook for<br />

students, engineers and structural designers. 1918. Scott. (Broadway<br />

engineering handbooks, v.31.)<br />

United States Shipping Board Emergency Fleet r 623.807 U25<br />

Corporation.<br />

Training of shipyard workers; report on the work of the Industrial<br />

relations division, Education and training section. 1919.<br />

Agriculture<br />

Gardner, Frank Duane, and others. 634 G18<br />

Fruits, vegetables and flowers; a non-technical manual for their<br />

culture, management and improvement. 1918. Winston. (Farming<br />

for profit.)<br />

"References" at the end of each chapter.<br />

Comprehensive in scope, treating topics rather briefly. In addition to culture of<br />

common garden vegetables, small fruits and orchard fruits, there are chapters on mushrooms,<br />

medicinal and aromatic plants, nuts, tropical fruits, the farm wood-lot. beautifying<br />

home grounds, window gardening, and plant diseases and enemies.<br />

Ge<strong>org</strong>ia—Agricultural experiment station. Experiment.<br />

Annual report (30th-date), 1917-date. [ipioj-date.<br />

r 630.6 G3ian<br />

Illinois—State council of defense.<br />

r 630.6 I2262<br />

Farm craft lessons for reserve volunteers, no.1-22. [1918-19.]<br />

A course arranged by the Educational committee of the Illinois state council of defense<br />

in co-operation with the University of Illinois college of agriculture for the United<br />

States Boys' Working Reserve of Illinois.


BOOKS ADDED—APRIL 1920 179<br />

Institute for Government Research. r 631.8 I24<br />

The U.S. reclamation service; its history, activities and <strong>org</strong>anization.<br />

1919. Appleton. (Service monographs of the United States<br />

government, no.2.)<br />

"Bibliography," p.132-172.<br />

Newland, H. Osman.<br />

63453 N28<br />

Planting, cultivation and expression of coconuts, kernels, cacao and<br />

edible vegetable oils and seeds of commerce; a practical handbook for<br />

planters, financiers, scientists and others. 1919. Griffin. (Griffin's<br />

technological hand-books.)<br />

Includes brief consideration of the peanut industry.<br />

Pellett, Frank Chapman.<br />

6 38.i P37<br />

Beginner's bee book. 1919. Lippincott.<br />

Gives accurate and practical information, together with suggestive illustrations.<br />

r 630.973 S78<br />

Standard farm paper year book, 1917-date. 1917-date. Standard Farm<br />

Papers.<br />

r<br />

Truffaut, Ge<strong>org</strong>es, & Colt, Helen.<br />

6 35 T77<br />

Army gardens in France, Belgium and occupied German territory;<br />

their making and management, with plans and directions suited to the<br />

garden service of the British and American expeditionary forces. 1919.<br />

(CSuvre des pepinieres nationales du Touring-Club de France.)<br />

r<br />

Washington, Ge<strong>org</strong>e.<br />

6 3° W27<br />

Agricultural papers of Ge<strong>org</strong>e Washington; ed. by W. E. Brooke.<br />

1919 Badger. ( Studies in American history.)<br />

Selection of Washington's letters which exhibit some interesting phases of his farming<br />

activities. Includes two extracts from his diary and four tables of crop rotation.<br />

Forestry<br />

Syracuse University-New York state college of forestry, r 634-9 S 99 t<br />

Technical publication, no.1-5. I9 T 4-I7-<br />

United States-Forest service.<br />

V 634-9 U2 5 na<br />

National forest areas, Jan.i, 1918; comp. by the Branch of engineering.<br />

[1918.]<br />

Business. Communication<br />

. , T 6S9-07 A42<br />

Allen, Frederick James.<br />

Advertising as a vocation. 1919- Macmillan.<br />

Bibliography, p.i6--i 73-<br />

retirements possibilities and rewards in the<br />

J S S r incident % £ 2 T Z % L L and methods of advertising<br />

and discusses advertising mediums.<br />

American Library Association-War servicecommittee. r 016.65 A51<br />

Five hundred business books; comp. and annotated by E hel Ue<br />

land, with an introduction by J. C. Dana; rev. by S. H. Powell. Ed.2.<br />

1919.


180 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Cope, Edward A. 651.5 C79<br />

Filing systems; their principles and their application to modern<br />

office requirements. [1913.] Pitman.<br />

"An attempt to supply some trustworthy information as to the chief characteristics<br />

of modern methods, to explain the kind of assistance they are capable of rendering<br />

to their users and to show how they may be applied for various purposes." Preface.<br />

Kimble, Elbert J. comp.<br />

653.042 K25<br />

Kimble's commercial, industrial and technical vocabularies for stenographers;<br />

comp. from actual work, for the use of schools, colleges.<br />

teachers, students, stenographers and typewriters. 1915. Privately<br />

printed.<br />

The same<br />

r 653.042 K25<br />

Covers 150 different types of business and contains 100,000 words.<br />

McNicol, Donald. 652.4 M21<br />

Telegraph operators' penmanship.<br />

[1919.] McNicol.<br />

Facsimiles and discussion of 24 specimens of telegraphers' penmanship, awarded<br />

prizes in two contests in 1917 and 1918.<br />

Pennsylvania—Public service commission.<br />

r 657.55328 P39<br />

Uniform classification of accounts for natural gas companies, effective<br />

Jan. 1, 1920. 1919.<br />

r 654.105 Qn<br />

Q S T; a magazine devoted exclusively to the wireless amateur [monthly],<br />

Dec. 1916-date. v.2-date. 1916-date.<br />

Official <strong>org</strong>an of the American Radio Relay League.<br />

No numbers were published from Oct. 1917 to June 1919.<br />

Chemical Technology<br />

Greene, John Arthur, ed. r 665.44 G83<br />

Treatise on British mineral oil; foreword by Sir Boverton Redwood.<br />

1919. Griffin.<br />

Contents: The raw material.—Retorting of bituminous materials.—The products<br />

from low-temperature carbonisation and their chemical nature.—Refining.—Practical<br />

experimental work.—Recovery of by-products from coal and the generation of electrical<br />

energy.—Appendix.<br />

"Bibliography; chemical section," p.227-229.<br />

qr 665.505 P4654<br />

Petroleum times [weekly], Jan. 11, 1919-date. v.i-date. 1919-date.<br />

Teed, P. Litherland. 661.96 T26<br />

Chemistry and manufacture of hydrogen. 1919. Arnold.<br />

Instructive, but not an exhaustive treatment.<br />

Wehrle, Ge<strong>org</strong>e.<br />

66s, 7 W < H<br />

American gas works practice; standard practical methods in gas<br />

fitting, distribution and works management. 1919. Progressive Age<br />

Pub. Co. (Gas age handbook series, v.4.)<br />

Deals briefly with manufacturing methods, but is concerned mainly with distribution,<br />

measurement and applications, and with management and welfare work of gas companies.


BOOKS ADDED—APRIL 1920 181<br />

Wells, Arthur Edward. r 661.31 W49<br />

Potash industry of the United States and its possibilities for future<br />

production. 1919. (United States—Mines bureau. Minerals investigations.)<br />

Mimeograph copy.<br />

"This is a preliminary report which will later be incorporated in a final and more<br />

complete report on potash."<br />

Fine Arts<br />

qr 759 A78<br />

Art & war; Canadian war memorials; a selection of the works executed<br />

for the Canadian war memorials fund to form a record of Canada's<br />

part in the great war and a memorial to those Canadians who have<br />

made the great sacrifice, with an article, "On war memorials," by P. G.<br />

Konody. [1919?] Colour.<br />

Barber, Edwin AtLee.<br />

r 738 B23h<br />

Hispano-Moresque pottery in the collection of the Hispanic Society<br />

of America. 1915. (Hispanic Society of America. Publications,<br />

no.94.)<br />

Barber, Edwin AtLee.<br />

r 738 B23SP<br />

Spanish maiolica in the collection of the Hispanic Society of America.<br />

1915. (Hispanic Society of America. Publications, no.91.)<br />

Berlin, Konigliche Museen.<br />

qb 736.1 B45<br />

Holzschnitzereien des I5ten und i6ten jahrhunderts im Kunstgewerbe-Museum<br />

zu Berlin; hrsg. von Julius Lessing [plates]. 1882.<br />

Forty-eight folio plates in phototype, giving measurements and sources.<br />

Bridgens, Richard.<br />

qb 749 B74<br />

Furniture, with candelabra and interior decoration. 1838. Pickering.<br />

Plates showing designs in Grecian, Elizabethan and Gothic styles.<br />

Colour.<br />

qr 759 C72<br />

Allies in art; a collection of works in modern art by artists of the<br />

allied nations; issued by "Colour magazine." 1917.<br />

Contents: England.—France.—Italy.—Belgium.—Russia.—Japan.—Serbia.<br />

Comments and notes in English and French accompany each reproduction.<br />

Gallatin, Albert Eugene. qr 759 G J 4<br />

Art and the great war. 1919. Dutton.<br />

Contents: Introduction.—The United States of America.—Great Britain and<br />

Canada.— France.—The Netherlands.<br />

"Bibliography," p.285-288.<br />

Chronicles the part played by painters, illustrators, etchers, lithographers and sculptors<br />

by means of their art. Illustrated with one hundred plates, partly in color, covering<br />

all phases of the war.<br />

Hale, Philip Leslie.<br />

V 759-9 V2 7 h<br />

Jan Vermeer of Delft, with reproductions of all of Vermeer's known<br />

paintings and examples of the work of certain of his contemporaries.<br />

1913. Small.<br />

"Bibliography," p.377-381.<br />

A brief account of his life and of the Holland of his day ; together with a study<br />

of his artistic qualities and technique. Includes reproductions of his paintings and ot<br />

those of certain of his contemporaries.


182 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Ives, Herbert Eugene.. 778.35 I33<br />

Airplane photography. 1920. Lippincott.<br />

Contents: Introductory.—The airplane camera.—The suspension and installation<br />

of airplane cameras.—Sensitized materials and chemicals.— Methods of handling plates,<br />

films and papers.—Practical problems and data.—The future of aerial photography.<br />

Shelmire, Robert Warren. 744 S54<br />

The draftsman. 1919. Scientific Pub. Bureau.<br />

Not concerned with drafting methods, but is a plea for recognition of the draftsman's<br />

services and for <strong>org</strong>anization to accomplish this end. Sets forth the nature and<br />

importance of drafting, the present status of the draftsman and his relation to the<br />

engineering profession.<br />

Victoria and Albert Museum, South Kensington. qr 738 V31<br />

Catalogue of the Le Blond collection of Corean pottery, by Bernard<br />

Rackham. 1918.<br />

"Bibliography," pref. p.7-8.<br />

Description and illustrations of the collection presented in 1918 by Mr Aubrey<br />

Le Blond to the Victoria and Albert Museum.<br />

Weale, John, ed. qb 748 W35<br />

Divers works of early masters in Christian decoration; with an introduction<br />

containing the biography, journal of travel, contemporaneous<br />

association in art and a critical account of Albert Diirer. 2v.<br />

1846.<br />

Includes examples of ancient painted and stained glass from England, Holland<br />

and Belgium.<br />

Wurttembergischer Kunstgewerbe-Verein. qb 736.1 W97<br />

Preisgekronte und andere decorative holzarbeiten aus der konkurrenz-ausstcllung;<br />

nach der natur aufgenommen, mit besonderer genehmigung<br />

des vereins; in feinsten lichtdruck-reproductionen; hrsg. von<br />

Wilhelm Kick. [1889.]<br />

City Planning<br />

Portland, Ore.—City planning commission. r 710 P83<br />

Zoning and city planning for Portland, Oregon; C. H. Cheney, consultant.<br />

1919. (Bulletin 110.1.)<br />

St. Louis—City plan commission. qr 710 S145Z<br />

The zone plan; Harland Bartholomew, engineer. 1919.<br />

Maps, plans, illustrations, descriptions of home, factory and commercial districts.<br />

Boisseree, Sulpiz. qb y26 BsQ7<br />

Architecture<br />

Monuments d'architecture du 7e au I3e siecle, dans les contrees du<br />

Rhin inferieur. 1842.<br />

Traces the changes which occurred during this period in the transition from romanesque<br />

to the germanic style of architecture which found its most beautiful expression in<br />

the cathedral of Cologne. Illustrated with 7: plates and plans, some in color


BOOKS ADDED—APRIL 1920 183<br />

Cousins, Frank, & Riley, P. M. b 724.9 C8 4 cl<br />

Colonial architecture of Salem. 1919. Little.<br />

Contents: The gable and peaked-roof house.—The lean-to house.—The gambrelrool<br />

house.—The square three-story wood house.—The square three-story brick house.<br />

Doorways and porches.—Windows and window frames.—Interior wood finish.—Halls<br />

and stairways.—Mantels and chimney pieces.—Public buildings.—Salem architectureto-day.<br />

Foville, Jean de, & Le Sourd, Auguste. r 728.8 F84<br />

Les chateaux de France. [1913?]<br />

Brief accounts of the principal and most beautiful of the chateaux of France A<br />

convenient handbook for travelers. Contains maps and pictures.<br />

La Tremblaye, Martin Coutel de. qr 726 L35<br />

Solesmes; les sculptures de l'eglise abbatiale, 1496-1553; reproductions,<br />

etat de la question d'origine. 1892.<br />

Ouvrage publie avec le patronage de la Societe Historique et Archeologique du<br />

Maine.<br />

Contains bibliographical foot-notes.<br />

Illustrated with 37 heliograph plates and five illustrations in the text.<br />

Le Roy, Julien David.<br />

qb 722.8 L63<br />

Les ruines des plus beaux monuments de la Grece; ouvrage divise<br />

en deux parties, ou Ton considere, dans la premiere, ces monuments du<br />

cote de I'histoire, et dans la seconde, du cote de l'architecture. 2 pts.<br />

in iv. 1758.<br />

The first part (historical) is illustrated by 28 engraved folio plates; the second part<br />

(architectural) by 32 plans showing details and measurements, particularly with respect<br />

to the various architectural orders.<br />

Mills, Wilbur Thoburn. r 727.1 M69<br />

American school building standards. 1915. Franklin Educational<br />

Pub. Co.<br />

Presents, in compact, systematic form, the essential problems of school architecture,<br />

with designs, illustrations and statistics.<br />

Morand, Sauveur Jerome. qb 726 M883<br />

Histoire de la Ste-Chapelle royale du palais. 1790.<br />

An 18th century history and description, with illustrations of this famous chapel.<br />

Also, a collection of Latin documents of grants or gifts to the chapel.<br />

Moreau, Charles. qb 729 M887<br />

Fragmens et ornemens d'architecture, dessines a Rome d'apres<br />

l'antique, formant supplement a l'ceuvre d'architecture de Desgodets.<br />

[1800?]<br />

Thirty-six engraved folio plates, in some cases giving measurements of the monuments<br />

pictured. Completes and enlarges Desgodetz's "Les edifices antiques de Rome,"<br />

giving not only the details of exterior ornament indicated by him, but also designs of<br />

accessories of interior decoration such as cups, tripods, vases, altars, candelabra, etc.<br />

Vignola, Giacomo Barozzi da. qb 729.3 V32C<br />

Li cinque ordini di architettura, con un ragionamento alii architeti<br />

di M. Ottaviano Ridolfi intorno alia perfetione di tutti gli cinque<br />

ordeni di detta architetura, con la nova agiunta di Michiel Angielo<br />

Rotta. [1603?]<br />

[Ware, Isaac] qb 720 W222<br />

[A complete body of architecture.]<br />

Title-page wanting. Probably the edition of 1756 of "A complete body of architecture,<br />

adorned with plans and elevations from original designs in which are interspersed<br />

some designs of Inigo Jones, never before published;" published in London<br />

by T. Osborne and J. Shipton.


184 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Music<br />

Scores<br />

Bach, Johann Sebastian.<br />

qM 783.3 B12C<br />

The Christmas oratorio for chorus, soli and orchestra; tr. and<br />

adapted by J. Troutbeck from the original German text of St. Luke II:<br />

1-21 and St. Matthew II: 1-12; ed. by Max Spicker, vocal score. 1909.<br />

Schirmer.<br />

Bach, Johann Sebastian. M 783.3 Bi2p<br />

Passion of our Lord (according to St. John); the English translation<br />

and adaptation by J. Troutbeck [vocal score]. Novello.<br />

Chaminade, Cecile Louise Stephanie. qM 784 C35<br />

Vocal album; 37 songs with piano accompaniment [for high voice].<br />

2v. in 1. Schirmer.<br />

English and French words.<br />

Delibes, Clement Philibert Leo.<br />

qM 786.45 D39<br />

Coppelia; ou, La fille aux yeux d'email; ballet en 2 actes et 3 tableaux<br />

de Ch. Nuitter et Saint-Leon, partition reduite pour piano. Heugel.<br />

Delibes, Clement Philibert Leo. qM 786.45 D39S<br />

Sylvia; ou, La nymphe de Diane; ballet en trois actes et cinq tableaux<br />

de Jules Barbier & Merante, partition piano. 1876. Heugel.<br />

Marschner, Heinrich August. qM 782.3 M41<br />

Hans Heiling; romantische oper von Eduard Devrient, klavierauszug<br />

von G. F. Kogel. Hofmeister.<br />

Massenet, Jules Smile Frederic. qM 782.4 M45C<br />

Le Cid; opera en quatre actes & dix tableaux de Ad. d'Ennery [et<br />

autres], partition chant & piano. [1886.] Heugel.<br />

French words.<br />

Massenet, Jules fimileFrederic. qM 782.4 M45e<br />

Esclarmonde; opera romanesque; poeme de Alfred Blau et Louis<br />

de Gramont [partition chant et piano]. [1889.] Hartmann.<br />

French words.<br />

Massenet, Jules fimileFrederic. qM 782.4 M45g<br />

Griselidis (Patient Griselda); lyric tale in three acts, with prologue;<br />

poem by Armand Silvestre and Eugene Morand (after the<br />

mystery given at the Comedie-frangaise), English translation by H. G.<br />

Chapman, vocal score. 1908. Heugel.<br />

French and English words.<br />

Massenet, Jules fimileFrederic. qM 782.4 M45S<br />

Sappho; a lyric play in five acts, after the novel by Alphonse Daudet,<br />

words by Henri Cain and Bernede, vocal score. 1909. Heugel.<br />

French and English words.


BOOKS ADDED—APRIL 1920 185<br />

Ponchielli, Amilcare. qM 782.5 P78<br />

La Gioconda; an opera in four acts; the libretto by Tobia Gorrio,<br />

English adaptation by Henry Hersee, complete arrangement for voice<br />

and pianoforte by Michele Saladino. Ricordi.<br />

Italian and English words.<br />

Ricci, Luigi, & Ricci, Federico.<br />

qM 782.6 R39<br />

Crispino e la comare; melodramma fantastico-giocoso; opera completa<br />

per canto e pianoforte. Ricordi.<br />

Saint-Saens, Charles Camille.<br />

qM 782.4 Si5e<br />

fitienne Marcel; opera en quatre actes; poeme de Louis Gallet, partition<br />

chant et piano par A. Messager. [1879.] Durand.<br />

French words.<br />

Saint-Saens, Charles Camille.<br />

qM 782.4 Sish<br />

Henry VIII; opera en 4 actes; poeme de Leonce Detroyat & Armand<br />

Silvestre, partition chant et piano par Leon Delahaye. Durand.<br />

French words.<br />

Schumann, Robert.<br />

qM 782.3 S392<br />

Genoveva; grosse oper in vier akten, klavierauszug mit text von<br />

Clara Schumann. Op. 81. Peters.<br />

German words.<br />

Spontini, Gasparo Luigi Pacifico.<br />

qM 782.5 S76<br />

La vestale; melodramma in tre atti; opera completa per canto e<br />

pianoforte. Ricordi.<br />

Italian words.<br />

Verdi, Giuseppe.<br />

782.5 V26m<br />

Masked ball; containing the Italian text, with an English translation<br />

by T. T. Baker and the music of all the principal airs [libretto].<br />

1891. Ditson.<br />

The same<br />

r 782.5 V26m<br />

Verdi, Giuseppe.<br />

qM 782.5 V26m<br />

[Masked ball.] Un ballo in maschera; melodramma in tre atti, canto<br />

e pianoforte. Ricordi.<br />

Italian words.<br />

Books About Music<br />

Stanley, Albert Augustus, comp. qr 780 S78<br />

Catalogue of the Stearns collection of musical instruments. 1918.<br />

University of Michigan.<br />

"Bibliography," p.223-234.<br />

List and descriptions of this collection owned by the University of Michigan.<br />

Van Vechten, Carl.<br />

780.4 V2ii<br />

In the garret. 1920. Knopf.<br />

Contents: Variations on a theme by Havelock Ellis.—A note on Philip Thicknesse.<br />

—The folk-songs of Iowa.—Isaac Albeniz.—The Holy jumpers.—On the relative difficulties<br />

of depicting heaven and hell in music.—Sir Arthur Sullivan.—On the rewriting<br />

of masterpieces.—Oscar Hammerstein ; an epitaph.—La Tigresse.—In the<br />

theatres of the purlieus: Mimi Aguglia as Salome; The negro theatre ; The Yiddish<br />

theatre; The Spanish theatre.


186 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Amusements<br />

Coale, Anna Worthington. 796-5 C62<br />

Summer in the girls' camp. 1919. Century.<br />

Description of the educational and physical benefits of camp life. Of value to parents<br />

and conductors of camps as well as to the girls themselves.<br />

Freeborough, E. ed.<br />

794-1 F89C<br />

Chess endings; a companion to Chess openings ancient and modern.<br />

1898. Paul.<br />

Literature<br />

Baker, Josephine Turck.<br />

808.6 B17<br />

Art of social letter writing; 12 charming studies. 1909. Correct<br />

English Pub. Co.<br />

Baker, Josephine Turck.<br />

808 B17<br />

The literary workshop; helps for the writer. [1918.] Correct English<br />

Pub. Co.<br />

Hazeltine, Mayo Williamson, ed.<br />

808.5 H38<br />

Orations, from Homer to William McKinley. v.2-25. 1902. Collier.<br />

Irving, Washington.<br />

817 I280I<br />

Old Christmas, and Bracebridge hall; from the Sketch-book, with<br />

illustrations by Lewis Baumer. 1918. Constable.<br />

Lee, Sir Sidney.<br />

qr 920.09 L52<br />

Perspective of biography. 1918. (English Association. Pamphlet<br />

no. 41.)<br />

Poetry<br />

Ellinger, Esther Parker.<br />

r 016.811 E52<br />

Southern war poetry of the Civil war. 1919. [Hershey Press.]<br />

Contents: The significance of the Southern war poetry.—The historical development<br />

of the Southern war poetry.—Reference bibliography.—Bibliography of collections<br />

examined.—Bibliography of anthologies and Confederate imprints.—Index of Southern<br />

war poems of the Civil war.<br />

Thesis for Ph. D., University of Pennsylvania.<br />

Guiterman, Arthur.<br />

811 Gg67b<br />

Ballads of old New York. 1920. Harper.<br />

A collection of lyrics and ballads—legends of Knickerbocker days. Quaintly illustrated.<br />

Mitchell, Silas Weir.<br />

811 M74C<br />

Collected poems. 1896. Century.<br />

Contents: Dramatic poems.—Miscellaneous poems.—Poems of occasion.<br />

Roberts, Cecil.<br />

821 R53<br />

Poems, with a preface by John Masefield. 1920. Stokes.<br />

Contents: Poems.—The dark years.—Other poems.<br />

Virgil.<br />

r 873 v 34 b<br />

Bucolics, Ge<strong>org</strong>ics and Aeneid; based on Ribbeck's text. [1891.]<br />

Rivingtons.


Drama. Theatre<br />

BOOKS ADDED—APRIL 1920 187<br />

Davis, Allan, & Stratton, A. R.<br />

812 D3ii<br />

The inward light; a drama in four acts. 1919. Knopf.<br />

A Civil war drama based on the spiritual conflict of Quaker faith opposed to war,<br />

against the call of patriotic obligations.<br />

Hill, Wycliffe Aber.<br />

808.27 H55<br />

Ten million photoplay plots; the master key to all dramatic plots.<br />

1919. Feature Photodrama Co.<br />

According to the author, editor of "The Screen fun magazine," there are only<br />

37 basic dramatic plots. The book discusses these and the laws controlling photoplay<br />

structure.<br />

Mackaye, Percy Wallace.<br />

792.5 M17W<br />

The will of song; a dramatic service of community singing, devised<br />

in cooperation with Harry Barnhart, for use as a two days' song festival.<br />

1919. Boni.<br />

Contents: Soul of earth.—Soul of light.<br />

Willy, Colette, pseud.<br />

Mitsou; ou, Comment l'esprit vient aux filles. 1919.<br />

With this is bound her "En camarades."<br />

Yeats, William Butler.<br />

Two plays for dancers. 1919. Cuala Press.<br />

Contents: The dreaming of the bones.—The only jealousy of Emer.<br />

Biography<br />

Bispham, David Scull.<br />

A Quaker singer's recollections. 1920. Macmillan.<br />

Autobiography of the career of the famous Philadelphia singer.<br />

842 W76<br />

822 Y22t<br />

92 B4972b<br />

Choate, Joseph Hodges.<br />

r 92 C4482n<br />

New York, Century Association. Joseph Hodges Choate; memorial<br />

addresses delivered before the Century Association, Jan 19, 1918;<br />

resolutions adopted May 16, 1917. 1918.<br />

Essex, Robert Devereux, earl of.<br />

r 92 E846t<br />

Turner, Jesse. Robert Devereux, second earl of Essex. 1917.<br />

[Nixon-Jones Printing Co.]<br />

Reprint from "American law review," v.51, no.3-4, May-Aug. 1917.<br />

Romantic life story of the Elizabethan earl loved by the great queen and doomed by<br />

her to an early and tragic death.<br />

Hinkson, Mrs Katharine (Tynan).<br />

92 Hs67hn<br />

Years of the shadow. 1919. Constable.<br />

Third volume of the author's trilogy of literary reminiscences, following "Twentyfive<br />

years" and "The middle years." Covers her life in Ireland from 1912-19. Comments<br />

upon her literary associates, upon events of the Sinn Fein rebellion and the European<br />

war. Introduces stories of Irish humor and folklore.<br />

Lister, Charles Alfred.<br />

92 L7372I<br />

Letters and recollections, with a memoir by his father Lord Ribblesdale.<br />

1917- Scribner.<br />

Charles Alfred Lister perished in the Dardanelles expedition of the world war.


188 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Travel and Description<br />

(Includes Antiquities)<br />

Forbes, Rosita. 910 F75<br />

Unconducted wanderers. 1919. Lane.<br />

Two English girls, weary with war service, travel by way of the United States<br />

and the Pacific islands to China and Korea. The book describes countries and native<br />

customs as they saw them. Illustrated.<br />

Reiss, Wilhelm, & Stiibel, Alfons. qr 913.85 R32<br />

Necropolis of Ancon in Peru; a contribution to our knowledge of<br />

the culture and industries of the empire of the Incas, being the results<br />

of excavations made on the spot by W. Reiss and A. Stiibel; tr. by A. H.<br />

Keane, with the aid of the general administration of the royal museums<br />

of Berlin. 3v. 1880-87.<br />

Scientific parts of v.3 by Ludwig Wittmack, Rudolf Yirchow and Alfred Nehring.<br />

Contains colored plates with full description.<br />

Europe<br />

Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh. r 016.9142 C2ie<br />

England and the English; a few suggestions for reading; Britain<br />

day, Dec. 7, 1918. 1918. Pittsburgh.<br />

Faure, Gabriel. 914-5 F27<br />

Wanderings in Italy. 1919. Houghton.<br />

A guide book for the educated pilgrim in Piedmont-Lombardy, Emilia, Umbria,<br />

Venetia, the Tyrol. Full of romantic incident and happy quotation.<br />

Gibbons, Mrs Helen Davenport (Brown). 914.436 G363<br />

Paris vistas. 1919. Century.<br />

Memories of life in Paris from 1887-1919, written in a sprightly style by the wife<br />

of Herbert Gibbons, the historian. Sketches by Lester Hornby.<br />

Kay, D. L. 914.15 D8sk<br />

The glamour of Dublin. 1918. Talbot Press.<br />

Impressionistic sketches on actual, historical or fantastic themes inspired by the<br />

capital of Ireland.<br />

United States<br />

New York (city). Directories. r 917.471 N2613<br />

Directory of directors in the city of New York, 1919-20. 1919. Directory<br />

of Directors Co.<br />

Simmons, James Raymond. 917.44 Ssg<br />

Historic trees of Massachusetts. 1919. Marshall Jones Co.<br />

Contents: The trees of Boston common.—The Washington elm.—The lindens at<br />

Plymouth.—The Cushing elm.—The Lakeville elms.—Island grove.—Eliot oak and<br />

other trees of South Natick.—Avery oak and other trees of Dedham.—The Holliston<br />

elms.—The Roby elm.—The Boxford elm.—The Endicott pear tree.—Lexington and<br />

Concord trees.—The ancient oaks at Wayside inn.—The Marlboro elm.—The Grafton<br />

oak.—The Washington elm at Palmer.—The Lafayette elm.—The elm at Court square,<br />

Springfield.—The Sheffield elm.—Deerfield trees.—The Charlemont buttonwood.—<br />

The Sunderland buttonwood.—The Oliver Wendell Holmes pine.—Other well-known<br />

trees.


BOOKS ADDED—APRIL 1920 189<br />

qr 912.753 M2<br />

United States—Commission to investigate title of United States to<br />

lands in District of Columbia.<br />

Map of the public lands under Federal jurisdiction in the District of<br />

Columbia; comp. under the direction of the secretary of war, in the<br />

Office of public buildings and grounds, from information obtained by<br />

the commission to investigate title of United States lands in the District<br />

of Columbia, 1915. 1916. (United States. 64th cong. ist sess.<br />

House. Doc. no.1055, v.140.)<br />

Winter, Nevin Otto.<br />

917.59 W79<br />

Florida; the land of enchantment. 1918. Page.<br />

"Bibliography," p.373~374-<br />

Deals with the history, geography, products and industries of Florida; also, its<br />

advantages and attractions as a resort for travelers.<br />

Wood, Frederic James.<br />

qr 917.4 W85<br />

Turnpikes of New England and evolution of the same through England,<br />

Virginia and Maryland. 1919. Marshall Jones Co.<br />

"Bibliography," p.415-424.<br />

Generously illustrated with reproductions of photographs taken mostly by the author;<br />

also with maps, diagrams and facsimiles of old documents.<br />

Other Countries<br />

Brady, Edwin James.<br />

qr 919.4 B68<br />

Australia unlimited. [1918.] Robertson.<br />

An illustrated history of Australia—its discovery, development, products, industries<br />

and government.<br />

Cochrane, Henry Park.<br />

915.9 C64<br />

Among the Burmans; a record of 15 years of work and its fruitage.<br />

1904. Revell.<br />

A picture of life, customs and conditions in Burma in modern times.<br />

Fujimoto, T.<br />

r 915.2 F97<br />

Story of the geisha girl. [1916.] Lippincott.<br />

A discussion of the origin and development of certain customs connected with<br />

the singing and dancing girls of Japan.<br />

McCarron, Stewart & Co. Sydney, New South Wales. r 919 M12<br />

Stewart's hand book of the Pacific islands; a reliable guide to all the<br />

inhabited islands of the Pacific ocean, for traders, tourists and settlers;<br />

comp. by P. S. Allen. 1918.<br />

Middleton, Philip Harvey.<br />

917.2 M67<br />

Industrial Mexico. 1919. Dodd.<br />

Contents: Government railways.—Private railways and steamships.—Oil industry.<br />

—Mines.—Agriculture.—Timber.—Trade opportunities.—Sugar and coffee plantations.<br />

—Credit and banking.—National debt.—Mexican constitution of 1917.—Government<br />

departments and institutions.<br />

Descriptions and statistics of the resources of Mexico at the present time. Optimistic<br />

in viewpoint.<br />

Moore, Frederick Ferdinand.<br />

915-7 M87<br />

Siberia to-day. 1919. Appleton.<br />

Observations and impressions of an American general staff officer serving in<br />

Siberia. Aims to afford a better understanding of some of the problems which confront<br />

our government there.


I9o<br />

CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

History<br />

General<br />

Adams, Henry, 1838-1918. 9°i A2132<br />

Degradation of the democratic dogma, with an introduction by<br />

Brooks Adams. 1919. Macmillan.<br />

Contents: Introductory note.—The heritage of Henry Adams [by Brooks Adams].<br />

—The tendency of history.—A letter to American teachers of history.—The rule of<br />

phase applied to history.<br />

Henry and Brooks Adams, grandsons of John Quincy Adams, present their convictions<br />

of the progressive degradation of vital energy in society and deplore the general<br />

tendency to expect democracy soon to approach a millenium.<br />

Europe<br />

Barbe, Louis A. 941 B23S<br />

Sidelights on the history, industries & social life of Scotland. 1919.<br />

Blackie.<br />

"Authorities and works consulted," pref. p. 11—13.<br />

A series of essays—some dealing with the relations between Scotland and France<br />

under the reigns of James I and James II; others, with social and industrial conditions<br />

under that of James IV.<br />

Bayley, Mary Clive. 945 B33<br />

The making of modern Italy. 1919. Cassell.<br />

"Chief authorities consulted," pref. p.S.<br />

A brief outline history of the events leading to the liberation of Italy.<br />

picturesque incidents.<br />

Butler, William Francis Thomas. 941-5 B97<br />

Confiscation in Irish history. 1917. Unwin.<br />

Full of<br />

Contents: The Tudor confiscations.—The plantation of LHster.—The plantation<br />

of Leinster.—The confiscation of Connaught and Ormond.—The Cromwellian confiscation.—The<br />

restoration settlement.—Jacobites and Williamites.—The results of confiscation.<br />

Bibliographical foot-notes.<br />

Gauvain, Auguste. r 949.7 G24<br />

La question yougoslave. 1918.<br />

Historical monograph on the Jugoslavs—Serbs, Croats, Slovenes; their racial demarkations,<br />

rights and claims.<br />

Hamilton, Lord Ernest William. 941.6 H21<br />

Elizabethan Ulster. Hurst.<br />

A history of the wars and revolts of the wild Irish chieftains of the 17th century.<br />

Lorenzoni, Giovanni. r 943.6 L87<br />

Cesare Battisti and the Trentino (Feb. 4, 1875-July 12, 1916); a sketc<br />

of his life, character and ideals, with an appendix on the Venezia Tridentina.<br />

[1919. Italian Bureau of Public Information.]<br />

Sayler, Oliver M. 947 S27<br />

Russia, white or red. 1919. Little.<br />

The author visited Russia, 1917-18, for the purpose of studying the famous Moscow<br />

theatre. The book describes the human side of the Bolshevik revolution and attempts to<br />

interpret the impersonal currents which have affected its trend.


BOOKS ADDED—APRIL 1920 191<br />

United States<br />

Dyer, Gus W. QjM Dg8<br />

School history of Tennessee. 1919. National Book Co. (National<br />

history series.)<br />

Kino, Eusebio Francisco. r g_ g j£ 2 „<br />

Kino's historical memoir of Pimeria Alta; a contemporary account<br />

of the beginnings of California, Sonora and Arizona; pub. for the first<br />

time from the original manuscript in the archives of Mexico; tr. into<br />

English, ed. and annotated, by H. E. Bolton. 2v. 1919. Clark. (Spain<br />

in the West, v.3-4.)<br />

"Printed works," v.2, p.279-286; "Manuscripts," v.2, p.287-296.<br />

Bibliographical foot-notes.<br />

Page, Thomas Nelson. 975.5 Pi4m<br />

Mount Vernon and its preservation, 1858-1910; the acquisition, restoration<br />

and care of the home of Washington by the Mount Vernon<br />

Ladies' Association of the Union for over half a century. 1910.<br />

[Knickerbocker Press.]<br />

Van der Zee, Jacob. 977-7 V18<br />

The Hollanders of Iowa. 1912. State Historical Soc. of Iowa.<br />

"Notes and references," p.369-425.<br />

A study of origins and of conditions in the principal Dutch settlements of Iowa.<br />

Other Countries<br />

Cheng, Sih-Gung.<br />

95I C42<br />

Modern China; a political study. 1919. Clarendon Press.<br />

A study of the Chinese government of to-day (1919); its administration, foreign<br />

policy, present problems and political outlook.<br />

McKenzie, Frederick Arthur. 951-9 Mi7k<br />

Korea's fight for freedom. 1920. Revell.<br />

Similar in scope to his "Tragedy of Korea," now out of print. Brings the latter<br />

up to date and includes some of its most debated passages and chapters.<br />

Scholefield, Guy Hardy. 990 S36<br />

The Pacific; its past and future and the policy of the great powers<br />

from the 18th century. 1919. Murray.<br />

Contains bibliographical foot-notes.<br />

A short history of the Pacific islands, with suggestions for their future interests.<br />

European War<br />

Briggs, Martin Shaw.<br />

940.918 B74<br />

Through Egypt in war-time. [1918.] Unwin.<br />

As a Sanitary officer of the Royal Army Medical Corps, the author traveled<br />

thousands of miles to all parts of Egypt. The book deals more with antiquities than<br />

with British army activities. Illustrations by the author.


192 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Carver, Thomas Nixon. qr 940.923 C24<br />

War thrift. 1919. Oxford University Press, Amer. branch.<br />

With this is bound his "Government control of the liquor business in Great Britain<br />

and the United States."<br />

Issued in the series Preliminary economic studies of the war by the Division of<br />

economics and history of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.<br />

Presents (1) an analysis of the nature of thrift and its relation to national economy<br />

and after-war reconstruction; (2) a study of the experience of Great Britain in the effort<br />

to control the liquor business in war time; (3) the prohibition movement in the<br />

United States.<br />

Emery, James Augustin, & Williams, N. B. r 940.923 E58<br />

Governmental war agencies affecting business; prepared for the National<br />

Association of Manufacturers. 1918.<br />

Information, in brief, concerning the jurisdiction and activities of government agencies<br />

as developed by the war needs of business.<br />

England—Ministry of information. r 940.911 E64<br />

Chronology of the war. v.l. 1918. Constable.<br />

v.i. 1914-15.<br />

• Small atlas of the war r 940.911 E64a<br />

v.i and atlas, ed. by Lord Edward Gleichen.<br />

Hunter, Francis T. 940.915 H942<br />

Beatty, Jellicoe, Sims and Rodman; Yankee gobs and British tars,<br />

as seen by an 'anglomanaic.' 1919. Doubleday.<br />

Narrative of European war experiences of a lieutenant in tlie United States navy,<br />

detailed on the American flagship with the grand fleet. A tribute to the English navy.<br />

Hurd, Archibald Spicer, & Bashford, H. H. 940.915 H94S<br />

Sons of admiralty; a short history of the naval war, 1914-18. 1919.<br />

Constable.<br />

Shows the survival and re-awakening of the spirit of admiralty, which has again<br />

declared itself as the peculiar expression in world affairs of the English-speaking races.<br />

Man, Henri de. 940.919 M32<br />

Remaking of a mind; a soldier's thoughts on war and reconstruction.<br />

1919. Scribner.<br />

Contents: Before the war.—The collapse of the "Internationale."—1914.—The spell<br />

of dogmatism.—German patriotism.—German militarism.—Why men fought.—Heroism.—In<br />

the land of despotism.—In the land of freedom.—The new socialism.<br />

Author was a lieutenant in the Belgian army during the European war.<br />

Palmer, Frederick. 940.913 P19<br />

Our greatest battle (the Meuse-Argonne). 1919. Dodd.<br />

Continues and supplements the author's "America in France." Aims to give a comprehensive<br />

and intelligent account of the Meuse-Argonne battle.<br />

Punch. 940.911 P98<br />

Mr Punch's history of the great war. 1919. Cassell.<br />

An outline of the events of the war and of home affairs, month by month, from<br />

the cartoons, prose and verse of "Punch."<br />

Scott, Emmett Jay. g40. gl s 42<br />

Official history of the American negro in the world war; a complete<br />

and authentic narration, from official sources, of the participation o


BOOKS ADDED—APRIL 1920 193<br />

Scott, Emmett Jay—continued. 940.91 S42<br />

American soldiers of the negro race in the world war for democracy;<br />

a full account of the war work <strong>org</strong>anizations of colored men and<br />

women and other civilian activities. 1919. Privately printed.<br />

Ward, Mrs Humphry. 940.91 W2i4f<br />

Fields of victory. [1919.] Hutchinson.<br />

A series of ten letters sent from France to America between Feb. and May, 1919.<br />

An appreciation of the part played by the British empire in the last campaigns of<br />

the European war. A sequel to "England's effort."<br />

Miscellaneous<br />

Carey, Thomas Joseph. 347-2 C19<br />

The real estate educator; a repository of useful information for<br />

ready reference, especially designed for real estate agents, operators,<br />

builders, contractors, manufacturers and business men, by F. M. Payne<br />

[pseud.]. 1916. Carey.<br />

qr 326 S75<br />

Spirit of liberty; weekly, Sept. 25, 1841-Sept. 30, 1843. v.i-v.2, no.51.<br />

1841-43. Pittsburgh.<br />

v.r carries the old series voluming, v.5, no.19-51; v.6, no.3-17.<br />

v.i, no.34-35, 43, May 28-June 4, July 30, 1842; v.2, no.18, 48-49, Feb. 4, Sept.<br />

2-9, 1843, wanting.<br />

Published by Edward Smith for the executive committee of the Western Pennsylvania<br />

Anti-Slavery Society.<br />

United States—Agriculture, Department of. r 640 U25<br />

Thrift leaflet, no.l-date. [I9i9]-date.<br />

Prepared in co-operation with the Treasury department.<br />

Books for the Blind<br />

The Library has a collection of about 3,700 books and 75 periodicals for the blind.<br />

The Pennsylvania Home Teaching Society and Free Circulating Library for the Blind<br />

supports in this district a teacher, herself totally blind, who, under the direction of this<br />

Library, visits the adult blind in their homes and teaches them to read. This service<br />

and the use of the books are absolutely free to all the adult blind in Pittsburgh and western<br />

Pennsylvania and the Director requests that names and addreses of such persons be<br />

sent to him in order that the teacher may call upon them.<br />

Moon Type<br />

Bible—New testament. Mark. qE 226.3 B47S<br />

St. Mark.<br />

Bible—New testament. Luke. qE 22D -4 B47S<br />

St. Luke. 2v.<br />

Bible—New testament. John. qE 226.5 B47stj<br />

St. John. 2v.<br />

Bible—New testament. Revelation. qE 228 B47<br />

Revelation.


194 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Young People's Books<br />

Colum, Padraic.<br />

j C727g<br />

The girl who sat by the ashes; illustrated by D. S. Walker. Macmillan.<br />

The tale telleth how Girl-go-with-the-Goats loses house room, how she finds the<br />

Woman of a Thousand Years and comes to the king's castle and of what there befalls<br />

her. A new Cinderella story.<br />

Davies, Ellen Chivers.<br />

j D3i2t<br />

Tales of Serbian life. Dodd.<br />

Contents: The little house at Novo Selo.—The Villa Golub.—Stefan the cowherd.<br />

Dickens, Charles.<br />

j 92 D551W<br />

Wiggin, Mrs Kate Douglas, afterward Mrs Riggs. A child's journey<br />

with Dickens. 1912. Houghton.<br />

Vivid account of the author's chance meeting with Dickens on a railway journey<br />

when she was a little girl.


Rules for Lending Books<br />

i. Hours. The adult Lending Rooms of the Central and branch<br />

libraries are open daily from 9 a. m. to 9 p. m., Sundays and holidays<br />

excepted. The Childrens Rooms in the branches are closed after 6 p. m.<br />

The Central Childrens Room is open daily except Sundays and holidays<br />

from 9 a. m to 9 p. m.<br />

2. Borrowers. Any resident or taxpayer of Pittsburgh is entitled<br />

to borrow books from the Library by signing the proper application<br />

and agreement and receiving a borrower's card. In the case of a child<br />

under fourteen years of age the application must also be signed by the<br />

parent or guardian.<br />

Non-residents who can call at the Library for their books may<br />

obtain a borrower's card on payment of one dollar a year in advance.<br />

For non-residents who wish their books sent by mail or express the<br />

annual fee is two dollars. If a non-resident is employed or attending<br />

school in the city the guaranty of a resident tax-payer will be accepted<br />

instead of this fee.<br />

Temporary residents may borrow books on making a deposit of<br />

five dollars, or more if deemed desirable, this sum to be returned to the<br />

depositor upon surrender of his borrower's card.<br />

3. Borrowers' cards. A borrower's card may be used at the Central<br />

and branch libraries.<br />

Each borrower is responsible for all books charged on his card.<br />

Change of residence must be reported immediately.<br />

Lost cards should be reported at once. Adult cards will be replaced<br />

fourteen days after notice of such loss. Juvenile cards will be replaced<br />

fourteen days after notice of loss is given upon the payment of a fine<br />

of five cents, or replaced without payment six months after notice of<br />

loss is given.<br />

4. Issue of books. Holders of adult cards may borrow as many<br />

books of non-fiction as are needed at one time, together with two books<br />

of fiction, only one of which shall have been published within the current<br />

or the preceding year. Holders of juvenile cards may borrow two<br />

juvenile books at one time.<br />

Books may be kept two weeks, except some new and popular<br />

books, which may be kept but seven days. Magazines are lent for<br />

seven days only.<br />

195


196 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

5. Renewals. Non-fiction and certain standard fiction may be<br />

once renewed for two weeks from the date on which the request for<br />

renewal is received.<br />

Requests for renewal may be made in person, by mail, or by telephone.<br />

In each case the call number of the book, the number of the<br />

borrower's card, and the date on which the book is due must be given.<br />

In return the borrower will receive a renewal card, which must be<br />

brought with the book when it is returned.<br />

6. Reserves. Books may be reserved at the Library by payment<br />

of one cent for a postal card notice. As soon as the book is returned<br />

to the Library, this postal card will be mailed to the person making<br />

the request, and the book will be reserved two days. Requests for<br />

reserves may be made by telephone, in which case the cost of the postal<br />

card will be collected when the borrower calls for the book.<br />

7. Fines. A fine of two cents a day (including Sundays and holidays)<br />

must be paid on each book kept overtime. The holder of a<br />

juvenile card may forfeit the use of his card for six months from the<br />

date upon which an overdue book is returned in place of payment of<br />

this fine. If a book is not returned within three weeks after the date<br />

on which it is due, a messenger will be sent for it. This messenger has<br />

authority to collect the fine incurred and an additional fee of twentyfive<br />

cents for messenger service.<br />

A borrower must pay for books lost or injured while charged on<br />

his card. No books may be borrowed until fines and claims for damages<br />

have been paid.<br />

No claim can be established because of the failure of the Post<br />

Office to deliver notices to or from the Library.


Publications of the Library Now in Print<br />

Prices. Where two prices are given, the first is that for which<br />

the publication is sold at the Library only. All prices are strictly net,<br />

except for individual publications ordered in lots of twenty or more.<br />

Remittances must be made in advance, payable to Carnegie Library of<br />

Pittsburgh. All publications not marked * may be had free at the<br />

Library, or will be sent postpaid for 5 cents each.<br />

•Classified Catalogue of the Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh.<br />

FIRST SERIES, 1895-1902. 1907. vol. 1-3. 3,890 pp. $12.00.<br />

SECOND SERIES, 1902-1906. 1908. vol. 4-5. 2,020 pp. $5.00.<br />

THIRD SERIES, 1907-1911. 1914. vol. 6-8. 3,475 pp. $8.00.<br />

Bound in buckram with gilt tops. Include full author and subject indexes.<br />

The same [in pamphlet form].<br />

FIRST SERIES, 1895-1902. 10 parts. 1903-07.<br />

Part 1. General Works. 1907. 67 pp. 10 cents, postpaid.<br />

Part 2. Philosophy and Religion. 1903. 223 pp. Out of print.<br />

Part 3. Sociology and Philology. 1904. 340 pp. 15 cents; postpaid, 25 cents.<br />

Part 4. Natural Science and Useful Arts. 1904. 598 pp. 35 cents; postpaid,<br />

50 cents.<br />

Part 5. Fine Arts. 1905. 351 pp. 15 cents; postpaid, 25 cents.<br />

Part 6. Literature. 1905. 308 pp. 15 cents; postpaid, 25 cents.<br />

Part 7. Fiction. 1906. 446 pp. 25 cents; postpaid, 40 cents.<br />

Part 8. History and Travel. 1907- 691 pp. 50 cents; postpaid, 65 cents.<br />

Part 9. Biography. 1907. 381 pp. 20 cents; postpaid, 30 cents.<br />

Part 10. Indexes, Title-pages, Contents, Preface and Synopsis of Classification.<br />

1907. 850 pp. $1.00; postpaid, $1.20.<br />

SECOND SERIES, 1902-1906. 5 parts. 1907-08.<br />

Part 1. General Works, Philosophy, Religion, Sociology and Philology. 1907-<br />

425 pp. Out of print.<br />

Part 2. Natural Science, Useful Arts and Fine Arts. 1907. 477 PP- 45<br />

cents ; postpaid, 60 cents.<br />

Part 3. Literature, English Fiction and Fiction in Foreign Languages. 1908.<br />

342 pp. 40 cents; postpaid, 50 cents.<br />

Part 4. History and Travel, Collected Biography and Individual Biography.<br />

1908. 465 pp. 45 cents; postpaid, 60 cents.<br />

Part 5. Indexes, Title-pages, Contents, Preface and Synopsis of Classification.<br />

1908. 460 pp. 80 cents; postpaid, 95 cents.<br />

THIRD SERIES, 1907-1911- 10 parts. 1912-14.<br />

Part 1. General Works, Philosophy, Religion. 1912. 372 pp. 40 cents;<br />

postpaid, 50 cents.<br />

Part 2. Sociology, Philology. 1912. 418 pp. 45 cents; postpaid, 60 cents.<br />

Part 3. Natural Science, Useful Arts. 1913. 623 pp. 60 cents; postpaid,<br />

75 cents.<br />

Part 4. Fine Arts. 1913- 237 PP- 25 cents; postpaid, 35 cents.<br />

Part 5. Literature. 1913- 271 PP- 30 cents; postpaid, 40 cents.<br />

Part 6. English Fiction, Fiction in Foreign Languages. 1913- 294 PP- 3°<br />

cents; postpaid, 40 cents.<br />

Part 7. History and Travel. 1914- 4»i PP- 40 cents; postpaid, 50 cents.<br />

Part 8. Biography. 1914- 276 PP- 30 cents; postpaid, 40 cents.<br />

Part 9. Books for the Blind. 1914. 44 PP- 5 cents; postpaid, 10 cents.<br />

Part 10. Indexes, Title-pages, Contents, Preface and Synopsis of Classification.<br />

1914. 816 pp. 80 cents; postpaid, $1.00.<br />

FOURTH SERIES, 1912-1917- 10 parts. 1919-<br />

Parti. General Works, Philosophy, Religion. 1919. 208 pp. 50 cents; postpaid,<br />

65 cents. ., g.<br />

Part 2. Sociology, Philology. 1919. 360 pp. 80 cents; postpaid, $1.00.


198 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Monthly Bulletin. 50 cents a year, postpaid.<br />

Not published in August and September.<br />

Annual Reports, ist-23d, 1896-1918. Sent free upon request.<br />

Except the 3d, 6th and 20th, which are out of print.<br />

Books in the Library of the American Philatelic Society. 1910. 20 pp.<br />

Catalogue of the Carnegie Library School; a school for training in<br />

General Library Work, Library Work with Children and School<br />

Library Work. Sent free upon request.<br />

*Debate Index. 3d edition. 1919. 116 pp. 25 cents; postpaid, 30 cents.<br />

The Function of the Public Library in a Democracy. 1920. 20 pp.<br />

Periodicals and Other Serials Currently Received by the Carnegie<br />

Library of Pittsburgh. 7th edition. 1915. 42 pp.<br />

Rules for Filing Cards in the Dictionary Catalogues of the Carnegie<br />

Library of Pittsburgh. Reprint of 2d edition. 1918. 32 pp.<br />

What a Public Library Finds to Do; by Elisa May Willard. 1917. 18 pp.<br />

Reference Lists<br />

History<br />

Books of Interest in Connection with the European War. 1914. 26 pp.<br />

Braddock's Expedition. 11 pp. (Monthly Bulletin, Nov. 1906.)<br />

England and the English; a Few Suggestions for Reading. 1918. 12 pp.<br />

Expeditions of General Forbes against Fort Duquesne. 1908. 20 pp.<br />

Expeditions of General Bouquet to the Ohio Country, 1763 and 1764.<br />

11 pp. (Monthly Bulletin, Dec. 1909.)<br />

Letters of General Forbes; Reprint of 35 Letters Relating to the Expedition<br />

against Fort Duquesne. 63 pp. 20 cents, postpaid.<br />

(Monthly Bulletin, Feb.-May 1909.)<br />

•Pennsylvania; a Reading List for the Use of Schools, with Special<br />

Reference to Indian Warfare and the Local History of Pittsburgh,<br />

1911. 83 pp. 20 cents; postpaid, 25 cents.<br />

Pittsburgh in 1816. 1916. 75 pp.<br />

Washington's Visits to Pittsburgh and the Ohio Country. 15 pp.<br />

(Monthly Bulletin, Feb. 1908.)<br />

The Whiskey Insurrection. 9 pp. (Monthly Bulletin, July 1906.)<br />

Biography<br />

Famous Royal Women; a Reading List for Girls. 1908. 11 pp.<br />

Lives and Letters; a Selected and Annotated List. 1910. 36pp.<br />

*Men of Science and Industry; a Guide to the Biographies of Scientists,<br />

Engineers, Inventors and Physicians, in the Carnegie Library of<br />

Pittsburgh. 1915. 189pp. 20 cents; postpaid, 30 cents.<br />

Sociology<br />

Housing. 1912. 45 pp.<br />

Immigration. 1918. 12 pp.<br />

Vocational Guidance. Supplement. 10 pp. (Monthly Bulletin, Dec.<br />

I9IS-)


PUBLICATIONS OF THE LIBRARY<br />

199<br />

Air-Brakes. 1915. 55 pp.<br />

Air Conditioning. 1914. 58 pp.<br />

Publications of Interest to Engineers<br />

Brick Manufacture and Bricklaying. 26 pp. (Monthly Bulletin Jan<br />

1912.)<br />

By-Product Coking. 1915. 40 pp.<br />

Case-Hardening. 1918. 10 pp.<br />

Electric Driving in Rolling-Mills and Foundries. 11 pp. (Monthly<br />

Bulletin, Nov. 1907.)<br />

Electric Heating and Cooking. 1910. 16 pp.<br />

Engineering Ethics. 1917. 17 pp.<br />

Floods and Flood Protection. 48 pp. (Monthly Bulletin, July 1908.)<br />

Floods and Flood Protection. Supplement. 1911. 19 pp.<br />

The Gyroscope. 1917. 23 pp.<br />

•Index to Proceedings of the Engineers' Society of Western Pennsylvania,<br />

Volumes 1 to 20, 1880-1904; Compiled by Harrison W.<br />

Craver. 1906. 144 pp. $1.00 postpaid.<br />

•Index to the Classified Catalogue of the Technology Department. 2d<br />

edition. 1916. 63 pp. 10 cents.<br />

Lampblack. 1919. 8 pp.<br />

List of Technical Indexes and Bibliographies Appearing Serially. 1910.<br />

17 pp.<br />

Market Prices Appearing Currently in Technical and Trade Journals.<br />

1918. 6 pp.<br />

•Men of Science and Industry; a Guide to the Biographies of Scientists,<br />

Engineers, Inventors and Physicians, in the Carnegie Library of<br />

Pittsburgh. 1915. 189 pp. 20 cents; postpaid, 30 cents.<br />

Metal Corrosion and Protection. 2d edition, revised and enlarged.<br />

58 pp. (Monthly Bulletin, July 1909.)<br />

Mica. 12 pp. (Monthly Bulletin, Oct. 1908.)<br />

One Hundred Recent Books on Agriculture. 1910. 19 pp.<br />

Refuse and Garbage Disposal. 1909. 39 pp.<br />

Road Dust Preventives. 1916. 39 pp.<br />

•Sand; Its Occurrence, Properties and Uses. 1918. 72 pp. 15 cents.<br />

postpaid.<br />

Scientific and Technical Reference Books. 19 pp. (Monthly Bulletin,<br />

Nov. 1916.)<br />

•Sewage Disposal and Treatment. 1910. 96 pp. 15 cents, postpaid.<br />

Smoke Prevention. 18 pp. (Monthly Bulletin, May 1907.)<br />

Sodium Nitrate Industry of Chile. 7 pp. (Monthly Bulletin, March<br />

1908.)<br />

Steam Turbines. 21 pp. (Monthly Bulletin, Nov. 1904.)<br />

•Technical Book Review Index, v.i-date, March 1917-date. 50 cents<br />

a year, postpaid.<br />

No. 1-3, March, April, May, published in the Monthly Bulletin of those months,<br />

5 cents each, postpaid.<br />

v.i, no.4-v.3, no.3 (July 1917-September 1919), issued separately, quarterly, 15<br />

cents each, postpaid.


CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Trees and Forestry. 1917. 18 pp.<br />

Water Softening. 8 pp. (Monthly Bulletin, June 1904.)<br />

Library Work with Children<br />

•Catalogue of Books, Annotated and Arranged, and Provided by the<br />

Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh for the Use of the First Eight<br />

Grades in the Pittsburgh Schools. 1907. 331 pp. 35 cents;<br />

postpaid, 50 cents.<br />

•Annotated Catalogue of Books Used in the Home Libraries and<br />

Reading Clubs. 1905. no pp. 20 cents; postpaid, 25 cents.<br />

Patriotism Through Literature; by Elva S. Smith. 1919. 17 pp.<br />

(Monthly Bulletin, June 1919.)<br />

Story-Telling<br />

Stories from the Ballads of Robin Hood; Outlines for Story-Telling.<br />

1914- 38 pp.<br />

Stories from the Norse; Outlines for Story-Telling. 1914- 22 pp.<br />

•Stories to Tell to Children. 2d edition. 1918. 72 pp. 25 cents.<br />

Reading Lists<br />

Famous Royal Women; a Reading List for Girls. 1908. n pp.<br />

Favorite Books of Well-known People When They Were Boys and<br />

Girls. 2d reprint. 1918. 12 pp.<br />

"Foreign Lands Where Wonders Are." 1911. 14 pp.<br />

•Pennsylvania; a Reading List for the Use of Schools, with Special<br />

Reference to Indian Warfare and the Local History of Pittsburgh.<br />

1911. 83 pp. 20 cents; postpaid, 25 cents.<br />

April 9, 1920.


CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

MONTHLY BULLETIN<br />

VOL. 25 MAY 1920 NO. 5<br />

MOUNT WASHINGTON BRANCH<br />

CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

PITTSBURGH<br />

CARNEGIE LIBRARY<br />

1920


Board of Trustees<br />

S. H. CHURCH, President<br />

ANDREW W. MELLON, Vice-President<br />

J. D. HAILMAN, Secretary<br />

JAMES H. REED, Treasurer<br />

E. V. BABCOCK DAVID B. OLIVER<br />

W. W. BLACKBURN H. K. PORTER<br />

JOHN H. DAILEY<br />

W. H. ROBERTSON<br />

W. Y. ENGLISH CHARLES L. TAYLOR<br />

ROBERT GARLAND<br />

J. J. TURNER<br />

JOHN H. HENDERSON<br />

H. D. WILLIAMS<br />

JOHN S. HERRON<br />

DANIEL WINTERS<br />

Library Committee<br />

J. J. TURNER, Chairman<br />

E. V. BABCOCK J. D. HAILMAN<br />

ROBERT GARLAND DANIEL WINTERS<br />

Director<br />

JOHN H. LEETE<br />

Central Library, Schenley Park<br />

Branch Libraries<br />

Lawrenceville Branch, 279 Fisk Street<br />

West End Branch, Wabash and Neptune Streets<br />

Wylie Avenue Branch, Wylie Avenue and Green Street<br />

Mount Washington Branch, 315 Grandview Avenue<br />

Hazelwood Branch, 4748 Monongahela Street<br />

East Liberty Branch, Station Street and Larimer Avenue<br />

South Side Branch, Carson and Twenty-second Streets<br />

Homewood Branch, Hamilton and Lang Avenues


Contents<br />

Page<br />

Shakespeare's Birthday - - 205<br />

Pageants - - - - - 208<br />

The "New Hope Group" in<br />

the Carnegie Institute Exhibition<br />

of Paintings - - 212<br />

John A. Brashear - 215<br />

Florence Nightingale Centenary<br />

- - - - - - 216<br />

Mount Washington Branch 220<br />

Vacation Book Privileges - 221<br />

Exhibition of French Posters 221<br />

Exhibition for Secondary School<br />

Students - - - - - 221<br />

Prices of Library Publications 222<br />

Present Day Problems - 222<br />

Industrial Fatigue (List) - -223<br />

Books Added, April 1 to<br />

May 1, 1920.<br />

Architecture - . - 238<br />

Biography - - - - - 243<br />

Blind, Books for the - - 247<br />

Commerce - - - - - 234<br />

Drama. Theatre - - - 241<br />

Economics - - - - - 232<br />

Education - - - - - 233<br />

Engineering - - - - - 236<br />

Ethics - - _ _ -<br />

European War -<br />

Fiction - - - - -<br />

Fine Arts -<br />

General Works<br />

History - - - - -<br />

Language -<br />

Law - - - - - -<br />

Literature - - - -<br />

Maps - - - - - -<br />

Mines and Mining -<br />

Municipal Art -<br />

Music - - - - -<br />

Philosophy - - - -<br />

Poetry - - - - -<br />

Politics and Government<br />

Public Health -<br />

Recreation - - - -<br />

Religion -<br />

Science -<br />

Sociology - - - -<br />

Travel and Description -<br />

Useful Arts<br />

Women - - - - -<br />

Young People's Books<br />

Page<br />

228<br />

• 247<br />

227<br />

- 237<br />

228<br />

- 246<br />

234<br />

- 232<br />

240<br />

- 245<br />

237<br />

- 238<br />

239<br />

- 228<br />

241<br />

- 231<br />

230<br />

- 239<br />

229<br />

- 234<br />

230<br />

- 244<br />

235<br />

- 234<br />

248


Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh<br />

Monthly Bulletin<br />

Published monthly, except in August and September, by the Carnegie Library of<br />

Pittsburgh, Forbes Street and Bellefield Avenue, Schenley Park, Pittsburgh, Pa. President,<br />

S. H. Church, Carnegie Library, Forbes Street and Bellefield Avenue; Secretary,<br />

J. D. Hailman; Treasurer, James H. Reed, 1027 Carnegie Building; Director, John H.<br />

Leete, Carnegie Library, Forbes Street and Bellefield Avenue.<br />

Subscription 50 cents a year.<br />

Vol. 25 May 1920 No. 5<br />

Shakespeare's Birthday<br />

An address by Frank P. Day, Director of the Division<br />

of Academic Studies, Carnegie Institute of Technology,<br />

delivered at the exercises in honor of Shakespeare, at<br />

Carnegie Institute, Pittsburgh, April 23, 1920.<br />

Three hundred and fifty-six years ago to-day—if we accept<br />

the traditional date—in the little Warwickshire village of Stratford-on-Avon<br />

was born a baby similar to a million other babies<br />

born that year throughout the world. He had no mark of<br />

greatness, around his head there was no aureole, no earthquake<br />

shook the little town, nor did the moon's eclipse portend the<br />

advent of genius. Like other little boys he grew up, idled over<br />

"Lily's Grammar," played truant, and roamed his hills and<br />

dales. At the age of eighteen he left the country to seek his<br />

fortune in London—then a small city; heath and wood were<br />

near by, the Thames still silver.<br />

He was poor and without either academic or technical training.<br />

Destiny prepared his way. Marlowe was his John the<br />

Baptist: the new drama was on the rising flood as is the<br />

moving picture to-day. In Shakespeare's time thirteen theatres<br />

were running in London: a hundred years later with London<br />

twice the size there were but three. After a few short prentice<br />

205


206 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

years as actor and dramatist, he wrote many plays—some of<br />

which are among the world's greatest treasures of art—promoted<br />

theatres, and made money. He was richly endowed<br />

with genius and common sense; never shied at the fact that<br />

two and two make four, was never a poseur nor claimed temperament<br />

as a shield for incompetence. Though his head was<br />

above the clouds he stood with both feet firm upon the earth.<br />

In the ripeness of early manhood he retired to his old home—<br />

tradition says, and I hope it is true, with a volume of Don<br />

Quixote in his saddle bag—to spend the last years of his life<br />

among old friends and comrades from London.<br />

His knowledge of books was meagre; he was never a great<br />

scholar in the accepted use of the word. Sometimes we can see<br />

that he is turning North's "Plutarch" word for word into blank<br />

verse. His materials were in the life around him; his university<br />

was the city street; his study the world of men. He was a<br />

natural story teller, he had strong poetic feeling and an unerring<br />

instinct for a dramatic situation. His knowledge of<br />

humanity was large, his heart was great, and he gave freely of<br />

himself.<br />

Though he towers head and shoulders above all the poets<br />

of our speech, he is the humblest: he demanded no recognition<br />

and received little from his contemporaries. How unlike<br />

Goethe! He had no great opinion of himself; one of his<br />

noblest sonnets runs thus :<br />

When, in disgrace with fortune and men's eyes,<br />

I all alone beweep my outcast state,<br />

And trouble deaf heaven with my bootless cries<br />

And look upon myself and curse my fate,<br />

Wishing me like to one more rich in hope<br />

Featur'd like him, like him with friends possess'd,<br />

Desiring this man's art and that man's scope.<br />

With what I most enjoy contented least;<br />

Yet in my thoughts myself almost despising.<br />

Haply I think on thee, and then my state,<br />

Like to the lark at break of day arising<br />

From sullen earth, sings hymns at heaven's gate;<br />

For thy sweet love remember'd such wealth brings<br />

That then I scorn to change my state with kings.


SHAKESPEARE'S BIRTHDAY 207<br />

While never a prude he constantly advises us that the great<br />

principles of life are sound and enduring, that those who do<br />

evil will suffer, that those striving for the right eventually save<br />

their souls; that the just and unjust must bear equally the slings<br />

and arrows of outrageous fortune, but that the spirit of the<br />

just 'mid death and disaster is unconquerable.<br />

After a lapse of three centuries it is the man of ideas, the<br />

poet, who has triumphed. Shakespeare's London has vanished,<br />

the city wall long since fell in decay, the heath land is a slum,<br />

the silver Thames a sullen and begrimed canal, nobles and<br />

captains of industry with their crumbling palaces are f<strong>org</strong>otten,<br />

all material things have wasted and changed; "Midsummer<br />

Night's Dream," "Hamlet," "Othello," and the "Tempest" endure.<br />

The poet often despised in his time sees more wisely<br />

than those who have their eyes upon the earth.<br />

The poet's eye in a fine frenzy rolling<br />

Doth glance from heaven to earth, from earth to heaven;<br />

And, as imagination bodies forth,<br />

The forms of things unknown, the poet's pen<br />

Turns them to shapes, and gives to airy nothing<br />

A local habitation and a name.<br />

The hearts of all those who truly love poetry is Shakespeare's<br />

imperishable shrine.<br />

He has given pleasure to peoples of three centuries before<br />

us. pleasure ever increasing to our generation. He has added<br />

much to the brightness and happiness of the world; he has<br />

brought an hour of ease to those racked with pain and longsickness.<br />

In the haversack of many a lad who died in Flanders<br />

was a pocket edition of Shakespeare.<br />

For all he has given the world, for his great-heartedness,<br />

for his humility, for his immeasurable contribution to the riches<br />

of humanity, we, with thousands of others to-day, wherever the<br />

English speech is heard in far regions of the earth, pay our<br />

tribute to his memory.


208 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Pageants<br />

The elaborate pageant to be given in Pittsburgh early in<br />

June as part of the celebration of the fiftieth anniversary of the<br />

founding of Pennsylvania College for Women, again arouses<br />

in Pittsburgh an interest in pageantry as an art. The history<br />

of this form of dramatic representation is worthy of study not<br />

only as showing one development of the dramatic instinct common<br />

to all races and times, but also because it has a distinct<br />

place in the development of civic and national pride. This is<br />

not a new interest in Pittsburgh, for in 1909 a very successful<br />

pageant representing the history of the city was presented by<br />

school children, and other celebrations of a similar nature have<br />

attracted popular attention. People who do not know how<br />

ancient an art this is, and how persistent has been its hold on<br />

popular interest through many ages and stages of history, will<br />

find suggestive this brief review of pageantry taken from an<br />

article by William Orr which serves as the introduction to<br />

Esther Willard Bates's "Pageants and Pageantry."<br />

Pageantry as a means of popular entertainment and instruction<br />

may be said to be a recent discovery, as far as America is concerned.<br />

In England the value and possibilities of the presentation in realistic<br />

form of great historical events have for man3 r years been well understood,<br />

and the pageant parade has become a common feature at anniversary<br />

celebrations. A new calling—that of planning and <strong>org</strong>anizing<br />

of such processions—is now attracting artists, musicians, and dramatists.<br />

On the continent of Europe, civic festivals, for many generations,<br />

have been enriched and dignified by floats, tableaux, and cavalcades.<br />

ordered and fashioned to depict scenes in the past history of town or<br />

nation. Even crude and savage peoples, in religious ceremonials, in<br />

their rituals of nature worship, or in the triumphal honors paid to rulers<br />

and warriors, delight to recall in vivid action, in color, form, and sound,<br />

the charm, grandeur, and quaintness of "the days of eld."<br />

Now that the practice of pageantry has become established on this<br />

side of the Atlantic, it is rapidly developing under the influence of<br />

American ingenuity and energy. . .<br />

With characteristic initiative, our academic and professional<br />

managers of festivals are discovering new phases and uses of pageantry.<br />

The early form was that of floats in procession, each representing<br />

some scene, historic, symbolic, or allegorical. These presentations<br />

were often closely associated in performance with the localities where<br />

the original incident occurred, as Lady Godiva's ride at Coventry, or


PAGEANTS 209<br />

the episode of the killing of William Rufus in the New Forest, and the<br />

carriage of his body in the charcoal burner's cart. Such realism, while<br />

impressive, has practical limitations, and when pushed too far, actually<br />

detracts from the effect, because no room is given for the play of fancy<br />

and imagination.<br />

American pageantry has now evolved three species of presentation.<br />

First, the parade composed of floats and marching companies and<br />

troops of horsemen. . .<br />

Second are out-of-door performances at selected sites of historical<br />

events, or in a natural or artificial amphitheater. In this case there is<br />

larger opportunity for action, music, and speaking...<br />

Third, indoor entertainments made up of scenes so related as to<br />

possess unity. Some theme, such as the growth of national spirit, the<br />

struggle of a people for liberty, the progress of science or education,<br />

may be used as the keynote. . .<br />

It is entirely safe to prophesy that pageantry is to win an increasing<br />

recognition as a means of popular education and entertainment.<br />

The instincts to which it appeals are elemental and universal in humanity.<br />

Children, youth, and manhood delight in the sensuous symbolism<br />

in which such representations abound. Popular festivals, city and<br />

national anniversaries, thus find a fitting method of celebrating and<br />

recalling the deeds of the fathers. Local pride and patriotism are<br />

quickened by contemplation of the great past out of which the present<br />

has come. Such productions as the Champlain celebration at Quebec<br />

in 1908, and the Hudson-Fulton pageant at New York, in October,<br />

1909, give communities a wide advertisement and also teach valuable<br />

lessons of cooperation and common endeavor. There is no better way<br />

to induct immigrants and their children into a knowledge of American<br />

history and institutions than through the medium of historical tableaux<br />

given in a setting both dramatic and artistic. And an abiding sense of<br />

the stability of society is gained as one enters into the very head of the<br />

human experience out of which it has grown. . .<br />

As the term "pageant" is used now, it means a dramatic representation<br />

of several scenes, either tableaux or miniature integral dramas<br />

which are unified by prologues. The real pageant is given out of<br />

doors, its spectators number thousands, genuine distance gives its<br />

beauty to the production, the stage is as vast as the eye can reach, and<br />

the production aims to reproduce actuality rather than illusion. The<br />

giving of a pageant is an act of veneration or of patriotism. . .<br />

Any review of the uses of pageantry in past ages and of its development<br />

in recent time must recognize that, while certain elements are<br />

constant, the form of presentation and the manner of acting the scenes<br />

have varied greatly. The factors essential to true pageantry are the<br />

use of the costumes and practices of older days and the representation<br />

of important events in history as expressions of the manifold activities<br />

and aspirations of the human soul. In other words, the reason of such<br />

displays is found in the innate desire for an expression of the facts of


210 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

life in the guise of poetry, art, and romance. As men are wont to idealize<br />

the characters and conditions of former times, the material for<br />

pageants is naturally taken from older days on which a glamour and<br />

halo rests. . .<br />

The pageant. . .has found favor in all times and among all peoples.<br />

The description of the great festivals of the ancients as contained in<br />

their annals and sculptured figures on tombs, temples, pyramids, and<br />

monuments show that Egyptians, Greeks, and Romans were adept at<br />

introducing into their celebrations many features of pageantry. One<br />

of the best illustrations is the Panathenaic procession, as presented on<br />

the frieze of the Parthenon, reproductions of which are so often used<br />

as decorations. When a Roman consul was tendered a triumph, the<br />

long column, as it made its way to the Capitoline Hill, contained, in the<br />

serried legions, the groups of captives and spoils of war, symbols of<br />

the might of the city and of her dominion over strange and distant<br />

peoples, while memorials in emblems, insignia, lictors, vestals, and<br />

aediles in robes of office stirred the pride of the citizens in the mighty<br />

past. So, too, under the empire, the great exhibitions in the amphitheater<br />

impressed the imagination of a fickle populace with the supreme<br />

majesty of their rulers and with the grandeur of the Roman state. . .<br />

When European society began to take definite shape, after the<br />

stress and tumult of the dark ages, the church and court took up again<br />

the work of popular entertainment. An elaborate ritual of worship<br />

was built up, and miracle and morality plays came into vogue. The<br />

accession of a new monarch gave occasion for coronation processions<br />

and ceremonies in place of the Roman triumph. The age of chivalry<br />

brought in jousts and tournaments and contests of troubadours.<br />

Knightly orders, such as the Templars and Hospitalers, made much of<br />

insignia, devices, and ordered and intricate evolutions. Elaborate armor<br />

and heraldry added distinction and splendor to all gatherings. Probably<br />

no time was so fruitful in material to impress the senses and stir<br />

the imagination, and, to this day, the makers of spectacular performances<br />

find a wealth of material in the panoply and ceremonials of the<br />

Middle Ages. Contact with the East through the Crusades brought<br />

in new and strange costumes, and music of peculiar charm. Princes<br />

and monarchs delighted to surround themselves with rich symbols of<br />

authority and power. Nor did they neglect to employ such rites and<br />

ceremonies in their functions and processions as would lend the sanction<br />

of religion and give plausibility to their claim of king and noble<br />

of divine right. Scott, in his Waverley novels, delights to picture such<br />

stately scenes, and his description of the tournament at Ashby de la<br />

Zouche in "Ivanhoe" and the festivities at Kenilworth Castle in honor<br />

of Queen Elizabeth are models of their kind. An earlier pageant that<br />

made a distinct impression on the popular mind was that of the Field<br />

of the Cloth of Gold at the meeting of Henry VIII of England and<br />

Francis I of France. In the free cities of Italy and Germany, the rulers<br />

made much of civic festivals on fixed days and especial occasions, and


PAGEANTS 211<br />

established certain rules and principles that obtain to this day. Monarchies<br />

found their great opportunities on coronation days, and the<br />

account of the exercises at the crowning of Ge<strong>org</strong>e V of England in<br />

1911, showed how much of the archaic is preserved in that intricate and<br />

elaborate ceremonial, while the interest the exercises aroused in Great<br />

Britain and the Empire was in proof of the hold the function has on<br />

the popular mind. Napoleon, who well understood the power of<br />

dramatic effect, sought on many occasions the aid of ordered processions<br />

and brilliant display as a dramatization of his power and a means<br />

of delight of the French populace.<br />

In countries where the government is popular and democratic in<br />

character, pageantry, while it may be used on rare occasions in honor<br />

of rulers or of successful statesmen, inventors, scholars, or warriors,<br />

exists in the main as a means of entertaining, amusing, and educating<br />

the people, and as an expression of pride and glory in educational,<br />

commercial, and civic institutions. . .A series of notable celebrations of<br />

anniversaries of historic towns, whose foundations date back to the<br />

very beginnings of English annals, has resulted in an entirely new and<br />

fruitful application and use of this method of celebration. Oxford,<br />

Coventry, Warwick, Bath, and Liverpool have made distinct successes<br />

of their pageants and attracted international attention. . .<br />

One of the earliest formal pageants in the United States was that<br />

held at Marietta, Ohio, in 1888. The aim, distinctly educational, was to<br />

teach history by the objective method, and the participants included<br />

many of the leading men and women of the community. . .<br />

Success has also been made in this country of the pageant performance<br />

on an open-air stage. The Quebec celebration was, in some<br />

respects, of this nature, but with grand effects in the marching of<br />

troops. Hartford, at the dedication of her great bridge in October,<br />

1908, carried out with precision and promptness a series of historical<br />

tableaux on an artificial stage, before which seats had been built up to<br />

accommodate many thousand spectators. . .Akin to such productions<br />

are the outdoor plays now so much in vogue in colleges. Mention<br />

should also be made of the St. Gaudens masque at Cornish, New<br />

Hampshire, in June, 1905, and the midsummer Redwood Play of the<br />

Bohemian Club of San Francisco. . .At Pittsburg, in May, 1909, an<br />

admirable series of scenes illustrating the history of that city from the<br />

time of the red man to the present day of a cosmopolitan population<br />

was given in a most effective fashion by school children under the<br />

direction of teachers. . .<br />

We may look then for a general rise of pageantry in America under<br />

three forms: street processions, particularly in connection with civic<br />

festivals and anniversaries; open-air performances under the auspices<br />

of colleges and universities, amateur students and professional artists,<br />

players, and musicians; and finally indoor performances on a small or<br />

large scale. American pageantry will be so ordered as to possess a<br />

constructive influence on the people. There will be entertainment with


212 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

splendid effects in color, form, and music to both please and improve<br />

the popular taste; the spectacle will stimulate pride in town, state, and<br />

nation; a broad sympathy for all lands and peoples will underlie and<br />

dominate the scenes; and finally there will be a definite educational<br />

aim to make real the great deeds of the fathers and to quicken the<br />

aspirations of the sons for right living and for devotion to country. In<br />

this last appeal the need of our immigrant population will be kept fully<br />

in mind.<br />

The "New Hope Group" in the Carnegie Institute<br />

Exhibition of Paintings<br />

In the Carnegie Institute Nineteenth Annual International<br />

Exhibition of Paintings are a number of canvases by a group<br />

of artists who represent one of the most characteristic and<br />

truly national expressions in American art. These men, called<br />

the "New Hope Group"—the name being taken from the place<br />

on the Delaware River in eastern Pennsylvania where they<br />

have settled in a colony—form a very strong group, several of<br />

them being among the ablest of the contemporary American<br />

artists. They make their homes in the charming old stone<br />

houses of this old Quaker settlement, and paint the wonderful<br />

Pennsylvania scenery which they need go no farther than their<br />

own doorsteps to find.<br />

This group has not formed a school, nor do its members all<br />

look at their work from the same angle. Some of them, notably<br />

Redfield, Lathrop, Rosen, and Folinsbee, treat their<br />

landscapes realistically; others, Bredin, Connor, Garber, and<br />

Spencer, show a decorative tendency.<br />

Lathrop and Redfield were the first to settle in New Hope,<br />

but gradually others have joined them. Pittsburghers may<br />

be interested to know that Ge<strong>org</strong>e W. Softer, represented in<br />

this exhibition by the paintings "Morning" and "Night,"<br />

was born in Pittsburgh, and that Charles Rosen, represented


EXHIBITION OF PAINTINGS 213<br />

by "The Ravine," and R. Sloan Bredin, represented by the<br />

canvas "By the River," were born near here.<br />

Honorable mention goes at this exhibition to "The White<br />

Mill" by Robert Spencer who is one of the "Xew Hope"<br />

painters.<br />

Ten men from this group have paintings in the Carnegie<br />

exhibition—R. Sloan Bredin, John R. Connor, John F. Folinsbee,<br />

Daniel Garber, William L. Lathrop, Ge<strong>org</strong>e Oberteuffer,<br />

H. Amiard Oberteuffer, Edward W. Redfield, Charles Rosen,<br />

and Robert Spencer.<br />

It is not possible in the small space which can be devoted<br />

here to a large subject, to give a comprehensive idea of the<br />

work of this group, but some suggestions as to the work of<br />

several of them are contained in the brief extracts quoted here.<br />

Concerning others of the group, no printed information is<br />

available, but art magazines in the Library contain reproductions<br />

of some of their paintings.<br />

Edward W. Redfield<br />

Among the men who have done most to infuse an authentic note<br />

of nationalism into contemporary American art Edward W. Redfield<br />

occupies a prominent position. He is the standard bearer of that progressive<br />

group of painters who are glorifying American landscape<br />

painting with a veracity and force that is astonishing the eyes of the<br />

Old World...<br />

Mr. Redfield is a realist, who seeks out and depicts with uncompromising,<br />

searching strokes the specific, visual aspects of a scene...<br />

He presents glimpses of nature with all the actuality of a scene viewed<br />

through a window, in which his art is a direct antithesis to that of<br />

Whistler and his followers, which is nature viewed through a temperament.<br />

. .<br />

This virile and thoroughly American painter was born in Bridgeville,<br />

Del., in 1868, of moderately well-to-do parents. At an early age<br />

he developed a love for art, which was encouraged by his parents, who<br />

sent the boy to the local academy, where he was instructed in freehand<br />

drawing by a second-rate painter of local repute. He soon outgrew<br />

the possibilities of this little town, however, and it was not long<br />

before he found his way into the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts,<br />

where his real work began. In the meantime his father's commission


214 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

business had failed and it was only by the most persistent effort tha<br />

the young man continued his art studies. . .While he progressed steadily<br />

in the understanding of his metier he had not distinguished himself<br />

especially during his term in the academy...<br />

The development of his art has been equable and constant, but<br />

not until his return from France. . .did he really find himself. . .<br />

While the greater part of his work celebrates the glories of winter<br />

his whole output reveals a great diversity of subjects; one feels the<br />

lack of a formula—each canvas has the freshness of a first discovery.<br />

There is nothing flamboyant or rhetorical in his art... One misses in<br />

his work any striving after effect. His color is fresh, alive and truthful,<br />

laid on with a crisp, trenchant touch that bespeaks a robust, masculine<br />

vigor. In his manner and method of painting his work is a reflection<br />

of the methods of the impressionists which he has adapted to his own<br />

uses. /. Nilscn Laurvik, in "The International Studio," 1910.<br />

Daniel Garber<br />

Daniel Garber, who was born in North Manchester, Indiana, has<br />

received many prizes and is an associate member of the National<br />

Academy of Design, New York, a member of the Fellowship of the<br />

Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, Philadelphia, and a member<br />

of the Art Club of Philadelphia. . .<br />

The effect of light upon fields, trees, and sky is finely depicted in<br />

(a number of his landscapes which show) how much the artist is at<br />

home in this delightful style. The treatment. . .is good and they have<br />

a charming decorative quality. Academy Notes, 191S.<br />

William L. Lathrop<br />

William L. Lathrop was born at Warren, Illinois. A journey<br />

abroad brought him in touch with the art of European countries, especially<br />

that of France. Later he became instructor in The Pennsylvania<br />

Academy of the Fine Arts. He has been awarded many prizes. . .<br />

and is a member of the National Academy of Design, New York, and<br />

of the New York Water Color Club.<br />

Lathrop's paintings are beautiful in color and fine in composition.<br />

Academy Notes, 1918.<br />

Robert Spencer<br />

Robert Spencer was born at Harvard, Nebraska. He is a member<br />

of the National Academy of Design, New York, has won many honors<br />

and is represented in The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York.<br />

The paintings of Spencer are very different from those of Garber<br />

and Lathrop. He seems more interested in a world of people, and with<br />

his delicate and skillful color harmony has produced many beautiful<br />

pictures. Academy Notes, 1918.


JOHN A. BRASHEAR 215<br />

John A. Brashear<br />

Quoted from the New Vork "Evening Sun."<br />

One of the noblest men of our time has risen from a wistful contemplation<br />

of the universe through lenses of his own making to the<br />

freedom of the starry fellowship. He opened windows in the wall of<br />

man's prison to let in more light. Now he has gone to seek the source<br />

of light.<br />

John A. Brashear was an American who confessed without shame<br />

that his business yielded no cash profits. Before he became chancellor<br />

of the Western University at Pittsburg he had achieved the title of<br />

the world's greatest maker of telescopic instruments. And of these he<br />

said: "The character of the work done in my laboratory is not of a<br />

kind that can be commercially successful. The field is limited, the demand<br />

is limited; and though delicate instruments cost large sums of<br />

money, yet the failures are so many, the risks so great before a perfect<br />

instrument can be turned out that the profit is a comparatively small<br />

element in the matter of price."<br />

Yet men whose own standards of value appear to be found in the<br />

money markets have left their juggling of millions to spend hours in<br />

his laboratory. One of these called him the "most interesting man" of<br />

his wide and varied acquaintance.<br />

Brashear began to grind lenses as a boy. It was never the instrument<br />

itself that he cared for. He had caught a glimpse of the heavens<br />

through a telescope, and being too poor to buy one for himself, he determined<br />

to make his own. He worked for a living in the mills and at<br />

night spent hours in his workshop. There his wife, like Madame Curie,<br />

gave aid not alone of skilled fingers, but of a true comradeship of spirit.<br />

It was her courage and patience that helped him to triumph over<br />

delay and disappointment. A lens to which they had given their<br />

hoarded midnights for more than a year, at the moment of completion,<br />

cracked! When Brashear came home from the next day's work at the<br />

mill in a mood close to despair, he found all preparations made for<br />

beginning a new lens.<br />

When the international body which determines the scientific<br />

standard of measurement fixed upon the length of a light wave as the<br />

best means of securing uniformity Brashear was picked out of all the<br />

lens makers in the world to make the instrument which should serve<br />

the need. Perhaps no other material labor demands a result so near<br />

perfection as that. Portia's charge to Shylock:<br />

If thou cut'st more<br />

Or less than just a pound, be it but so much<br />

As makes it light or heavy in the substance,<br />

Or the division of the twentieth part<br />

Of one poor scruple, nay, if the scale do turn<br />

But in the estimation of a hair


216 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

how infinitely removed was that from the delicacy of the distinction<br />

drawn by one of the lens maker's products. It is too soon to say exactly<br />

what part they have played and will play in the larger developments<br />

of our knowledge about the universe. But philosophers, mathematicians,<br />

physicists—they all base their calculations and deductions<br />

in some degree on the work of the mechanic from Pittsburg.<br />

However intensively he labored with material substance, the real<br />

meaning of this man's life is a spiritual meaning. Springing out of a<br />

wondering delight in the mind's adventure, spurred by desire for<br />

greater exploration, his immortal spirit looked ever beyond the limits<br />

of sight. Browning's "Prospice" expresses his attitude. Long ago he<br />

and his wife agreed upon the epitaph to be engraved over their tomb:<br />

We have loved the stars too fondly to be fearful of the night.<br />

And the spirits that conceive such an epitaph no tomb can hold.<br />

Florence Nightingale Centenary<br />

May 15, 1820-May 15, 1920<br />

Just why certain years and certain epochs produce more<br />

people and events that stand out prominently in the development<br />

of civilization than do other periods, no one can explain<br />

satisfactorily; but the fact remains. The year 1820 is one of<br />

those periods, as a review of the centenaries occurring this<br />

year makes patent to even the unobserving. Among the important<br />

1820 birthdays is that of Florence Nightingale, and while<br />

it is not easy, or perhaps possible, to explain why that year<br />

produced so many great people, it is not at all difficult to explain<br />

why she as an individual is great. It is the influence on<br />

present conditions, growing out of her spirit of service, which<br />

makes the centenary of her birth stand out from among the<br />

thousands of centenaries which occur each day. These extracts<br />

from an article by John Bruce Mitchell in the "Forum" for<br />

March 1919, give, not a biography of Florence Nightingale—<br />

that can be found in some of the many books which have been<br />

written about her—but a glimpse of her spirit and of how she<br />

used her life to make the world a better place.


FLORENCE NIGHTINGALE CENTENARY 217<br />

The air trembled with the roll of the guns. Rifle fire crackled to<br />

staccato and tempoed down. The sinking sun flashed bayonets, red<br />

with work. A man groaned. Through the acrid smoke from the shells<br />

a woman came. She was .dressed neatly in blue, very slender, very girlish,<br />

very pretty; some called her delicately molded face spirituelle. She<br />

knelt beside the wounded man and held his head in her arms. "You<br />

are not going to die," she whispered. . .<br />

They were bringing back the wounded by the thousands... Men,<br />

all men and misery. And then the woman came. As she directed the<br />

workers her gentle voice became imperious with commands; when she<br />

spoke to the wounded it was asif an angel ha,d passed. One woman,<br />

thousands of men; and into that place of misery came cheerfulness.. .<br />

France? No. Italy? Far from it. Those things happened more<br />

than half a century ago. They happened in the Crimea. And the<br />

woman was Florence Nightingale. She did not live to see the Great<br />

War but her spirit was over there. Her presence walked with the<br />

thousands of nurses who tenderly cared for wounded men. Her spirit<br />

consciously or unconsciously influenced every woman who worked for<br />

the Red Cross, or in other ways sought to alleviate the sufferings of<br />

war. For Florence Nightingale was the first woman to carry mercy to<br />

the battlefields. After her work in the Crimean War, Queen Victoria<br />

of England presented her with a cross of red enamel; it lay in a box<br />

on a pillow of white satin—whence comes the emblem of the Red Cross.<br />

Henri Dunant, the Swiss physician to whom the Red Cross Society<br />

owes its inception, has said: "Though I am known as the founder<br />

of the Red Cross and the originator of the Convention of Geneva, it is<br />

to an Englishwoman that all the honor of that convention is due.<br />

What inspired me was the work of Miss Nightingale iu the Crimea."<br />

Florence Nightingale achieved great things. She is one of the<br />

heroines of history. In the light of her vast achievements her heroism<br />

in the Crimea is trivial. It is not that she braved the dangers of<br />

battle; thousands of women have done that. But Florence Nightingale<br />

changed the profession of nursing. Before her coming it was considered<br />

in a more or less disreputable light; most nurses were coarse,<br />

even immoral persons; if a woman took up nursing there was placed<br />

upon her the Great Taboo. That ended with Florence Nightingale.<br />

She introduced sanitation into the calculations of military leaders.<br />

Before her day—and the Crimean War was a shocking example of it—<br />

military leaders thought that their one concern was tactics, reserves,<br />

food and ammunition. Never a ^ampaign but brought with it the unseeing<br />

enemy, Disease; and men dying like flies. Florence Nightingale<br />

fought for sanitation in the armies and, awakening the need for this in<br />

the military conscience, saved the world, from her day to this, millions<br />

of lives. Every clean piece of hospital linen, every scrupulously scrubbed<br />

plate, every super-sterilized surgical instrument, every cup of<br />

greaseless broth, every clean-swept corner, every carefully swept camp<br />

street, every camp kitchen free from refuse, every great can for boiling


218 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

water—every device known to modern armies to keep the sick and the<br />

well free from disease is due to the pioneer work of this woman.. .<br />

What sort of a person was she? Nothing very startling, just like<br />

thousands of other English or American girls. Possibly her greatest<br />

asset was that she did things instead of talking about going to do them.<br />

There was that and the fact that she came to be very sure of herself<br />

that she possessed executive ability. There was nothing of the Joan<br />

of Arc about Florence Nightingale. She did not hear any voices; nor<br />

was she divinely inspired.. .Queen Victoria expressed her quite neatly.<br />

"Such a clear head; I wish we had it in the War Office".. .<br />

She was born of an upper middle-class English family in Florence,<br />

Italy, in 1820. Her father's name was not Nightingale but Shore. The<br />

name Nightingale was a condition imposed by the inheritance of an estate.<br />

It is interesting to know that her mother was the daughter of<br />

William Smith, a member of Parliament, who advocated the emancipation<br />

of the negroes and other ideas calculated to relieve suffering in<br />

the world. Florence Nightingale grew up much in the same, way as<br />

other girls. She received an excellent education, became a good musician<br />

and was facile in the use of languages. Her home was in Derbyshire<br />

at a place called Lea Hurst. It is said that when she was a girl<br />

she used to visit the cottagers there bringing dainties to those who<br />

were ill. Hers was a sympathy quick to be awakened. She became<br />

interested in hospitals, she observed that in England and on the Continent<br />

most of these institutions were in the care of Sisters of Charity.<br />

She felt that the women of the Protestant Church should also undertake<br />

work of this kind and at once began a study of it. She heard that<br />

in Germany there was already such a hospital in operation, the Fliedner<br />

Hospital at Kaiserwerth, and, when she was twenty-nine, she took a<br />

course there. Returning to London she had a conversation with Dr.<br />

Howe of Boston, famous for his work in educating the blind. This<br />

conversation reflects the attitude of that day toward women who "did<br />

things." "Dr. Howe," said Florence Nightingale, "may I ask you to<br />

tell me upon your word whether it would be anything unsuitable or<br />

unbecoming to a young Englishwoman, if she should devote herself to<br />

works of charity in hospitals?"<br />

"I say to you," replied Dr. Howe, "go forward, if you have a vocation<br />

for that way of life; act up to your aspiration, and you will find<br />

that there is never anything unbecoming or unladylike in doing your<br />

duty for the good of others."<br />

Florence Nightingale, her own opinion confirmed, launched herself<br />

upon her career. By the time the Crimean War broke out, she,<br />

as a result of continuous study and training, was conversant with all<br />

that anyone could teach her in regard to nursing, diet, hospital construction<br />

and hygiene. She was active in hospital work in London<br />

when war began to rumble. In the spring of 1854 the Bear Who<br />

Walked Like a Man. began to waddle down from the Russian forests


FLORENCE NIGHTINGALE CENTENARY 219<br />

toward Turkey. The Foreign policy of Britain at the time did not relish<br />

Russia seizing the Dardanelles. So Great Britain entered the war<br />

on Turkey's behalf and 25,000 soldiers we,re dispatched to Constantinople.<br />

The Battle of the Alma was fought and won and all London<br />

rejoiced. Then, from that out of the way part of the world, the truth<br />

began to trickle back. England was stunned to read in the papers one<br />

morning a revelation of appalling conditions in the Crimea. Russell,<br />

a famous war correspondent of his day, declared that the British War<br />

Office had been wofully lacking in hospital and sanitary planning, that<br />

there were thousands of wounded and sick lying in abominable conditions<br />

in the old Turkish barracks at Scutari without decent nursing.<br />

He ended his story with an appeal. "Are there no devoted women<br />

among us able and willing to go forth and minister to the sick and suffering<br />

soldiers of the East in the hospital at Scutari? Are none of the<br />

daughters of England at this extreme hour of need ready for such<br />

mercy work?"<br />

Florence Nightingale read that appeal. She at once wrote the<br />

Minister for War offering her services. He, roused by the storm of indignation<br />

that was sweeping England, had written her. Their letters<br />

crossed in the mail. He wrote to her: "There is, so far as I know,<br />

only one person in England capable of <strong>org</strong>anizing and directing such<br />

a plan, and I have been several times on the point of asking youif<br />

you would be disposed to make the attempt." Six days later Florence<br />

Nightingale, accompanied by 34 women volunteers, sailed for the<br />

Crimea. When it was proposed to give them a parade and an official<br />

farewell, she said: "I am naturally a very shy person," and with her<br />

little band she left quietly on her splendid adventure.<br />

Florence Nightingale arrived in Turkey the very day the bloody<br />

battle of Inkerman was fought. She found, at Scutari, that great barrack<br />

hospital, the revelation of the conditions which had caused such<br />

an uproar in England. . .<br />

But that was not all of her problem. There was the stupid, ingrown<br />

prejudice and arrogance of old-fashioned army officers...<br />

Just after the Crimean War was over there was a dinner given in<br />

London to the officers who had served in that campaign. It was suggested<br />

that each guest write upon a slip of paper the name of the person<br />

whose services would be longest remembered. When the papers<br />

were examined each bore the name of "Florence Nightingale." What<br />

had changed the attitude of the military?<br />

From the day that Florence Nightingale entered the great hospital<br />

at Scutari it was fired with a new intelligence. She brought pity,<br />

energy and womanly invention. She declared war on dirt. She brought<br />

into the hospital fresh air, clean linen, sweet food and soft hands.<br />

Previously the men had eaten the rough provender dished up by army<br />

cooks. Florence Nightingale <strong>org</strong>anized a great kitchen to provide special<br />

food for the wounded. She caused to be built a great laundry and<br />

dirt disappeared.. .


220 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Whenever the conditions in the hospital were most dangerous,<br />

whenever disease was most prevalent and death was hovering close,<br />

Florence Nightingale was there. As her slender form glided quietly<br />

along, every soldier's face softened with gratitude at the sight of her.<br />

When all the medical officers retired for the night and silence and darkness<br />

settled down upon those miles of prostrate sick, she could be<br />

seen making her solitary rounds, holding a little lamp in her hand...<br />

Night after night she walked along those four miles of sick beds, carrying<br />

the little lamp. It was that which inspired Longfellow to write<br />

"The Lady of the Lamp".. .<br />

Cold statistics tell what she did in the Crimea. When she entered<br />

the hospital hell at Scutari the death rate was 42 per cent; when she<br />

left it, it was 2 per cent. Upon her return to England her health<br />

broke down. She became an invalid. Her slender little body had done<br />

all it could, but her spirit lived on, sending inspiration out into the<br />

world, stirring women to go and do likewise.<br />

Mount Washington Branch<br />

Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh<br />

The Mount Washington Branch Library, which is situated<br />

on Grandview Avenue, was opened to the public May 31, 1900.<br />

This branch is in a residence district with practically no<br />

industrial or manufacturing plants and with an almost negligible<br />

number of foreigners, so that it does not serve such varied<br />

interests as do some of the branches; but in addition to the<br />

demands usual in a residence district, there is a STOwine<br />

demand for technical books from men of the district who<br />

recognize that from printed material they may gain what will<br />

be of value to them in improving their business methods or in<br />

gaining a better understanding of their work.<br />

Although the work in this branch does not show such<br />

variety as in some of the other branches, it is steadily growing<br />

along certain definite lines—the lending of books to adults and<br />

to children; reference work for students in the grade schools,<br />

parochial schools, and high schools of the district; story hours<br />

for children ; and work with clubs.


LIBRARY NEWS AND NOTICES 221<br />

Vacation Book Privileges<br />

Beginning with June first, regular borrowers may take<br />

books out of town for the summer on the following conditions:<br />

Not more than ten books may be issued on one card.<br />

of these may be fiction.<br />

Four<br />

Books will be stamped due October 1, 1920, from which<br />

date a fine of two cents a day will accrue on each. They may<br />

be returned at any time before that date.<br />

Any transportation charges on books returned must be<br />

prepaid.<br />

Borrowers will be asked to give their out of town addresses<br />

and their cards will be held at the Library.<br />

The Library reserves the right to refuse to lend by this<br />

method any books which it seems unwise to take out of general<br />

circulation for so long a time.<br />

Exhibition of French Posters<br />

In the Central Library there is a loan exhibition, a collection<br />

of French railroad posters, beautiful both in color and<br />

design, which represent French decorative art applied to advertising.<br />

This collection which is to be exhibited in a number of<br />

large cities, called forth much interest and favorable comment<br />

in New York where it was shown before it came to Pittsburgh.<br />

Exhibition for Secondary School Students<br />

There will be a display of catalogues, books, and pictures<br />

of colleges and universities in the Central Library from the<br />

first of June to the first of August. This exhibition is planned<br />

to give young people who have not yet decided upon a college,<br />

a chance to know the various opportunities offered by the colleges<br />

and universities of the country.


222 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Prices of Library Publications<br />

The list of "Publications of the Library Now in Print" at<br />

the back of this "Bulletin" gives the price of each. Any publication<br />

not marked * in that list will be sent postpaid on receipt<br />

of five cents.<br />

Present Day Problems<br />

The books in this list are entered also, in fuller form and with annotations,<br />

under their proper headings in this issue of the "Bulletin."<br />

They are brought together here to show the additions of books which<br />

are of interest in connection with problems of the day. The date of<br />

publication is 1919 unless otherwise stated.<br />

Adriacus, pseud. From Trieste to Valona 943-6 A24<br />

Bolshevik aims and ideals, and Russia's revolt against bolshevism<br />

947 B61<br />

Bureau of Applied Economics, Washington, D. C. Wages in<br />

various industries<br />

r 331.2 B8g<br />

De Bekker, L. J. The plot against Mexico<br />

972 D35<br />

Downer, H. E. Chats with possible Americans. 1918 r 325.1 D77<br />

Fletcher, C. B. Problem of the Pacific<br />

Hannay, J. O. An Irishman looks at his world<br />

Hard, William. Raymond Robins' own story. 1920<br />

Jenkins, V. C. Our industrial problems<br />

Jenks, Edward. The state and the nation<br />

990 F63<br />

914-15 H23ir<br />

947 H25<br />

r 338 J25<br />

320.1 J25<br />

Kamman, W. F. Socialism in German American literature.<br />

1917 r 830.9 K12<br />

Keeling, H. V. Bolshevism 947 K15<br />

Macara, Sir C. W. Social and industrial reform 330.9 Mn<br />

Old Colony Trust Company, Boston. Treaty of Versailles;<br />

American opinion<br />

f 341:6 023t<br />

Peace treaties<br />

341.2 P34<br />

Pennsylvania—Constitutional amendment and revision commission.<br />

Preliminary draft of constitution. 1920. .r 342.74 P3992<br />

Smith, R. H. Justice and the poor<br />

q 361 S65<br />

Taussig, F. W. Free trade, the tariff and reciprocity. 1920. .337 T24f<br />

United States. Statutes. Transportation act, 1920. 1920. .r 385 U2538t<br />

Vinogradov, Sir P. G. co. The reconstruction of Russia<br />

914.7 V34


INDUSTRIAL FATIGUE 223<br />

Industrial Fatigue<br />

Selected References<br />

Bibliography<br />

Russell Sage foundation—Library.<br />

Bulletin. Aug. 1917. no.24.<br />

Industrial fatigue and scientific management.<br />

Journal of industrial hygiene. May 1919. v.i, p.42-53.<br />

Bibliography on fatigue: Sec. 8, p.52-53, on "Industrial fatigue and<br />

efficiency."<br />

Constitutes pt. 3 of an article entitled "The problem of fatigue," by R. A. Spaeth.<br />

Books<br />

Bentinck, H. C.<br />

Industrial fatigue and the relation between hours of work and output,<br />

with a memorandum on sickness. 1918.<br />

Bogardus, E. S.<br />

Relation of fatigue to industrial accidents. 1912.<br />

Florence, P. S.<br />

Use of factory statistics in the investigation of industrial fatigue.<br />

1918. (Columbia University. Studies in history, economics and public<br />

law. v.81, no.3.)<br />

Gilbreth, F. B. & Gilbreth, Mrs Lillian (Moller).<br />

Fatigue study: the elimination of humanity's greatest unnecessary<br />

waste, a first step in motion study. 1919.<br />

Goidmark, J. C.<br />

Fatigue and efficiency; a study in industry.<br />

foundation.)<br />

1912. (Russell Sage<br />

International Congress of Hygiene and Demography (15th).<br />

Transactions. Sept. 1912. v.3, p.512-532.<br />

Fatigue factors in certain types of occupations, by S. I. Franz; The<br />

study of fatigue and its application to industrial workers, by Josephine<br />

Goidmark; Some considerations regarding the factor of fatigue with<br />

reference to industrial conditions, by W. A. White.<br />

Magazine Articles<br />

American Institute of Mining Engineers.<br />

Transactions. Feb. 1918. v.59, p.665-668.<br />

Illness in industry, by Thomas Darlington.<br />

Discusses in a general way the causes of fatigue.


224 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Automotive industries. Jan. 23, 1919. v.40, p.219.<br />

Reducing industrial fatigue.<br />

Outline of the principal causes of diminished output, with concrete suggestions for<br />

overcoming them.<br />

Automotive industries. Jan. 22, 1920. v.42, p.324-325.<br />

Interest in work a vital factor in fatigue studies, by Harry Tipper.<br />

Contemporary review. Feb. 1918. v.113, p.144-<br />

Industrial fatigue and the relation between hours of work and output.<br />

Summarizes reports on inquiries made in England. Deals with special occupations.<br />

Economic journal. Sept. 1914. v.24, P-393~4 n 2.<br />

Suggestions for an inquiry into industrial fatigue, by J. W. Ramsbottom.<br />

Engineer (London). Sept. 24, 1915. v.120, p.292.<br />

Workshop fatigue.<br />

From the economic standpoint.<br />

Engineering and contracting. Dec. 31, 1919. v.52, p.765.<br />

Industrial fatigue; theory and practice.<br />

Factory. Jan. 1920. v.24, p.174-178.<br />

How fatigue affects output.<br />

Brief report of an investigation made in a spinning room of a cotton factory.<br />

Illustrated world. May 1914. v.31, p.441.<br />

What do you know about industrial fatigue? by F. E. Kline.<br />

Brief discussion of causes and remedies.<br />

Industrial management. April 1918. v.55, P-3IO.<br />

Cause of industrial fatigue, by C. B. Lord.<br />

Treats of fatigue, recuperation, and effect of mental attitude.<br />

Industrial management. Nov. 1919. v.58, p.417-418.<br />

The problem of fatigue, by L. F. Fuld.<br />

Emphasizes the value of rest periods and nutritious refreshments in lessening fatigue.<br />

Industrial management. Dec. 1919. v.58, p.448-452.<br />

Fatigue and industrial efficiency, by W. N. Polakov.<br />

Shows relations between length of working day, fatigue, and the efficiency of operation<br />

in power houses. Graphically illustrated.<br />

Industrial management. Jan.-April 19m v.59, P-7~9, 120-122, 215-217,<br />

3ii-3 T 3- (To be concluded.)<br />

Prevention of fatigue in industry, by R. A. Spaeth.<br />

Emphasizes the need of practical tests which can he applied in shops and factories<br />

to keep fatigue within normal limits.<br />

Industrial management. April 1920. v.59, P-323-324.<br />

Fatigue study; the first step in better industrial relations, by F. B.<br />

Gilbreth and L. M. Gilbreth.


INDUSTRIAL FATIGUE 225<br />

Iron age. April 6, 1916. v.97, p.827.<br />

Conserving the worker's health and energy, by F. B. Gilbreth and<br />

L. M. Gilbreth.<br />

Suggests proper shop hygiene, the study of fatigue, and rest periods, with the idea<br />

of maintaining health and increasing output.<br />

Iron and coal trades review. Sept. 17, 1915. v.91, p.346-347.<br />

Fatigue from the economic standpoint.<br />

Abstract of report of a committee of the British association appointed to investigate<br />

the question among industrial workers.<br />

Iron and coal trades review. Sept. 12, 1919. v.99, P-336-<br />

Fatigue research in tinplate manufacture, by H. M. Vernon.<br />

The same. Abstract. (Chemical and metallurgical engineering.<br />

Feb. 4, 1920. v.22, p.223-225.)<br />

Journal of industrial hygiene. May 1919. v.i, p.22-53.<br />

The problem of fatigue, by R. A. Spaeth.<br />

Contains bibliography. Discusses the theoretical and practical side.<br />

Journal of industrial hygiene. Sept. 1919. v.i, p.233-237.<br />

Practical study in industrial fatigue, by H. C. Link.<br />

Results of a study undertaken to determine certain facts regarding the effects of<br />

fatigue in the work of shell inspection.<br />

Journal of industrial hygiene. Jan. 1920. v.i, p.435-447.<br />

The prevention of fatigue in manufacturing industries, by R. A.<br />

Spaeth.<br />

Treats of output tests, environment, rest periods, and motion studies.<br />

Literary digest. Feb. 21, 1920. v.64, p.97-101.<br />

Faulty fatigue tests.<br />

Summary of an article in "Industrial management," Jan. 1920.<br />

Living age. Nov. 1918. v.299, p.316-318.<br />

Industrial fatigue.<br />

Brief discussion.<br />

Monthly labor review. Feb. 1917. v.4, p.283-290.<br />

Effect of atmospheric conditions upon fatigue and efficiency, by<br />

C. E. A. Winslow.<br />

Nineteenth century. Feb. 1917. v.81, p.413-<br />

Industrial fatigue.<br />

Shows results obtained by inquiry made by the British association fatigue committee.<br />

Science. Sept. 1919. v.50, p.277.<br />

Industrial fatigue, by F. W. Jenkins and Bertha Fairfield.<br />

Brief report made after study in British munition factories.<br />

Scientific American. Nov. 14, ioi4- v.i 11, P-4H-<br />

A museum of devices for the elimination of unnecessary fatigue in<br />

the industries, by F. B. Gilbreth.<br />

Scientific American monthly. Feb. 1920. v.i, p.154-156.<br />

Unnecessary fatigue; America's multibillion enemy, by F. B. Gilbreth<br />

and L. M. Gilbreth.


226 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Scientific American supplement. April 21, 1917. v.83, p.250.<br />

Industrial fatigue.<br />

Brief report upon conditions found among British munition workers.<br />

Scientific American supplement. Nov. 8, 1919. v.88, p.263.<br />

Influence of the six-hour day on industrial efficiency and fatigue.<br />

United States—Bureau of mines.<br />

Technical paper, 102. 1916.<br />

Health conservation at steel mills.


April 1 to May 1, 1920<br />

Books Added to the Library<br />

An r or b prefixed to the call number indicates that the book must be<br />

called for and used in the Reference or the Technology Room; j that it is<br />

especially suitable for children; and q that it is quarto size or larger<br />

Fiction<br />

Altsheler, Joseph Alexander.<br />

Forest of swords; a story of Paris and the Marne.<br />

(World war series.)<br />

A466fo<br />

Appleton.<br />

Sequel to "The guns of Europe"; followed by "The hosts of the air."<br />

Altsheler, Joseph Alexander.<br />

A466I1S<br />

Hosts of the air; the story of a quest in the great war. Appleton.<br />

(World war series.)<br />

Preceded by "The guns of Europe" and "The forest of swords."<br />

Dillon, Mrs Mary C. (Johnson).<br />

Ds84f<br />

The farmer of Roaring Run. Century.<br />

The farmer, an attractive young widow, manages a beautiful Virginia farm for its<br />

Philadelphia owner. His subjugation to the charms of farm life supplies the necessary<br />

romance.<br />

Gide, Andre.<br />

G374P<br />

Prometheus illbound; literal translation from the French by Lilian<br />

Rothermere. Chatto.<br />

"Spirited rendering of...Gide's brilliant philosophic jest... Compact of wit and<br />

wisdom and humour and experience and the comic spirit...For sheer intellectual brilliance<br />

these fantasies. . .are unsurpassed." Outlook (London), 1919.<br />

Raymond, Robert Lovejoy.<br />

R2452a<br />

At a dollar a year; ripples on the edge of the maelstrom. Marshall<br />

Jones Co.<br />

Contents: Trap-grease.—Settling the peace terms.—Shipbuilders.—One hundred<br />

and fourteen in the shade.—All quiet along the Potomac.—Munitions of war.—Distinguished<br />

service.—The peace bells.—Postscript.<br />

Sinclair, Bertrand William.<br />

S6i64bu<br />

Burned bridges. Little.<br />

Story of a young Canadian missionary who burns his bridges of religious zeal to<br />

achieve success in the business world and later in the war.<br />

Wells, Carolyn. • W494^<br />

Raspberry jam. Lippincott.<br />

Detective story woven about a murder, an aunt with spiritualistic tendencies, a<br />

"human fly," and raspberry jam as a clue.<br />

227


228 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

General Works<br />

Barnstead, Winifred G.<br />

qr 025.3 B25<br />

Filing rules for dictionary catalogues. 1918. Wilgress.<br />

Recommended by the Minister of education for use in the public libraries of Ontario.<br />

qr 015 D485<br />

Deutsches biicherverzeichnis; eine zusammenstellung der im deutschen<br />

buchhandel erschienenen bucher, zeitschriften und landkarten, nebst<br />

stich und schlagwortregister. v.i. 1916.<br />

v.i. 1911 bis 1914, A-K.<br />

Bearbeitet von der Bibliographischen abteilung des Borsenvereins der Deutschen<br />

Buchhandler zu Leipzig.<br />

Kudalkar, Janardan S.<br />

qr 027.4 625k<br />

The Baroda [India] library movement; a short account of the origin<br />

and growth of the Central library department of the Baroda state.<br />

1919. Baroda Central Library.<br />

Philosophy<br />

Boutroux, fitienne fimileMarie. no B65<br />

Relation between thought and action from the German and from the<br />

classical point of view; the Herbert Spencer lecture delivered at Oxford,<br />

Oct. 20, 1917. 1918. Clarendon Press.<br />

"The text chosen... is the saying of Herbert Spencer's that if two opposing terms<br />

both have bases in the reality of things, then between them there must be a fundamental<br />

harmony." Philosophic review, 1919.<br />

Hamilton, Clarence Herbert.<br />

r 149 H19<br />

Psychological interpretation of mysticism. 1916. University of<br />

Chicago.<br />

"Bibliography." p.84—85.<br />

Thesis for Ph. D., University of Chicago.<br />

Ethics<br />

Brandt, Carlos.<br />

Ty 0 B69<br />

El fundamento de la moral. 1918.<br />

Contents: Ley de la conservacion de la vida.—La filosofia vegetarista.<br />

Coler, Cyphron Seymour.<br />

^Q.4 C68<br />

Character building; a book for teachers, parents and young people.<br />

1899. Hinds.<br />

Discusses aims, psychology, ethics, methods, and growth in character building, also<br />

the value of an education and character in relation to American citizenship.<br />

Colman, Ge<strong>org</strong>e Tilden.<br />

170.9 C71<br />

Certain movements in England and America which influenced the<br />

transition from the ideals of personal righteousness of the 17th century<br />

to the modern ideals of social service. 1917. [Banta.]<br />

Thesis for Ph. D., University of Chicago. *<br />

King, Henry Churchill.<br />

J~ 1 j^2g<br />

It's all in the day's work. 1916. Macmillan.<br />

"A little sermon on the spirit in which work should be undertaken, analysing different<br />

attitudes towards life." Saturday review, 1917.


BOOKS ADDED—MAY 1920 229<br />

Labbe, Ernest, comp. • 170.8 Ln<br />

La morale enseignee par les grandes ecrivains. 1896.<br />

A collection of ethical quotations grouped by subject. Each chapter ends with a<br />

questionnaire.<br />

Pitt-Rivers, Ge<strong>org</strong>e. ,»j pg-<br />

Conscience & fanaticism; an essay on moral values. 1919. McBride.<br />

"The earlier portions of the essay are devoted chiefly to an examination of moral<br />

ideas, the latter portions more exclusively to the facts of nature and of mind from<br />

which they derive their meaning...No claim to exhaustive or even adequate treatment<br />

can be made for so slight a review of so vast a subject." Preface.<br />

Religion<br />

Bible^Old testament. Apocrypha. 229 B47apo<br />

Apocalypse of Abraham; ed., with a translation from the Slavonic<br />

text and notes, by G. H. Box, with the assistance of J. I. Landsman.<br />

1919. Soc. for Promoting Christian Knowledge. (Translations of<br />

early documents, series I. Palestinian Jewish texts (pre-rabbinic).)<br />

"Bibliography," pref. p.32-33.<br />

With this is bound "The ascension of Isaiah," ed. by R. H. Charles.<br />

Fleming, Daniel Johnson. r 266 F62<br />

Devolution in mission administration, as exemplified by the legislative<br />

history of five American missionary societies in India. 1916. Revell.<br />

"Bibliography," p.281-306.<br />

Thesis for Ph. D., University of Chicago.<br />

Describes the process of handing over to indigenous <strong>org</strong>anizations the powers and<br />

responsibilities of the American Board, the Baptist Foreign Mission Society, the Reformed,<br />

the Presbyterian, and the Methodist Episcopal churches.<br />

Gillet, Louis. r 246 G41<br />

Histoire artistique des ordres mendiants; etudes sur l'art religieux<br />

en Europe du I3e au I7e siecles. 1912. Laurens.<br />

Contents: L'ame religieuse au i3e siecle; Saint Francois et Saint Dominique.—Les<br />

eglises des mendiants.—Giotto et les fresques d'Assise.—La vie de Jesus et la vie des<br />

-saints en images; La legende doree.—Le miroir theologique et le miroir moral: la<br />

chapelle des Espagnols et le Campo-santo de Pise.—L'avenement du pathetique; Mysteres<br />

et Danses macabres.—Confreries, devotions nouvelles; les cinq plaies, les saints<br />

protecteurs, la rosaire.—Le couvent de Saint-Marc a Florence; Fra Angelico, Savonarole,<br />

les propheties de la Sibylle.—La fin de la renaissance et la renaissance catholique.<br />

—Les derniers chefs-ceuvre franciscains; Rubens et Murillo.<br />

Ten essays on religious art in Europe from the 13th to the 17th century. Plate<br />

illustrations.<br />

Kato, Katsuji. 248 K13<br />

Psychology of oriental religious experience; a study of some typical<br />

experiences of Japanese converts to Christianity. 1915. Banta.<br />

"Bibliography," p.98-101.<br />

Thesis for Ph. D., Universi'y of Chicago.<br />

Kawaguchi, Ukichi. r 201 K14<br />

Bearing of the evolutionary theory on the conception of God; a<br />

study in contemporary interpretations of God in terms of the doctrine<br />

of evolution. 1916. [Banta.]<br />

"Bibliography," pref. p.7-8.<br />

Thesis for Ph. D„ University of Chicago.


CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Mode, Peter Ge<strong>org</strong>e.<br />

r 271 M76<br />

Influence of the black death on the English monasteries. 1916.<br />

[Banta.]<br />

"Bibliography," p.99-104.<br />

Thesis for Ph. D., University of Chicago.<br />

Roy, Jules. 282 R81<br />

Saint Nicholas I; tr. by Margaret M ait land. 1913. Benzinger.<br />

(The saints.)<br />

"Table of references," p. 192-200.<br />

Bibliographical foot-notes.<br />

First published in 1901, Treats of "the Pope's position as Roman pontiff, and his<br />

relation to the great question of Papal supremacy, as regards both the Empire and the<br />

Eastern Church." Spectator, igoi.<br />

Tolstoi", Lyof Nikolaievitch, count. 240 T58<br />

The pathway of life; tr. by A. J. Wolfe. 2 pts. in 2v. 1919. International<br />

Book Pub. Co. (Russian authors' library.)<br />

A compilation of thoughts on the spiritual problems of life, from many races and<br />

ages, arranged under suitable captions and interspersed with Tolstoi's own expressions<br />

of his attitude toward life.<br />

Webb, Clement Charles Julian. 231 W36<br />

God and personality, being the Gifford lectures delivered in the<br />

University of Aberdeen in the years 1918 & 1919. First course. [1918.]<br />

Allen. (Library of philosophy.)<br />

A philosophical defense of the Christian conception of God, with the emphasis on<br />

the value of religious experience as affording the best clues to the nature of the world<br />

we live in. An attempt to discover the contribution of religion to philosophy. Condensed<br />

from New republic, IQ20.<br />

Sociology<br />

Chancellor, William Estabrook. 301 C361<br />

Educational sociology. 1919. Century.<br />

"Selected readings," at the end of each chapter.<br />

Author is (1910) head of department of political and social sciences, College of<br />

Wooster. In this text-book, he discusses social movements, social institutions, and<br />

social measurement. Chapter questions and good index.<br />

National Country Life Conference. r 309.1 N15<br />

Proceedings (1st), 1919. [1919.]<br />

Published by the National Country Life Association.<br />

Paraguay—Oficina de estadistica. q 318.9 P22<br />

Anuario estadistico, 1916. 1917.<br />

Smith, Reginald Heber. q 361 S65<br />

Justice and the poor; a study of the present denial of justice to the<br />

poor and of the agencies making more equal their position before the<br />

law, with particular reference to legal aid work in the United States.<br />

[1919.] (Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching.<br />

Bulletin no.13.)<br />

Bibliographical foot-notes.<br />

The same. (In Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching.<br />

Bulletin 110.13.)<br />

qr 37I. I? c 2 ib no.13


BOOKS ADDED—MAY 1920 231<br />

United States. Statutes. r 385 U2538t<br />

Transportation act, 1920, approved Feb. 28, 1920. 1920.<br />

Issued by the Guaranty Trust Company of New York.<br />

A general summary and the text of this act by which the government returns the<br />

railroads to their owners; together with a brief review of prior laws pertaining to Federal<br />

regulation.<br />

Politics and Government<br />

Bieber, Ralph Paul.<br />

Lords of trade and plantations, 1675-96. 1919. Haas.<br />

"Bibliography," p.93-102.<br />

Thesis for Ph. D., LTniversity of Pennsylvania.<br />

325.3 B476<br />

Downer, Harry E.<br />

r 325.1 D77<br />

Chats with possible Americans; some help in civics given worthwhile<br />

folks. 1918. Friendly House Drookery.<br />

Binder's title reads "Friendly chats with possible Americans; Hawkeye civics for<br />

worth while folks."<br />

Hecht, Solomon.<br />

qr 351.1 H39<br />

Post office dept. examination instruction; a complete course of<br />

instruction for civil service examinations for post office clerk, city<br />

letter carrier, rural carrier, postmaster, for first, second, third and fourth<br />

class offices; also complete, except for one subject, for railway mail<br />

clerk; full description of examination for post office inspector. 1919.<br />

Civil Service Chronicle.<br />

"Application for examination" folded and laid in.<br />

Hoekstra, Peter.<br />

r 327.73 H67<br />

Thirty-seven years of Holland-American relations, 1803 to 1840.<br />

1916. Eerdmans-Sevensma Co.<br />

"Bibliography," p.179-184.<br />

Thesis for Ph. D., LTniversity of Pennsylvania.<br />

HoUingsworth, William Wiley.<br />

320.4 H72<br />

Woodrow Wilson's political ideals as interpreted from his works.<br />

1918. Princeton University Press.<br />

Contents: Beginning and early development of government.—Constitutional government.—Democracy.—Sovereignty.—Liberty.—Leadership.<br />

"Selected bibliography of Woodrow Wilson," p.48-53.<br />

Thesis for Ph. D.. University of Pennsylvania.<br />

Jenks, Edward.<br />

320-1 J25<br />

The state and the nation. 1919. Dent.<br />

"An expansion of the author's Short History of Politics. . .An interesting impartial<br />

review of a very large subject, from primitive man to the League of Nations and Syndicalism."<br />

Spectator, 1919.<br />

Pennsylvania—Economy and efficiency commission. r 353.9 P3999 2<br />

Report of the solicitor, 1917. 1917.<br />

Philadelphia Charter Committee.<br />

r 352 P4942<br />

Report of the sub-committee regarding measures needed for the<br />

improvement of the government of the city and county of Philadelphia<br />

together with drafts of bills prepared for introduction into the Legislature.<br />

1919.


-23-'<br />

CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Economics<br />

Bowden, Witt. 330-9 B66<br />

Rise of the great manufacturers in England, 1760-90. 1919. Haas.<br />

"Bibliography." p.82-95.<br />

Thesis for Ph. D., University of Pennsylvania.<br />

Bureau of Applied Economics, Washington, D. C. r 331.2 B89<br />

Wages in various industries; a summary of wage movements during<br />

the war. 1919.<br />

Guyot, Yves. 330.1917 G99<br />

La morale de la concurrence. 1896. (Questions du temps present.)<br />

Contents: Position de la question.—Caracteres de l'obligation morale.—L'altruisme<br />

professionnel.—Solidarity des interets.—L'altruisme patronal.—Morale individuelle.—Les<br />

agents du desordre moral.—Conclusions.<br />

Jenkins, V. Clement. r 338 J25<br />

Our industrial problems; how are we going to solve them? 1919.<br />

Industrial Service Bureau. Pittsburgh.<br />

Macara, Sir Charles Wright. 330.9 Mn<br />

Social and industrial reform; some international aspects. 1919.<br />

Sherratt.<br />

Contents: L'<strong>org</strong>anisation necessaire.—Les elements de la cite.—La resurrection<br />

the sphere of industry.—Diplomacy or war—which?—Industrial reconstruction.—Labour's<br />

post-war problems.—Lord Balfour's committee.—The work of the Cotton control<br />

board.—The cotton industry and the Control board.—The <strong>org</strong>anisation of trade.—The<br />

raw- cotton problem.—Man-power and industry.—British agriculture. APPENDIX: Retention<br />

of the Cotton control board (Letter from J. H. Whitley) ; Cotton spinning spindles;<br />

Indian cotton; Employers' parliamentary association.—Internationalism in industry.—<br />

David Lubin's proposal.—A reserve of cotton.—High density baling of cotton.—President<br />

Wilson; an appreciation.<br />

Provident Loan Society of New York. r 332.3 P97<br />

Provident Loan Society of New York; 25th anniversary, 1894-1919.<br />

1919.<br />

Taussig, Frank William. 337 T24f<br />

Free trade, the tariff and reciprocity. 1920. Macmillan.<br />

r 332.6 W59<br />

What's what in Wall street; a pocket compendium of useful information<br />

regarding customs and usages of finance, including brokerage<br />

and trading methods, and over 300 definitions of words, terms and<br />

phrases in daily use in the stock market. 1918.<br />

Published by Hughes & Dier.<br />

Law<br />

Old Colony Trust Company, Boston. r 341.6 023t<br />

Treaty of Versailles; American opinion. 1919.<br />

Contents: Speech of Henry Cabot Lodge, senator from Massachusetts, in the Senate,<br />

Aug. 12, 1919.—Speech of Philander C. Knox, senator from Pennsylvania, in the<br />

Senate, Aug. 29, 1919.—Speech of Gilbert M. Hitchcock, senator from Nebraska, in the<br />

Senate, Sept. 3, 1919.—Speech of President Wilson, in St. Louis, Sept. 5, 1919.


BOOKS ADDED—MAY 1920 233<br />

341-2 P34<br />

Peace treaties, comprising the league of nations covenant, digest of the<br />

German treaty, digest of the Austrian treaty, with annotations by the<br />

American mission at the peace conference; milestones on the road to<br />

victory. 1919. Federal Trade Information Service.<br />

The same<br />

r 341.2 P34<br />

Pennsylvania—Constitutional amendment and<br />

r 342.74 P3992<br />

revision commission.<br />

Preliminary draft of constitution. 1920.<br />

Contains also "Synopsis of changes in the constitution embodied in the preliminary<br />

draft."<br />

United States—Revision of the laws,<br />

qr 347.7 U2534<br />

Committee on. (House.)<br />

Bankruptcy laws of the United States; revision of the act of July 1,<br />

1898, act of February 5, 1903, act of June 15, 1906 and act of June 25,<br />

1910; uniform system, with marginal notes and index and general<br />

orders and forms in bankruptcy adopted by the Supreme court of the<br />

United States, together with court decisions on the various sections.<br />

1916. (64th cong. ist sess. House. Doc. no. 1106, v.137.)<br />

Education<br />

Boston—Educational investigation and r 371.29 B64 no.17<br />

measurement department.<br />

Organization and administration of intermediate schools in Boston.<br />

1918. (In its Bulletin no.17.)<br />

Edgeworth Ladies' Seminary, Sewickley.<br />

r 376.9 E28<br />

A notice of the Edgeworth seminary for young ladies, together with<br />

a table of studies taught in the institution, and a catalogue embracing<br />

the names of those who are now, or have been heretofore, its pupils,<br />

April 1836. 1836. Allinder. Pittsburgh.<br />

Graves, Frank Pierrepont.<br />

370.9 G8ihi<br />

History of education before the middle ages. 1918. Macmillan.<br />

"Supplementary reading" at the end of many of the chapters.<br />

Contains bibliographical foot-notes.<br />

New- issue of a work published in 1909. "The author follows Thomas Davidson in<br />

regarding education as a part of the process of evolution, but he views it as 'conscious<br />

evolution' toward more definite ends. .Liberal quotations are made from original sources,<br />

and a bibliography is added to each chapter." Nation, 1909.<br />

Sabin, Frances Ellis, & Woodruff, L. B.<br />

375-8 Sn<br />

The relation of Latin to practical life; concrete illustrations in the<br />

form of an exhibit. [1918.] Privately printed.<br />

The book affords material to answer the question of the high school boy or girl,<br />

"What's the use of Latin?"<br />

Vermont—Education, State board of. r 379-17 V2 7<br />

Vermont junior high schools; suggestions for teachers; CM. Hill,<br />

supervisor of junior high schools. 1918. (Bulletin no.i, 1918.)<br />

Worker's Educational Association.<br />

W. E. A. education year book, 1918. [1918.]<br />

r 370.6 W89


234 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Yale University. r 378.7 Y130<br />

Obituary record of Yale graduates, 1916-17. [1917.] (Bulletin, 13th<br />

ser. no.10.)<br />

Commerce<br />

Hanna, Mary Alice.<br />

r 382 H23<br />

Trade of the Delaware district before the Revolution. 1917. [Smith<br />

College.]<br />

"Bibliography," p.334-338.<br />

Reprinted from the "Smith College studies in history, 1917."<br />

Thesis for Ph. D., Bryn Mawr College.<br />

Wolfe, Archibald John.<br />

380 W83<br />

Theory and practice of international commerce. 1919. International<br />

Book Pub. Co.<br />

"Bibliography," p.537-54°.<br />

Women<br />

Beaumont, fidouardde. q 396 B353<br />

L'epee et les femmes. 1881.<br />

Discusses the influence of the sword, synonym of war, of the warrior, and of the<br />

gentleman, upon the disposition, the ideas, the beauty, and the customs of women; the<br />

influence of women upon the sentiments, the vigor, the deeds, the manners, and the<br />

destinies of the sword; and their combined influence upon the form of society from ancient<br />

times to 1789.<br />

Quitard, Pierre Marie, comp.<br />

r 398.9 Q47<br />

Proverbes sur les femmes; l'amitie, l'amour et le mariage. [i860.]<br />

Language<br />

r 499 H36<br />

Hawaiian phrase book; na huaolelo a me na olelo kikeke ma ka olelo<br />

Beretania a me ka olelo Hawaii. 1906. Hawaiian News Co.<br />

La Villesbrunne, Jehanne de.<br />

448 L33<br />

Le frangais des frangais de France; conversations en cours d'annee.<br />

1918. Clarendon Press.<br />

Pitman (Sir Isaac) & Sons.<br />

448 P66<br />

Pitman's mercantile correspondence; a collection of actual letters<br />

arranged in groups, illustrating modern mercantile methods and forming<br />

models for the foreign correspondent; English-French. [1918?]<br />

Science<br />

Felt, Ephraim Porter.<br />

595-7 F34<br />

Key to American insect galls. 1918. (New York (state)—Museum.<br />

Bulletin no.200.)<br />

"Bibliography," p.232-241.<br />

r 541.105 J46<br />

Journal de chimie physique; electrochimie, thermochimie, radiochimie,<br />

mecanique chimique, stoechiometrie, 1903-date. v.i-date. 1903-date.<br />

Issued irregularly.<br />

Tables decennales, v.1-10, 1903-12. (In v.io.)


BOOKS ADDED—MAY 1920 235<br />

Miller, Dayton Clarence. r 530.7 M69<br />

Laboratory physics; a student's manual for colleges and scientific<br />

schools. 1903. Ginn.<br />

"Reference books," p.389-390.<br />

United States—Fuel administration—Oil division. qr 553.28 U2532<br />

Report to the Arkansas Gas Users' Association on the natural gas<br />

problems of communities in the state of Arkansas dependent upon the<br />

supply of the Arkansas Natural Gas Company. 1919.<br />

Mimeograph copy.<br />

Useful Arts<br />

Arizona—Agricultural experiment station, Tucson. r 630.6 A7it<br />

Timely hints to farmers, no.79, 93, 101, 105-122, 129, 131-135. 1909-18.<br />

Australia—Advisory council of science and industry. r 605 A93<br />

Bulletin, no.i-date. 1917-date.<br />

Brown, Nelson Courtlandt. 634.9197 B79<br />

Forest products; their manufacture and use, embracing the principal<br />

commercial features in the production, manufacture and utilization<br />

of the most important forest products other than lumber, in the United<br />

States. 1919. Wiley.<br />

Contents: General.—Wood pulp and paper.—Tanning materials.—Veneers.—Slack<br />

cooperage.—Tight cooperage.—Naval stores.—Hardwood distillation.—Softwood distillation.—Charcoal.—Boxes<br />

and box shooks.—Cross ties.—Poles and piling.—Posts.—Mine<br />

timbers.—Fuelwood.—Shingles and shakes.—Maple syrup and sugar.—Rubber.—Dye<br />

woods and materials.—Excelsior.—Cork.<br />

"Bibliography," at the end of most of the chapters.<br />

The same<br />

r 634.9197 B79<br />

[Craig, David, & Lovsey, C. H.] qr 691.3 C86<br />

An opportunity to make money; manufacture multisize portable<br />

concrete buildings; houses, churches, offices, factories, sheds, garages,<br />

barns, silos, fences, and any and all kinds of buildings and structures.<br />

1918. [Everett Press.]<br />

Cover title reads "The answer to the housing problem; multisize portable concrete<br />

buildings."<br />

Gardner, Henry Alfred. r 691 G18<br />

Tests of moisture and water resistance of various coatings on small<br />

boat construction. Privately printed.<br />

Kelly, Fred C. 658.01 K17<br />

Human nature in business; how to capitalize your every-day habits<br />

and characteristics. 1920. Putnam.<br />

Contents: The law of averages.—The little law at work.—Cashing in on footsteps.—<br />

Candy and soda.—Men's moods at the lunch hour.—Following the crowd.—Street cars<br />

and pedestrians—Human ants.—Human nature and the weather.—The costliness of<br />

vanity—Habits of the shopper.—Ingenuity in salesmanship.—Meeting human nature<br />

half way —To buy or not to buy.—Finding the keynote.—Applying imagination.—Turning<br />

imagination to profit.—Handling people at hotels.—Capitalizing courtesy.—Honesty<br />

in the average man.—Human nature at the credit window.—The voice of the average<br />

man.


236 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Technical Association of the Paper and Pulp Industry. qr 676 T26<br />

Papers and addresses presented at the annual meeting (3d-date),<br />

1918-date. 1918-date.<br />

Title varies.<br />

Includes Proceedings.<br />

United States—Labor statistics bureau.<br />

r 607 U2533<br />

Descriptions of occupations, [no.1-10.] 1918.<br />

Prepared for the L T nited States employment service by the Bureau of labor statistics.<br />

For contents see Contents book kept at the reference desk.<br />

Public Health<br />

Dublin, Louis Israel, and others.<br />

r 614.16 D85<br />

Mortality statistics of insured wage-earners and their families;<br />

experience of the Metropolitan Life Insurance Company Industrial<br />

Department, 1911 to 1916, in the United States and Canada. 1919.<br />

Metropolitan Life Insurance Co.<br />

Travelers Insurance Company, Hartford, Conn.<br />

Safety in building construction. 1916.<br />

The same<br />

Engineering<br />

614.8 T6gs<br />

r 614.8 T6gs<br />

District of Columbia—Public utilities commission. r 625.6 D63<br />

Street railways in the District of Columbia; letter submitting, in<br />

response to a Senate resolution of Feb. II, 1918, certain information<br />

relative to the street railway systems in the District of Columbia. 1918.<br />

(United States. 65th cong. 2d. sess. Senate. Doc. 110.197, v.13.)<br />

Dixon (Joseph) Crucible Company, Jersey City, N. J. r 621.89 D64<br />

Use and abuse of ball and roller bearings, by F. J. Jarosch. 1915.<br />

Dozal, Pedro J.<br />

q 627.8 D77<br />

Retaining walls, based entirely on the theory of friction; done into<br />

English by R. T. Mulleady. 1918.<br />

The same<br />

q r 627.8 D77<br />

Garner, J. H. & Carmichael, J. F.<br />

qr 628.544 G18<br />

Recovery of grease from waste materials by the solvent extraction<br />

process. 1918. Chorley.<br />

Reprinted from the "Journal of the Society of Dyers and Colourists," v.34, no.6,<br />

June 1918.<br />

With this is bound "Treatment of effluents from dyehouses and textile factories,"<br />

by J. H. Garner.<br />

Mesta Machine Company, West Homestead, Pa. qr 621.7 M64<br />

Plant and product of the Mesta Machine Company. 1919. Pittsburgh.<br />

A well illustrated description giving valuable technical information regarding prime<br />

movers and steel-mill equipment manufactured by this company.<br />

qr 621.7 M64U<br />

[1919.] Pitts­<br />

Mesta Machine Company, West Homestead, Pa.<br />

Usines et produits de la Mesta Machine Company.<br />

burgh.


BOOKS ADDED—MAY 1920 237<br />

Texas University—Engineering department. r 625.7 T32<br />

Roads and pavements; papers presented before the short course<br />

in highway engineering, March 31-April 12, 1919. 1919. (Texas<br />

University. Bulletin no.1922.)<br />

Contents: Earth roads, by R. G. Tyler.—Preparation of road plans involving state<br />

or Federal aid, by M. C. Welborn.—Drainage areas and culverts, by G. G. Wickline.—<br />

Preparation of specifications and contracts, by R. G. Tyler.—Road surfaces, by J. D.<br />

Fauntleroy.—Bituminated roads, by M. C. Welborn.—Penetration bituminous pavements,<br />

by R. G. Tyler.—Trap rock as the mineral aggregate in hard-surfaced roads and streets,<br />

by A. H. Muid and E. L. Dennis.—Concrete construction, by Julian Montgomery.<br />

Wegmann, Edward.<br />

628.14 W44<br />

Conveyance and distribution of water for water supply; aqueducts,<br />

pipe-lines and distributing systems; a practical treatise for water-works<br />

engineers and superintendents. 1918. Van Nostrand.<br />

Bibliographical foot-notes.<br />

The same<br />

r 628.14 W44<br />

Not concerned with water collection, storage reservoirs, or pumping, but is the first<br />

work to deal comprehensively with local distribution of water supply. Considers design<br />

and maintenance of piping systems and accessories, stand-pipes and service reservoirs,<br />

measurement of water and prevention of waste, and fire protection systems.<br />

Westinghouse Air Brake Co.<br />

r 625.25 Ws6pc<br />

P C passenger brake equipment. 1919. Pittsburgh. (Instruction<br />

pamphlet no.5045, July 1919.)<br />

Mines and Mining<br />

British Columbia—Mines department. qr 622.05 B75<br />

Bulletin, no.l-date. 1919-date.<br />

r 622.33 S271<br />

Saward's annual; a standard statistical review of the coal trade [ed.]<br />

by F. W. Saward and others, 1919-date.<br />

Similar in scope to "The coal trade," an annual formerly published by Frederick E.<br />

Saward.<br />

qr 622.3305 S27<br />

Saward's journal; a progressive coal trade weekly, May 4, 1918-date.<br />

v.i-date. 1918-date.<br />

Fine Arts<br />

Clarke, Thomas Benedict.<br />

r 757 C S3<br />

Catalogue of early American portraits collected by Thomas B.<br />

Clarke, New York city; to be sold at unrestricted public sale by direction<br />

of the owner in the Plaza hotel [Jan. 7, 1919]; the sale will be<br />

conducted by Thomas E. Kirby of the American Art Association,<br />

managers. 1919.<br />

Drake, Maurice.<br />


238 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Friese, John Frank. 771-53 ?95<br />

Blueprinting. 1919. Manual Arts Press.<br />

Covers printing room arrangements and equipment, blue-print papers, sunlight<br />

and electric printing, and methods of special printing.<br />

Wirick, Lewis Arthur.<br />

r 744 W81<br />

How to read blue prints; for use of students in industrial and vocational<br />

schools. 1917. Privately printed.<br />

Municipal Art<br />

Evans, Frederick Noble. 7 E94<br />

Town improvement; a review of the principles by which physical<br />

improvement in the town or city may be accomplished, with observations<br />

as to the effect of such improvement upon the life of the community.<br />

1919. Appleton.<br />

Rosenthal, Leon. 710 R72<br />

Villes et villages francais apres la guerre; amenagement, restauration,<br />

embellissement, extension; preface de Louis Bonnier. 1918.<br />

Contents: L'<strong>org</strong>anisation necessaire.—Les elements de la cite.—La resurrection<br />

des cites detruites.<br />

Bibliographical foot-notes.<br />

Architecture<br />

Byne, Arthur, & Stapley, Mildred. b 729.97 B99S<br />

Spanish ironwork. 1915. (Hispanic Society of America. Publications,<br />

no.89.)<br />

Contents: Spanish ironwork previous to the Gothic period.—Gothic rejas and pulpits.—Gothic<br />

hardware and domestic utensils.—The development of the renaissance reja.<br />

—Renaissance church rej'as.—Smaller renaissance productions.—The last of Spanish<br />

ironwork.—Catalogue of ironwork in the collection of the Hispanic Society of America.<br />

Carter, John. qb 726 C23<br />

Plan, elevations, sections and specimens of the architecture and<br />

ornaments of the cathedral church at Exeter; engraved by James<br />

Basire from drawings made by John Carter [ed. by H. C. Engelfield<br />

and J. Wyndham]. 1797.<br />

Published by the Society of Antiquaries of London.<br />

Contains "Some remarks on the original foundation and construction of the present<br />

fabric of Exeter cathedral," by Charles Lyttelton.<br />

With this are bound his Plans, elevations, sections and specimens of the architecture<br />

and ornaments of the remaining parts of St. Stephen's chapel, Westminster; Plan,<br />

elevations, sections and specimens of the abbey church of Bath; Plans, elevations, sections<br />

and specimens of the architecture and ornaments of the cathedral church at Durham.<br />

[Le grand escalier de Versailles; 16 engraved plates.] qb 728.3 G77<br />

Title-page wanting.<br />

Some of the engravings in this volume are signed by Audran, one by Baudet; a few<br />

are of paintings from other parts of the Chateau than the grand staircase. The paintings<br />

were by Charles Lebrun and Pierre Mignard.<br />

Labacco, Antonio.<br />

qb 722.7 Ln<br />

Libro appartenente a l'architettura nel qual si figurano alcune notabili<br />

antiquita di Roma. [1559.]<br />

Contains 36 plates.<br />

On first recto after title-page is inscribed "Impresso in Roma in casa nostra ne<br />

gl'anni del Signore M. D.LIIII."


BOOKS ADDED—MAY 1920 239<br />

Narragansett Machine Co. Providence, R. I. 725.85 N13<br />

Gymnasium construction. 1919.<br />

Illustrated with plans and photographs of gymnasium interiors.<br />

Music<br />

Scores<br />

Beach, Mrs Amy Marcy (Cheney). qM 783.4 B34<br />

Festival Jubilate; composed for the dedication of the Woman's<br />

building at the World's Columbian Exposition, Chicago, 1892 [vocal<br />

score]. 1892. Schmidt.<br />

Gaul, Alfred Robert. q M 1%3A Gz4<br />

The holy city; an oratorio [vocal score]. Schirmer.<br />

Paine, John Knowles.<br />

qM 7g s •, p l6<br />

Im friihling; symphonie (no.2 in A), fiir grosses orchester, partitur.<br />

Op.34. 1880. Schmidt.<br />

Books About Music<br />

Mitchell, Albert G.<br />

Public school class method for the cornet. 1919. Ditson.<br />

q 788. 3 M74<br />

Schmitt, Hans.<br />

78 6 . 3 S35<br />

The pedals of the piano-forte and their relation to piano-forte playing<br />

and the teaching of composition and acoustics; tr. by F. S. Law.<br />

1893. Presser.<br />

Smith, Macdonald. 786.3 S65<br />

From brain to keyboard; a system of hand and finger control for<br />

pianists and students. 1917. Ditson.<br />

Recreation<br />

Culp, Juanita Mae, comp.<br />

793 C91<br />

What to do on Hallowe'en, containing material for Hallowe'en<br />

parties and programs for young and old. Eldridge Entertainment<br />

House.<br />

Hanson, Dorothy.<br />

r 792.7 H24<br />

Social significance of the motion picture. 1917. (Lilian Edwards<br />

prize essay.)<br />

"Bibliography," p. 14-15.<br />

The Lilian S. Edwards prize is used to publish and distribute the best theses on sociological<br />

subjects, written by students for the department of sociology of the New Hampshire<br />

State College.<br />

Madison [Wis.] Board of Commerce.<br />

qr 790 M23<br />

Madison, "the four lake city," recreational survey; prepared by a<br />

special committee of the Madison Board of Commerce. 1915.<br />

"Covers the whole scope of play and recreation and was entered upon with thoroughness<br />

in order that it might serve as a real guide in constructive civic effort." Letters<br />

of transmittal.


CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Literature<br />

Asquith, Herbert Henry. 820 A84<br />

Some aspects of the Victorian age; delivered in the Sheldonian<br />

theatre, June 8, 1918. 1918. Clarendon Press. (Romanes lecture,<br />

1918.)<br />

An estimate of the contribution made by Victorians to civilization, exclusive of the<br />

fields of theology and politics.<br />

Gerould, Mrs Katharine (Fullerton). 814 G32<br />

Modes and morals. 1920. Scribner.<br />

Contents: The new simplicity.—Dress and the woman.—Caviare on principle.—The<br />

extirpation of culture.—Fashions in men.—The newest woman.—Tabu and temperament.<br />

—The boundaries of truth.—Miss Alcott's New England.—The sensual ear.—British<br />

novelists, ltd.—The remarkable Tightness of Rudyard Kipling.<br />

Huneker, James Gibbons. 814 H93b<br />

Bedouins. 1920. Scribner.<br />

Contents: Mary Garden [etc.]: Superwoman.—Intimate.—The baby, the critic,<br />

and the guitar.—Interpreter.—Melisande and Debussy.—The artistic temperament.—<br />

The passing of Octave Mirbeau.—Anarchs and ecstasy.—Painted music [Botticelli].—<br />

Poe and his Polish contemporary [Frederic Francois Chopin],—Ge<strong>org</strong>e Luks.—Concerning<br />

calico cats.—Chopin or the circus?—Caruso on wheels.—Sing and grow voiceless.—Anatole<br />

France, the last phase.—A masque of music.—Idols and ambergris :<br />

The supreme sin.—Brothers-in-law.—Grindstones.—Venus or Valkyr?—The cardinal's<br />

fiddle.—Renunciation.—The vision malefic.<br />

Jenkins, MacGregor. 824 J25<br />

Literature with a large L, and Fellow travelers. 1919. Houghton.<br />

Two essays, the first dealing with the attitude of the public toward literature, the<br />

second with just "folks." Written in whimsical vein.<br />

Kamman, William Frederic. r 830.9 K12<br />

Socialism in German American literature. 1917. Americana Germanica<br />

Press. (Americana Germanica; monographs, no.24.)<br />

"Bibliography," p. 119-124.<br />

Thesis for Ph. D., University of Pennsylvania.<br />

An attempt to "trace in outline the introduction, dissemination, and development<br />

of German socialistic ideas in the United States from about 1835, to recent years, and to<br />

show their influence on German American literature." Preface.<br />

Lynd, Robert. 804 L99<br />

Old and new masters. [1919.] Scribner.<br />

Contents: Dostoevsky the sensationalist.—Jane Austen, natural historian.—Mr<br />

G. K. Chesterton and Mr Hilaire Belloc.—Wordsworth.—Keats.—Henry James.—<br />

Browning, the poet of love.—The fame of J. M. Synge.—Villon, the genius of the<br />

tavern.—Pope.—James Elroy Flecker.—Turgenev.—The madness of Strindberg.—"The<br />

prince of French poets."—Rossetti and ritual.—Mr Bernard Shaw.—Mr Masefield's<br />

secret.—Mr. W. B. Yeats. —Tchehov, the perfect story-teller. —Lady Gregory.— Mr<br />

Cunninghame Graham.—Swinburne.—The work of T. M. Kettle.—Mr I. C. Squire.—<br />

Mr Joseph Conrad.—Mr Rudyard Kipling.—Mr Thomas Hardy.<br />

Morley, Christopher Darlington. 814 M8gm<br />

Mince pie; adventures on the sunny side of Grub street [essays].<br />

1919. Doran.<br />

A series of short, humorous sketches, many of which were first printed in the Philadelphia<br />

"Public ledger," the "Bookman," the "Boston evening transcript," "Life." and<br />

the "Smart set." The author says they are intended to be read in bed. to pave the way<br />

to easy slumber.


BOOKS ADDED—MAY 1920 241<br />

Olrik, Axel.<br />

839.81 O237<br />

Heroic legends of Denmark; tr. from the Danish and rev. in collaboration<br />

with the author by L. M. Hollander. 1919. American-<br />

Scandinavian foundation. (Scandinavian monographs, v.4.)<br />

"Scandinavian sources for the Scylding legends," p.511-512.<br />

Poetry<br />

[Aldington, Mrs Hilda (Doolittle).] 811 A363<br />

Sea garden [imagist poems], by H. D. 1917. Houghton. (New<br />

poetry series.)<br />

Braithwaite, William Stanley, ed.<br />

821.08 B69<br />

Book of modern British verse. 1919. Small.<br />

Companion volume to the "Golden treasury of magazine verse." Covers the contemporary<br />

period which began with John Masefield and includes Siegfried Sassoon,<br />

Robert Nichols, Wilfrid Gibson, John Drinkwater, etc.<br />

Burr, Amelia Josephine.<br />

811 Bg43h<br />

Hearts awake [poems], and The pixy; a play. 1919. Doran.<br />

Cutts, John Cutts, baron.<br />

r 821 C95<br />

Life and poetry of John Cutts, by S. S. Swartley. 1917. Deputy<br />

Brothers Co.<br />

"Bibliography," p.35-37.<br />

Thesis by S. S. Swartley for Ph. D., University of Pennsylvania.<br />

Dunn, Theodore Douglas, comp.<br />

891.4 D92<br />

The Bengali book of English verse, with a foreword by Sir Rabindranath<br />

Tagore. 1918. Longmans.<br />

"The verse collected in this volume represents about one hundred years of poetical<br />

effort; and has its origin in England's introduction into India of western education."<br />

Introduction.<br />

Shorter, Mrs Dora (Sigerson).<br />

821 S55I<br />

A legend of Glendalough, and other ballads. 1919. Maunsel.<br />

Drama. Theatre<br />

Altair, pseud.<br />

812 A46<br />

Chaos; a vision of eternity. 1919. McMurtrie.<br />

A drama in verse. "Too recondite to come seriously into consideration as a practicable<br />

festival production for untrained folks." Survey, 1919.<br />

822 B 43S<br />

Bennett, Arnold.<br />

Sacred and profane love; a play in three acts, founded on the novel<br />

of the same name. 1920. Doran.<br />

Revised edition of the novel was issued under title "Book of Carlotta."<br />

Claudel, Paul.<br />

8 4 2 C 54n<br />

La nuit de Noel de 1914 [drame pour patronages en un acte]. [I9IS-]<br />

The scene is a village near Rheims and the chief characters are the spirits of two<br />

French soldiers, a group of children killed in the war, and the rector of Saint-Remy-aux-<br />

Bois.<br />

De Mille, William Churchill.<br />

"Food;" a tragedy of the future in one act. 1914. French.<br />

8l2 D 4 2


242 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Glaspell, Susan, afterward Mrs Cook. 812 G46P<br />

The people, and Close the book; two one-act plays. 1918. Shay.<br />

(Plays of the Provincetown players.)<br />

Gsell, Paul. 842 G94<br />

Les gosses dans les ruines; idylle de guerre [50 dessins de Poulbot].<br />

1919.<br />

The scene is a devastated village of the Somme where, in spite of the surrounding<br />

ruins and suffering, the children still play at war.<br />

Housman, Laurence.<br />

822 H83I<br />

Lord of the harvest; a morality in one act. 1916. French.<br />

Housman, Laurence. 822 H83n<br />

Nazareth; a morality in one act. 1916. French.<br />

Depicts a scene from the childhood of Jesus. Written in verse.<br />

Mackaye, Percy Wallace.<br />

812 Mi7r<br />

Rip Van Winkle; folk-opera in three acts. 1919. Knopf.<br />

Written at the request of Mr Cleofonte Campanini. The legend has been modified<br />

by the introduction of a new character, Peterkce, and by a new element in the plot, the<br />

magic flask.<br />

O'Brien, Seumas.<br />

822 Oi2b<br />

Blind; a comedy in one act as played by Whitford Kane's Irish<br />

players. 1918. Arens. (Flying stag plays for the little theatre.)<br />

Pailleron, fidouard. 842 Pisar<br />

The art of being bored; a comedy in three acts; tr. by B. H. Clark.<br />

1914. French. (World's best plays by celebrated European authors.)<br />

First produced in 1881. The usual type of 19th century French play, skillfully<br />

built around one strong scene. Written solely to amuse.<br />

Reely, Mary Katharine.<br />

812 R28<br />

Daily bread; A window to the south; The lean years; one-act plays.<br />

1919. Wilson.<br />

Deal with scenes from every-day life, mostly tragic in character.<br />

Ruud, Martin Brown.<br />

r 822.33 HM<br />

Essay toward a history of Shakespeare in Norway. 1917. [Banta.]<br />

Contents: Shakespeare translations in Norway.—Shakespeare criticism in Norway.—Performances<br />

of Shakespeare's plays in Norway.<br />

Reprint from "Scandinavian studies and notes," Urbana, 111. 1917.<br />

Thesis for Ph. D., University of Chicago.<br />

Shay, Frank, ed.<br />

016.822 S53<br />

Plays and books of the little theatre, with a preface by Pierre Loving.<br />

1919. Theatre Crafts Exchange.<br />

A bibliography in two parts, giving place, publisher, date, and price of books; and<br />

number of characters, publisher or magazine, date, and price of plays suitable for the<br />

little theatre.<br />

Smith, Ge<strong>org</strong>e Gregory. 822 J42zsm<br />

Ben Jonson. 1919. Macmillan. (English men of letters.)<br />

Contents: Early life.—Middle life and close.—Literary conscience.—The comedies.<br />

—The masques.—The tragedies ; The sad shepherd.—The poems.—Spolia opima.—Influence.


Biography<br />

BOOKS ADDED—MAY 1920 243<br />

Black, Joseph.<br />

92 Bsi3r<br />

Ramsay, Sir William. Life and letters of Joseph Black, M. D., with<br />

an introduction dealing with the life and work of Sir William Ramsay,<br />

by F. G. Donnan. 1918. Constable.<br />

"An excellent biography of Joseph Black, which is also a history of an important<br />

period in chemical discovery [the period of the quantitative study of chemical reactions]."<br />

Science progress, 1919.<br />

Cody, William Frederick.<br />

92 C655C<br />

Cody, Mrs Louisa (Frederici), & Cooper, C. R. Memories of Buffalo<br />

Bill. 1919. Appleton.<br />

Gives intimate details of his life—his courtship in 1865, thrilling exploits with the<br />

Indians of the "wild West," his buffalo killings, and his circus performing days.<br />

Demmler, Fred Adolph.<br />

r 92 D421P<br />

[Price, Lucien.] Immortal youth [a memoir of Fred A. Demmler];<br />

a study in the will to create. 1919. McGrath.<br />

Sympathetic sketch of a young artist who was killed in the world war.<br />

Hays, Alexander.<br />

92 H376h<br />

Life and letters; ed. and arranged with notes and contemporary history<br />

by G. T. Fleming from data comp. by G. A. Hays. 1919. Privately<br />

printed. Pittsburgh.<br />

The same<br />

r 92 H376h<br />

Traces the career of this brevet major general of United States volunteers, from<br />

boyhood, through West Point, in Mexico and in the Civil war, to his death in the Battle<br />

of the Wilderness.<br />

Henry, David Ford.<br />

r 92 H4515I1<br />

Geneaology [sic] of the Henry family. 1919. Privately printed.<br />

[Pittsburgh.]<br />

Rogers, Mrs Clara Kathleen. 9 2 R6i5r<br />

Memories of a musical career. 1919. Little.<br />

Story of a singer, covering her student life in Leipzig and Berlin and her operatic<br />

career in Italy, England, and America.<br />

Taylor, James Hudson.<br />

9 2 T2543t<br />

Taylor, Howard, & Taylor, Mrs G. G. Hudson Taylor in early<br />

years; the growth of a soul; with introduction by Mr D. E. Hoste.<br />

1912. Hodder.<br />

Story of the life of the founder of the China Inland Mission, compiled by his son<br />

and daughter-in-law.<br />

Trumbull, Jonathan, 1710-85. 9 2 T78it<br />

Trumbull, Jonathan, b. 1844. Jonathan Trumbull, governor of<br />

Connecticut, 1769-84. 1919- Little.<br />

"Bibliography," p.34i-34»- , „ .<br />

Simple and impartial story of the life of Connecticut s Revolutionary governor, by<br />

his great-great-grandson.<br />

Collected Biography<br />

United States—Congress. qr 9 2 3- 2 U2 5 mu<br />

[Memorial addresses.] 1917- (64th cong. ist sess. House. Doc.<br />

no.1030, 1360, v.139-) „<br />

Contains memorial adresses on S. A. Witherspoon and J. A. Goulden.


244 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

r 920 V25<br />

Vem ar det? 1918; uppslags- och handbok over samtida kanda svenska<br />

man och kvinnor; utgiven av Erik Thyselius. [1918.]<br />

Travel and Description<br />

Newbolt, Sir Henry John. 910.9 N26<br />

Book of the long trail. 1919. Longmans.<br />

Contents: John Franklin.—Richard Burton.—David Livingstone.—Henry Stanley.<br />

—Burke and Wills.—Francis Younghusband.—Robert Scott.—Alexander Wollaston.<br />

The same<br />

j 910.9 N26<br />

Accounts of polar expeditions and of explorations in Africa, Asia, and Australia—of<br />

Burton's famous pilgrimage to Mecca in disguise, of Younghusband's adventures in<br />

the forbidden land of Tibet, of Wollaston's experiences among the Papuans and pygmies<br />

of the little known island of New Guinea.<br />

Rathbone, Josephine Adams, comp.<br />

r 016.91 R21<br />

Viewpoints in travel; an arrangement of books according to their<br />

essential interest. 1919. A. L. A. Pub. Board.<br />

Europe<br />

Fraser, Ge<strong>org</strong>e M. comp.<br />

r 914.1 Ai4f<br />

Stranger's guide to Aberdeen. 1919. "Aberdeen daily journal" and<br />

"Evening express."<br />

Hannay, James Owen.<br />

914-15 H23U-<br />

An Irishman looks at his world, by G. A. Birmingham [pseud.].<br />

1919. Hodder.<br />

Contents: Irish politics; the old parties.—Irish politics; the new parties.—The island<br />

of saints; Ireland's religion.—And scholars; Ireland's culture.—Education, primary,<br />

intermediate, university.—Education; the Gaelic League and the Irish Agricultural Organization<br />

Society.—The Irish aristocracy.—The farmers.—The middle classes; Dublin.<br />

—The middle classes; Belfast.—The middle classes; the country town.—Conclusion.<br />

Vinogradov, Sir Pavel Gavrilovich, ed.<br />

914-7 V34<br />

The reconstruction of Russia; essa3's. 1919. Oxford University<br />

Press.<br />

Contents: The situation in Russia,'by Sir Paul Vinogradoff.—Russia as an economic<br />

<strong>org</strong>anism, by N. Nordman.—Russian Jews and the league of nations, by S. L.<br />

Poliakoff-Litovtzeff.—The Llkrainian question, by I. V. Shklovsky (Dioneo).<br />

United States<br />

Rand, McNally & Co. pub.<br />

r 917.471 R18<br />

Rand McNally New York guide to the city and environs, with map.<br />

I9I3-<br />

Other Countries<br />

De la Pasture, Mrs Henry, ed.<br />

916 D38<br />

Our days on the Gold Coast, in Ashanti, in the northern territories<br />

and the British sphere of occupation in Togoland. 1919. Murray.<br />

The editor is (1919) the wife of the English governor of West Africa. The book<br />

is a collection of essays describing a day in the writer's life, submitted in a competition<br />

<strong>org</strong>anized in aid of the Red Cross in 1918. Half the essays were written by West<br />

African natives.


BOOKS ADDED—MAY 1920 245<br />

Hurd, Percy Angier. gi 7 , z H94<br />

Canada, past, present and future. [1918.] Allen. (International<br />

information series; British empire section, v.5.)<br />

Published for the International Information Committee.<br />

O'Brien, Frederick.<br />

White shadows in the South seas. 1919. Century.<br />

919.63 O12<br />

An account of the author's sojourn of a year among the cannibals of the Marquesas<br />

islands. Illustrated with photographs.<br />

Peking leader. qr 915.1 p 37<br />

China in 1918; ed. by M. T. Z. Tyau. 1919.<br />

Special anniversary supplement of the "Peking leader," Feb. 12, 1919.<br />

Maps<br />

Maps—Asia.<br />

qr 912.5 Mio<br />

Asia, eastern Europe & Australia; reference & resource map.<br />

Size, 32 x 36 inches, folded in 4° cover; scale, about 190 miles to 1 inch.<br />

Contains inset map "Australia."<br />

Published by "Asia, journal of the American Asiatic Association."<br />

Maps—Brazil. (1911.) qr 912.81 M<br />

Carte economique du Bresil <strong>org</strong>anisee par A.J. Rodrigues. 1911.<br />

Size, 35^8 x 35^8 inches, folded in 4° cover; scale, about 50 kilometers to 1 centimeter.<br />

Issued by order of the Minister of agriculture, industry and commerce of Brazil.<br />

Maps—Lithuania. (1918?)<br />

qr 912.475 M<br />

Lithuania [map]; pub. by direction of the Lithuanian National<br />

Council. [1918?]<br />

Size, 35J4 x 25J4 inches, folded in 4 0 cover; scale, about 15 kilometers to 1 centimeter.<br />

Contains inset maps showing territorial changes and ethnological status in Lithuania<br />

from prehistoric times to the present day.<br />

Original issued by Lithuanian bureau of information, Lausanne, Switzerland.<br />

Maps—Manitoba. (1917-) qr 912.712 M4<br />

Map of Manitoba, Saskatchewan & Alberta; showing the number<br />

of quarter sections available for homestead entry in each township,<br />

also the pre-emption and purchased homestead area as defined by the<br />

Dominion lands act, 1908. 1917.<br />

Size, 21 !4 x 3254 inches, folded in folio cover; scale, 35 miles to 1 inch.<br />

Prepared in the Natural resources intelligence branch of Canada.<br />

Maps—Pittsburgh. (1919.) r 912.74886 M17<br />

Lippincott & McNeil's map of greater Pittsburgh. 1919. Pittsburgh.<br />

Size, 32 x 43 inches, folded in 8° cover; scale, about 2,000 ft. to 1 inch.<br />

[Mercator, Gerardus.]<br />

[Atlas; ed. by Jodocus Hondius. 1609.]<br />

qr 91 2 M63<br />

Title-page wanting.<br />

French text.<br />

Includes Mercator's cosmography, followed by descriptions and maps of Europe,<br />

Asia, and northern Africa. Contains 131 double and three single maps, all colored.


246 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

History<br />

Europe<br />

Adriacus, pseud. 943-6 A24<br />

From Trieste to Valona; the Adriatic problem and Italy's aspirations.<br />

1919. Alfieri.<br />

Attempts to prove Italy's right to Julian-Venetia, Trieste, Istria, Pola, Dalmatia,<br />

Fiume, and Spalato, and also to show that these claims are for the best interests of the<br />

peoples concerned. Illustrated with photographs.<br />

947 B61<br />

Bolshevik aims and ideals, and Russia's revolt against bolshevism;<br />

reprinted from the Round table. 1919. Macmillan.<br />

The first article describes the principles of bolshevism with a view to showing how<br />

it differs from other forms of socialism. The second is a sketch of the various Russian<br />

factions acting against the Bolsheviki.<br />

Griffith, William John. r 942.9 G89<br />

Short analysis of Welsh history. 1911. Dent. (Temple primers.)<br />

"Meant for students and teachers—a summary for the one, and a syllabus for the<br />

others. . .The continuity of the story, rather than the number of isolated facts, has been<br />

the chief obj'ect." Preface.<br />

Hard, William. g47 H25<br />

Raymond Robins' own story. 1920. Harper.<br />

Robins was for 18 months the unofficial representative of the American ambassador<br />

to Russia and had exceptional opportunities to observe conditions under Kerensky,<br />

Lenine, and Trotzky. He believes that intercourse is tlie only way open to America in<br />

dealing with Russia.<br />

Keeling, H. V. 947 Kis<br />

Bolshevism; Mr Reeling's five years in Russia. 1919. Hodder.<br />

Records "the first-hand experiences of an English trade-unionist and 'internationalist'...An<br />

unqualified condemnation of Bolshevism." Outlook (London), 1919.<br />

Taylor, Hannis. 937 T253<br />

Cicero, a sketch of his life and works; a commentary on the Roman<br />

constitution and Roman public life, supplemented by the sayings of<br />

Cicero arranged for the first time as an anthology. Ed.2. 1918. Mc­<br />

Clurg.<br />

"Bibliography," pref. p.37-44.<br />

Other Countries<br />

Bentwich, Norman de Mattos. g 33 B445<br />

Hellenism. 1919. Jewish Publication Soc. of America. (Movements<br />

in Judaism.)<br />

"Bibliography," p.377-379.<br />

Describes the interaction of Judaism and Hellenistic culture, or the culture which<br />

emanated from the Greek world during the three centuries immediately preceding the<br />

Christian era.<br />

De Bekker, Leander Jan. 972 D35<br />

The plot against Mexico, with an introduction by J. F. Moors.<br />

1919. Knopf.<br />

A defense of the non-intervention policy in dealing with our Mexican problem.


BOOKS ADDED—MAY 1920 247<br />

Fletcher, Charles Brunsdon. ggo F63<br />

Problem of the Pacific; preface by Sir William MacGregor. 1919.<br />

Heinemann.<br />

"A broader view of the international questions treated in the author's previous<br />

volume, The New Pacific. A useful contribution to the study of Far Eastern politics."<br />

Outlook (London), 1919.<br />

Macphail, James Merry.<br />

954 M22<br />

Asoka. Assoc. Press. (Heritage of India.)<br />

"Short study... of the life and times of Asoka as king, missionary, and scribe, with<br />

the early history of Buddhism and with Asoka's place in history...An admirable little<br />

volume, full, interesting, and careful." Review, 1920.<br />

New York (city)—Public library. Astor, Lenox and qr 016.9352 N26<br />

Tilden foundations.<br />

Assyria and Babylonia; a list of references in the library; comp. by<br />

I. A. Pratt, under the direction of Richard Gottheil. 1918.<br />

European War<br />

Blanchet, Eugene Louis.<br />

940.917 B53<br />

En represailles. 1918.<br />

An account of the horrors of life in various German prison camps during the world<br />

war. Illustrated.<br />

Duffy, Francis Patrick.<br />

940.918 D877<br />

Father Duffy's story; a tale of humor and heroism, of life and death<br />

with the fighting 69th, with an historical appendix by Joyce Kilmer.<br />

1919. Doran.<br />

Written in the form of a journal from June 1917 to April 1919. "Not so much<br />

history, as one of the sources of history, a first-hand document." Review, 1920.<br />

Etienne, pseud.<br />

940.915 E88<br />

A naval lieutenant, 1914-18. [1919-] Methuen.<br />

Vivid descriptions of the war at sea, especially of the Battle of Jutland, by a shrewd<br />

observer who kept full notes. Illustrated with photographs taken by the author. Condensed<br />

from Outlook (London), 1919.<br />

Parmer, Charles Brower.<br />

r 940.92 P25<br />

We are Americans! [I9I9-] Privately printed.<br />

Sketches which first appeared in "Qu'est-ce que c'est?" the weekly publication of<br />

the A. E. F. students attending the University of Toulouse, France, in the spring of 1910.<br />

United States—Library of Congress.<br />

qr 016.94091 U25I<br />

List of bibliographies on the European war. 1918.<br />

Mimeograph copy.<br />

Books for the Blind<br />

The Library has a collection of about 3,700 books and 75 periodicals for the blind.<br />

The Pennsylvania Home Teaching Society and Free Circulating Library for the Blind<br />

supports in this district a teacher, herself totally blind, who, under the direction of this<br />

Library visits the adult blind in their homes and teaches them to read. This service<br />

and the use of the books are absolutely free to all the adult blind in Pittsburgh and western<br />

Pennsylvania and the Director requests that names and addreses of such persons be<br />

sent to him in order that the teacher may call upon them.<br />

American Braille<br />

Declaration of independence in Congress, July 4, 1776.<br />

E 342-7 036a


248 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Bible—New testament. Matthew.<br />

St. Matthew. 2v.<br />

Moon Type<br />

qE 226.2 B47S<br />

New York Point<br />

qE 821.08 P74a<br />

Poetry for everyday reading. 1899. Amer. Printing House for the<br />

Blind.<br />

White, Mrs Ellen G. (Harmon). qE 232 W63C<br />

Christ our Saviour; stereotyped and printed for the Bible Training<br />

School, South Lancaster, Mass. 2v. 1918. Amer. Printing House for<br />

the Blind.<br />

Revised Braille with Contractions<br />

Knight, William Allen.<br />

E 223.2 K34a3<br />

Song of our Syrian guest. 1920. Howe Pub. Soc. for the Blind.<br />

Revised Braille with contractions.<br />

Leacock, Stephen Butler.<br />

qE 827 L44<br />

Soaked in seaweed; or, Upset in the ocean; Zenobia's infidelity,<br />

by H. C. Bunner; Captain Tristram's shipbuilding, by Robert Wade;<br />

and Pigs, is pigs, by E. P. Butler; embossed in Revised Braille, grade<br />

lyi for the special use of the American war blind by the Library War<br />

Service, American Library Association. 1919. Amer. Printing House<br />

for the Blind.<br />

Spicer, William Ambrose. qE 231 S75<br />

The hand that intervenes; embossed and printed for the Bible Training<br />

School, South Lancaster, Mass. 4v. 1919. Amer. Printing House<br />

for the Blind.<br />

Young People's Books<br />

Davies, Alary Carolyn. j 811 D31<br />

A little freckled person; a book of child verse, with illustrations by<br />

Harold Cue. 1919. Houghton.<br />

Fanciful and whimsical verses about "The selfish sea," "Next-door people," "Treechildren,"<br />

etc.<br />

De La Mare, Walter John. j D388t<br />

The three Mulla-mulgars; illustrated by D. P. Lathrop. Knopf.<br />

What befell Thumb, Thimble, and Nod, monkeys of the blood royal, in the long and<br />

perilous journey from their forest home to the kingdom of their uncie in the lovely valleys<br />

of Tishnar.<br />

Kinne, Helen, & Cooley, A. M. j 646 K27<br />

Clothing and health; an elementary textbook of home making.<br />

1919. Macmillan. (Home-making series.)<br />

The Pleasant valley girls learn to sew, to make simple garments and attractive gifts,<br />

to choose and care for their clothes, and about the materials of which they are made.


BOOKS ADDED—MAY 1920 249<br />

Lear, Edward. j g 27 L4Sp<br />

The pelican chorus, & other nonsense verses, with drawings by L. L.<br />

Brooke. [1910?] Warne.<br />

Other nonsense verses: The daddy long-legs and the fly.—The nutcrackers and the<br />

sugar-tongs.—Mr and Mrs Spikky Sparrow.—The table and the chair.—The two old<br />

bachelors.—The pobble who has no toes.— Mr and Mrs Discobbolos.—The Quangle<br />

Wangle's hat.<br />

McKinley, Albert Edward, and others. j 940.911 M18<br />

School history of the great war. 1919. Amer. Book Co.<br />

Follows the outline prepared for the National Board for Historical Service and published<br />

by the United States bureau of education. References and suggestions for study<br />

at the end of each chapter. Suitable for seventh and eighth grades.<br />

Maeterlinck, Maurice. j 595.79 M24<br />

Children's life of the bee; selected and arranged by Alfred Sutro and<br />

Herschel Williams; illustrated by E.J. Detmold. 1919. Dodd.<br />

Follows the life of the bees through the year—the formation and departure of the<br />

swarm, the building of the new city, the birth and flight of the young queens, the massacre<br />

of the drones, the return of the sleep of winter. Five pictures in color.<br />

Nelson, Edward William. j sgg N22<br />

The larger North American mammals. 1916. National Geographic<br />

Soc.<br />

v.30, no.5, Nov. 1916, of the "National geographic magazine."<br />

Descriptions of wolves, bears, deer, and other wild animals, with illustrations from<br />

photographs and full color plates from paintings by L. A. Fuertes.<br />

Newbolt, Sir Henry John. j 910.9 N26<br />

Book of the long trail. 1919. Longmans.<br />

Contents: John Franklin.—Richard Burton.—David Livingstone.—Henry Stanley.<br />

—Burke and Wills.—Francis Younghusband.—Robert Scott.—Alexander Wollaston.<br />

Accounts of polar expeditions and of explorations in Africa, Asia, and Australia—<br />

of Burton's famous pilgrimage to Mecca in disguise, of Younghusband's adventures in<br />

the forbidden land of Tibet, of Wollaston's experiences among the Papuans and pygmies<br />

of the little known island of New Guinea.<br />

Weedon, Lucy L. j 633 W42<br />

From the grain to the loaf; the story of a wheat field; illustrated by<br />

Charles Collins. Nister.<br />

Eight full-page plates and other pictures in black and white.


Rules for Lending Books<br />

I. Hours. The adult Lending Rooms of the Central and branch<br />

libraries are open daily from 9 a. m. to 9 p. m., Sundays and holidays<br />

excepted. The Childrens Rooms in the branches are closed after 6 p. m.<br />

The Central Childrens Room is open daily except Sundays and holidays<br />

from 9 a. m to 9 p. m.<br />

2. Borrowers. Any resident or taxpayer of Pittsburgh is entitled<br />

to borrow books from the Library by signing the proper application<br />

and agreement and receiving a borrower's card. In the case of a child<br />

under fourteen years of age the application must also be signed by the<br />

parent or guardian.<br />

Non-residents who can call at the Library for their books may<br />

obtain a borrower's card on payment of one dollar a year in advance.<br />

For non-residents who wish their books sent by mail or express the<br />

annual fee is two dollars. If a non-resident is employed or attending<br />

school in the city the guaranty of a resident tax-payer will be accepted<br />

instead of this fee.<br />

Temporary residents may borrow books on making a deposit of<br />

five dollars, or more if deemed desirable, this sum to be returned to the<br />

depositor upon surrender of his borrower's card.<br />

3. Borrowers' cards. A borrower's card may be used at the Central<br />

and branch libraries.<br />

Each borrower is responsible for all books charged on his card.<br />

Change of residence must be reported immediately.<br />

Lost cards should be reported at once. Adult cards will be replaced<br />

fourteen days after notice of such loss. Juvenile cards will be replaced<br />

fourteen days after notice of loss is given upon the payment of a fine<br />

of five cents, or replaced without payment six months after notice of<br />

loss is given.<br />

4. Issue of books. Holders of adult cards may borrow as many<br />

books of non-fiction as are needed at one time, together with two books<br />

of fiction, only one of which shall have been published within the current<br />

or the preceding year. Holders of juvenile cards may borrow two<br />

juvenile books at one time.<br />

Books may be kept two weeks, except some new and popular<br />

books, which may be kept but seven days. Magazines are lent for<br />

seven days only.<br />

250


RULES FOR LENDING BOOKS 251<br />

5. Renewals. Non-fiction and certain standard fiction may be<br />

once renewed for two weeks from the date on which the request for<br />

renewal is received.<br />

Requests for renewal may be made in person, by mail, or by telephone.<br />

In each case the call number of the book, the number of the<br />

borrower's card, and the date on which the book is due must be given.<br />

In return the borrower will receive a renewal card, which must be<br />

brought with the book when it is returned.<br />

6. Reserves. Books may be reserved at the Library by payment<br />

of one cent for a postal card notice. As soon as the book is returned<br />

to the Library, this postal card will be mailed to the person making<br />

the request, and the book will be reserved two days. Requests for<br />

reserves may be made by telephone, in which case the cost of the postal<br />

card will be collected when the borrower calls for the book.<br />

7. Fines. A fine of two cents a day (including Sundays and holidays)<br />

must be paid on each book kept overtime. The holder of a<br />

juvenile card may forfeit the use of his card for six months from the<br />

date upon which an overdue book is returned in place of payment of<br />

this fine. If a book is not returned within three weeks after the date<br />

on which it is due, a messenger will be sent for it. This messenger has<br />

authority to collect the fine incurred and an additional fee of twentyfive<br />

cents for messenger service.<br />

A borrower must pay for books lost or injured while charged on<br />

his card. No books may be borrowed until fines and claims for damages<br />

have been paid.<br />

No claim can be established because of the failure of the Post<br />

Office to deliver notices to or from the Library.


Schedule of Library Hours<br />

Central Library—Reference, Technology and Periodical Rooms<br />

open week days from 9 a. m. to 10 p. m.; Sunday from 2 to 6 p. m. Lending<br />

Room open week days from 9 a. m. to 9 p. m. Childrens Room open<br />

week days from 9 a. m. to 9 p. m. (See schedule of holiday hours below.)<br />

Branch Libraries—Open week days from 9 a. m. to 9 p. m. Childrens<br />

Rooms open from 9 a. m. to 6 p. m. (See schedule of holiday<br />

hours below.)<br />

New Year's Day. Central Library—Reading rooms open from 9 a. m.<br />

to 10 p. m. Lending Room closed. Branch Libraries—Reading rooms<br />

open from 2 to 6 p. m. No books issued for home use.<br />

Washington's Birthday. All departments open as usual.<br />

Good Friday. All departments open as usual.<br />

Memorial Day. All departments closed.<br />

July Fourth. All departments closed.<br />

Labor Day. ' All departments open as usual.<br />

Thanksgiving Day. Central Library—Reading rooms open from 9<br />

a. m. to 10 p. m. Lending Room closed. Branch Libraries—Reading<br />

rooms open from 2 to 6 p. m. No books issued for home use.<br />

Christmas. All departments closed from 6 p. m. December 24 to<br />

9 a. m. December 26.


Publications of the Library Now in Print<br />

Prices. Where two prices are given, the first is that for which<br />

the publication is sold at the Library only. All prices are strictly net,<br />

except for individual publications ordered in lots of twenty or more.<br />

Remittances must be made in advance, payable to Carnegie Library of<br />

Pittsburgh. All publications not marked * may be had free at the<br />

Library, or will be sent postpaid for 5 cents each.<br />

•Classified Catalogue of the Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh.<br />

FIRST SERIES, 1895-1902. 1907. vol. 1-3. 3,890 pp. $12.00.<br />

SECOND SERIES, 1902-1906. 1908. vol. 4-5. 2,020 pp. $5.00.<br />

THIRD SERIES, 1907-1911. 1914. vol. 6-8. 3,475 pp. $8.00.<br />

Bound in buckram with gilt tops. Include full author and subject indexes.<br />

The same [in pamphlet form].<br />

FIRST SERIES, 1895-1902. 10 parts. 1903-07.<br />

Part 1.<br />

Part 2.<br />

Part 3-<br />

Part 4.<br />

pa d,<br />

Part 5-<br />

Part 6.<br />

Part 7.<br />

Part 8.<br />

Part 9-<br />

Part 10<br />

General Works. 1907. 67 pp. 10 cents, postpaid.<br />

Philosophy and Religion. 1903. 223 pp. Out of print.<br />

Sociology and Philology. 1904. 340 pp. 15 cents; postpaid, 25 cent'.<br />

Natural Science and Useful Arts. 1904. 598 pp. 35 cents; post-<br />

50 cents.<br />

Fine Arts. 1905. 351 pp. 15 cents; postpaid, 25 cents.<br />

Literature. 1905. 308 pp. 15 cents; postpaid, 25 cents.<br />

Fiction. 1906. 446 pp. 25 cents; postpaid, 40 cents.<br />

History and Travel. 1907. 691 pp. 50 cents; postpaid, 65 cents.<br />

Biography. 1907. 381 pp. 20 cents; postpaid, 30 cents.<br />

). Indexes, Title-pages, Contents, Preface and Synopsis of Classifica-<br />

1907. 850 pp. $1.00; postpaid, $1.20.<br />

SECOND SERIES, 1902-1906. 5 parts. 1907-08.<br />

Part 1. General Works, Philosophy, Religion, Sociology and Philology. 1907.<br />

425 pp. Out of print.<br />

Part 2. Natural Science, Useful Arts and Fine Arts. 1907. 477 pp. 45<br />

cents; postpaid, 60 cents.<br />

Part 3. Literature, English Fiction and Fiction in Foreign Languages. 1908.<br />

342 pp. 40 cents; postpaid, 50 cents.<br />

Part 4. History and Travel, Collected Biography and Individual Biography.<br />

1908. 465 pp. 45 cents; postpaid, 60 cents.<br />

Part 5. Indexes, Title-pages, Contents, Preface and Synopsis of Classification.<br />

1908. 460 pp. 80 cents; postpaid, 95 cents.<br />

THIRD SERIES, 1907-1911. 10 parts. 1912-14.<br />

Part 1. General Works, Philosophy, Religion. 1912. 372 pp. 40 cents;<br />

postpaid, 50 cents.<br />

Part 2. Sociology, Philology. 1912. 418 pp. 45 cents; postpaid, 60 cents.<br />

Part 3. Natural Science, Useful Arts. 1913- 623 pp. 60 cents; postpaid,<br />

75 cents.<br />

Part 4. Fine Arts. 1913. 237 pp. 25 cents; postpaid, 35 cents.<br />

Part 5. Literature. 1913. 271 pp. 30 cents; postpaid, 40 cents.<br />

Part 6. English Fiction, Fiction in Foreign Languages. 1913- 294 pp. 3°<br />

cents ; postpaid, 40 cents.<br />

Part 7. History and Travel. 1914. 401 pp. 40 cents; postpaid, so cents.<br />

Part 8. Biography. 1914. 276 pp. 30 cents; postpaid, 40 cents.<br />

Part 9. Books for the Blind. 1914. 44 PP- 5 cents; postpaid, 10 cents.<br />

Part 10. Indexes, Title-pages, Contents, Preface and Synopsis of Classification.<br />

1914. 816 pp. 80 cents; postpaid, $1.00.<br />

FOURTH SERIES, 1912-1917. 10 parts. 1919-<br />

Part 1. General Works, Philosophy, Religion. 1919- 2°8 PP- 50 cents; postpaid,<br />

65 cents.<br />

Part 2. Sociology, Philology. 1919- 360 pp. 80 cents; postpaid, $1.00.<br />

253<br />

tion.


2J| CARN^GIr. LIBRARY Or PM.5BLRGH<br />

M~'-"'"'v Bulletin. 50 cents a year. pos:pa:d.<br />

Annual Reports. :s:-23d. :>:o—:::5. Ser.: free ;::~ request.<br />

Books in the Library of the American Philatelic Society. 19;?. 20 pp.<br />

Catalogue of the Carnegie Library School: a school for trainingir.<br />

General Library Work. Library Work with Children and School<br />

Library Work- Ser.: free upon, request.<br />

•Debate Index. 30 edition. :p:a. 1:0 pp. 25 cer:s: postpaid, to cents.<br />

The Function of the Public Library in a Democracy, igan. 2-0 pp.<br />

Periodicals and Other Serials Currently Received by the Carnegie<br />

Library of Pittsburgh. "th edition. 1915. -i2 pp.<br />

Rules for Filing Cards in the Dictionary Catalogces of the Carnegie<br />

Library of Pittsburgh. Reprint of od editior. :o:S. 32 pp.<br />

What a Public Library Finds to Do; by Eiisa May Willard. 191-. I? pp.<br />

Reference Lists<br />

History-<br />

Books of Interest in Connection with the European War. 1914. oro pp.<br />

Braddock's Expedition. 1: pp. .Monthly Bullet:-. Nov. ;;;:.<br />

England and the English; a Few Suggestions for Reading. 191&. 12 pp.<br />

Expeditions of General Forbes against Fort Duquesne. IOOS. ONO pp<br />

Expeditions of General Bouquet to the Ohio Country. 1.-63 s* d :*o_<br />

:: pp. Monthly Bulletin. Dec. 1909P<br />

Letters of General Forbes: Reprint of 35 Letters Relating :o the Expedition<br />

against Fort Duquesne. 63 pp. 20 cents, postpaid.<br />

Monthly Bulletin. Feb.-May loop." 1<br />

•Pennsylvania: a Reading List for the Use of Schools, with Special<br />

Reference to Indian Warfare and the Local History of Pittsburgh.<br />

1911. S3 pp. 20 cen:s; postpaid. 05 cents.<br />

Pittsburgh in 1816. 191& .-5 pp.<br />

Washington's Visits to Pittsburgh and the Ohio Country. 15 pp.<br />

Monthly Bulletin. Feb. :eoS.<br />

The Whiskey Insurrection, a pp. ..Monthly Bulletin. July 1906J<br />

Biography<br />

Famous Royal Women: a Reading List for Girls. ipoc?. n pp.<br />

Lives and Letters: a Selected and Annotated List. 1010. 30pp.<br />

"Men of Science and Industry; a Guide to the Biographies of Scien::s:s<br />

Engineers. Inventors and Physicians, in the Carnegie Library of<br />

Pittsburgh. 1915. :Sopp. 20 cen:s: postpaid, 30 cents.<br />

Sociology<br />

Housing. 1912. u5 po.<br />

Immigration. :p:>. 12 pp.<br />

Vocational Guidance. Supplement. 10 pp. .Monthly Bulletin. Dec.<br />

1915.)


PUBLICATIONS OF THE LIBRARY<br />

255<br />

Publications of Interest to Engineers<br />

Air-Brakes. 1915. 55 pp.<br />

Air Conditioning. 1914. 58 pp.<br />

Brick Manufacture and Bricklaying. 26 pp. (Monthly Bulletin, Jan.<br />

1912.)<br />

By-Product Coking. 1915. 40 pp.<br />

Case-Hardening. 1918. 10 pp.<br />

Electric Driving in Rolling-Mills and Foundries. 11 pp. (Monthly<br />

Bulletin, Nov. 1907.)<br />

Electric Heating and Cooking. 1910. 16 pp.<br />

Engineering Ethics. 1917. 17 pp.<br />

Floods and Flood Protection. 48 pp. (Monthly Bulletin, July 1908.)<br />

Floods and Flood Protection. Supplement. 1911. 19 pp.<br />

The Gyroscope. 1917. 23 pp.<br />

•Index to Proceedings of the Engineers' Society of Western Pennsylvania,<br />

Volumes I to 20, 1880-1904; Compiled by Harrison W.<br />

Craver. 1906. 144 pp. $1.00 postpaid.<br />

*Index to the Classified Catalogue of the Technology Department. 2d<br />

edition. 1916. 63 pp. 10 cents.<br />

Lampblack. 1919. 8 pp.<br />

List of Technical Indexes and Bibliographies Appearing Serially. 1910.<br />

17 PP-<br />

Market Prices Appearing Currently in Technical and Trade Journals.<br />

1918. 6 pp.<br />

*Men of Science and Industry; a Guide to the Biographies of Scientists,<br />

Engineers, Inventors and Physicians, in the Carnegie Library of<br />

Pittsburgh. 1915. 189 pp. 20 cents; postpaid, 30 cents.<br />

Metal Corrosion and Protection. 2d edition, revised and enlarged.<br />

58 pp. (Monthly Bulletin, July 1909.)<br />

Mica. 12 pp. (Monthly Bulletin, Oct. 1908.)<br />

One Hundred Recent Books on Agriculture. 1910. 19 pp.<br />

Refuse and Garbage Disposal. 1909. 39 pp.<br />

Road Dust Preventives. 1916. 39 pp.<br />

*Sand; Its Occurrence, Properties and Uses. 1918. 72 pp. 15 cents.<br />

postpaid.<br />

Scientific and Technical Reference Books. 19 PP- (Monthly Bulletin,<br />

Nov. 1916.)<br />

*Sewage Disposal and Treatment. 1910. 96 pp. 15 cents, postpaid.<br />

Smoke Prevention. 18 pp. (Monthly Bulletin, May 1907.)<br />

Sodium Nitrate Industry of Chile. 7 PP- (Monthly Bulletin, March<br />

1908.)<br />

Steam Turbines. 21 pp. (Monthly Bulletin. Nov. 1904.)<br />

technical Book Review Index, v.i-date, March 1917-date. 50 cents<br />

a year, postpaid. , .<br />

No. .-3, March, April, May, published in the Monthly Bulletin of those months.<br />

y, 5 , r;ivTno P 3 0 gut d ':9.7-SePternber .9,9), issued separately, quarter,y, ,5<br />

cents each, postpaid.


256 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Trees and Forestry. 1917. 18 pp.<br />

Water Softening. 8 pp. (Monthly Bulletin, June 1904-)<br />

Library Work with Children<br />

•Catalogue of Books, Annotated and Arranged, and Provided by the<br />

Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh for the Use of the First Eight<br />

Grades in the Pittsburgh Schools. 1907. 331 pp. 35 cents;<br />

postpaid, 50 cents.<br />

•Annotated Catalogue of Books Used in the Home Libraries and<br />

Reading Clubs. 1905. no pp. 20 cents; postpaid, 25 cents.<br />

Patriotism Through Literature; by Elva S. Smith. 1919. 17 pp.<br />

(Monthly Bulletin, June 1919.)<br />

Story-Telling<br />

Stories from the Ballads of Robin Hood; Outlines for Story-Telling.<br />

1914. 38 pp.<br />

Stories from the Norse; Outlines for Story-Telling. 1914. 22 pp.<br />

•Stories to Tell to Children. 2d edition. 1918. 72 pp. 25 cents.<br />

Reading Lists<br />

Famous Royal Women; a Reading List for Girls. 1908. n pp.<br />

Favorite Books of Well-known People When They Were Boys and<br />

Girls. 2d reprint. 1918. 12 pp.<br />

"Foreign Lands Where Wonders Are." 1911. 14 pp.<br />

•Pennsylvania; a Reading List for the Use of Schools, with Special<br />

Reference to Indian Warfare and the Local History of Pittsburgh.<br />

1911. 83 pp. 20 cents; postpaid, 25 cents.<br />

May 11, 1920.


CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

MONTHLY BULLETIN<br />

VOL. 25 JUNE 1920 NO. 6<br />

HAZELWOOD BRANCH<br />

CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

PITTSBURGH<br />

CARNEGIE LIBRARY<br />

1920


Board of Trustees<br />

S. H. CHURCH, President<br />

ANDREW W. MELLON, Vice-President<br />

J. D. HAILMAN, Secretary<br />

JAMES H. REED, Treasurer<br />

E. V. BABCOCK DAVID B. OLIVER<br />

W. W. BLACKBURN H. K. PORTER<br />

JOHN H. DAILEY<br />

W. H. ROBERTSON<br />

W. Y. ENGLISH CHARLES L. TAYLOR<br />

ROBERT GARLAND<br />

J. J. TURNER<br />

JOHN H. HENDERSON<br />

H. D. WILLIAMS<br />

JOHN S. HERRON DANIEL WINTERS<br />

Library Committee<br />

J. J. TURNER, Chairman<br />

E. V. BABCOCK J. D. HAILMAN<br />

ROBERT GARLAND DANIEL WINTERS<br />

Director<br />

JOHN H. LEETE<br />

Central Library, Schenley Park<br />

Branch Libraries<br />

Lawrenceville Branch, 279 Fisk Street<br />

West End Branch, Wabash and Neptune Streets<br />

Wylie Avenue Branch, Wylie Avenue and Green Street<br />

Mount Washington Branch, 313 Grandview Avenue<br />

Hazelwood Branch, 4748 Monongahela Street<br />

East Liberty Branch, Station Street and Larimer Avenue<br />

South Side Branch, Carson and Twenty-second Streets<br />

Homewood Branch, Hamilton and Lang Avenues


Page<br />

William Dean Howells - 261<br />

Maintaining the Independence<br />

of the United States - - 265<br />

The Hudson's Bay Company 266<br />

The Origin of Commencement<br />

- - - - - 267<br />

Hazelwood Branch<br />

New Periodicals -<br />

Present Day Problems -<br />

268<br />

- 269<br />

269<br />

Books Added, May 1 to<br />

June 1, 1920.<br />

Agriculture - - - - - 286<br />

Americanization and Immigration<br />

- - - - .<br />

Architecture - - - -<br />

Banking.<br />

Finance<br />

Biography - - - -<br />

Blind, Books for the<br />

Botany -<br />

Business.<br />

Communication<br />

Chemical Technology<br />

Chemistry -<br />

Commerce. Communication<br />

Domestic Economy<br />

Drama. Theatre -<br />

Economics - - - - -<br />

Education - 280<br />

Engineering - 285<br />

Ethics - - - - - - 274<br />

Contents<br />

276<br />

290<br />

278<br />

295<br />

299<br />

284<br />

287<br />

288<br />

283<br />

281<br />

287<br />

294<br />

277<br />

Page<br />

European War - - - - 298<br />

Fiction - - - - - - 270<br />

Fine Arts - - - - - 289<br />

French Fiction - 272<br />

Gardening -<br />

2QO<br />

Geology - - - - _ . 283<br />

History - - - _ _ 297<br />

Humor - - - - - - 293<br />

Language - - - - - 282<br />

Law - - - - - - - 279<br />

Libraries - - - - - 273<br />

Literature - 292<br />

Medicine, Physiology, Hygiene<br />

- - - - - - 285<br />

Military and Naval Science - 280<br />

Miscellaneous - - - - 299<br />

Music - - - - - - 291<br />

Philosophy - - - - - 273<br />

Poetry - - - - - - 294<br />

Politics and Government - 276<br />

Religion - - - - - - 274<br />

Science - - - - - - 282<br />

Sociology - - - - - - 275<br />

Spanish Fiction - - - 272<br />

Travel and Description - - 296<br />

Useful Arts - - - - - 284<br />

Women - - - - - - 281<br />

Young People's Books - 3°°


Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh<br />

Monthly Bulletin<br />

Published monthly, except in August and September, by the Carnegie Library of<br />

Pittsburgh, Forbes Street and Bellefield Avenue, Schenley Park, Pittsburgh, Pa. President,<br />

S. H. Church, Carnegie Library, Forbes Street and Bellefield Avenue; Secretary,<br />

J. D. Hailman; Treasurer. James H. Reed, 1027 Carnegie Building; Director, John H.<br />

Leete, Carnegie Library, Forbes Street and Bellefield Avenue.<br />

Subscription 50 cents a year.<br />

Vol. 25 June 1920 No. 6<br />

William Dean Howells<br />

"There would be little or no dissent among critics," says<br />

the "Outlook" of May 19, "to placing first among American<br />

contemporary writers of fiction and men of letters William<br />

Dean Howells, who died in New York on May 11 at the age<br />

of eighty-three. It was not only the extent and variety of his<br />

writings that made him thus pre-eminent, but human kindliness,<br />

wide sympathy, and constant interest in all that relates<br />

to true art and social progress. Five years ago, when the<br />

American National Institute bestowed a gold medal of honor<br />

upon Mr. Howells, the late Hamilton W. Mabie expressed<br />

this exactly when he said: 'Mr. Howells, divesting the novel<br />

of the dramatic aids of station, passion, and adventure, has<br />

brought into view those elements of character and of circumstance<br />

which, in the newest as in the oldest world, give life<br />

perennial interest<br />

Mr. Howells's literary life in a sense began when, as a boy<br />

of nine, he wrote a composition on 'Human Life'—or, rather,<br />

set up his modest attempt in type for his father's newspaper.<br />

Since then, what an immense number of essays, travel papers,<br />

poems, short stories, and novels he has put forth! Seventy-five<br />

books, we are told, stand in the catalogues under his name. If<br />

we add to this his editorial work as associate editor of the<br />

261


262 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

'Atlantic Monthly' for eight years, and as the worthy successor<br />

of Ge<strong>org</strong>e William Curtis in the 'Editor's Easy Chair'<br />

of 'Harper's Magazine' for fourteen years and up to the time<br />

of his last illness, we get an idea of his mental activity. Yet<br />

he never hurried or scamped his work; it always had the mark<br />

of culture and almost of leisure. . .<br />

Personally, Mr. Howells was a man of native courtesy, of<br />

sound and wide culture, and of fine perceptions and generous<br />

impulse. He was a notable figure in American life as well as<br />

in American literature."<br />

Mr: Howells's literary career was an interesting one and<br />

one which should encourage those aspirants to a literary<br />

career, who do not have their path made easy by the circumstances<br />

in which they are placed. William Lyon Phelps in<br />

his "Essays on Modern Novelists" presents this side of Mr.<br />

Howells's career along with a critical estimate of his work.<br />

Born in a little village in Ohio over seventy years ago, and growing<br />

up with small Latin and less Greek, Mr. Howells may fairly be<br />

called a self-educated man. Just why the epithet "self-made" should<br />

be applied to those non-college-graduates who succeed in business, and<br />

withheld from those who succeed in poetry and fiction, seems not entirely<br />

clear. Perhaps it is tacitly assumed that those who become captains<br />

of industry achieve prominence without divine assistance; whereas<br />

men of letters, with or without early advantages, and whether grateful<br />

or not, have unconscious communication with hidden forces. Be this<br />

as it may, the boy Howells had little schooling and no college. All the<br />

public institutions in the world, however, are but a poor makeshift in<br />

the absence of good home training; and the future novelist's father was<br />

the right sort of man and had the right sort of occupation to stimulate<br />

a clever and ambitious son. The elder Howells was the editor of a<br />

country newspaper, which, like a country doctor, makes up in variety<br />

of information what it loses in spread of influence. The boy was a<br />

compositor before he was a composer, as plenty of literary men since<br />

Richardson have been; he helped to set up lyrics, news items, local gossip,<br />

the funny column, and patent medicine advertisements. From<br />

mechanical he passed to original work, both in his father's office and<br />

in other sanctums about the state; sometimes acting not only as contributor,<br />

but "moulding public opinion" from the editor's chair. And indeed<br />

he has never entirely stepped out of the editorial role. During an amazingly<br />

busy life as novelist, dramatist, poet, and foreign diplomat, Mr.<br />

Howells has acted as editorial writer on the Nation, the Atlantic, the<br />

Cosmopolitan Magazine, and Harper's Monthly. I think he would sometimes<br />

be appalled at the prodigious amount of merely "timely" articles<br />

that he has written, were it not for the fact that during his long career<br />

he has never published a single line of which he need feel ashamed.


WILLIAM DEAN HOWELLS 263<br />

Type-setters and printers are commonly men of ideas, who have<br />

interesting minds, and are good to talk with. Mr. Howells was certainly<br />

no exception to the rule, and to the foundation of his early education<br />

as a compositor and journalist he added four years of study of<br />

the Italian language and literature in the pleasant environment of<br />

Venice. ..<br />

He formally began a literary career by the composition of a volume<br />

of poems, as Blackmore, Hardy, Meredith, and many other novelists<br />

have seen fit to do. He is not widely known as a poet to-day, though<br />

all his life he has written more or less verse without achieving distinction;<br />

for he is essentially a prosatcur. In 1872, twelve years after the<br />

appearance of his book of poems, came his first successful novel, Their<br />

Wedding Journey. This story is written in the style that is responsible<br />

for its author's fame and popularity; it is thoroughly typical of the<br />

whole first part of his novel-production. It has that quiet stingless<br />

humour, clever dialogue, and wholesome charm, that all readers of Mr.<br />

Howells associate with his name. In other words, it is a clear manifestation<br />

of his own personality. Now as to the permanent value and<br />

final place in literature of these American novels, critics may differ;<br />

but there can be only one opinion of the man who wrote them.<br />

The personality of Mr. Howells, as shown both in his objective<br />

novels and in his subjective literary confessions, is one that irresistibly<br />

commands our highest respect and our warmest affection. A simple,<br />

democratic, unaffected, modest, kindly, humorous, healthy soul, with a<br />

rare combination of rugged virility and extreme refinement. It is exceedingly<br />

fortunate for America that such a man has for so many years<br />

by common consent, at home and abroad, been regarded as the Dean<br />

of American Letters. He has had more influence on the output of fiction<br />

in America than any other living man. This influence has been<br />

entirely wholesome, from the standpoint of both morals and Art. He<br />

has consistently stood for Reticent Realism. He has ridiculed what<br />

he is fond of calling "romantic rot," and his own novels have been a<br />

silent but emphatic protest against "mentioning the unmentionable". . .<br />

Mr. Howells's creed in Art is perhaps more open to criticism than<br />

his creed in Ethics. His artistic creed is narrow, strict, and definite.<br />

He has expressedit in his essays, and exemplifiedit in his novels. His<br />

two doctrinal works, Criticism and Fiction, and My Literary Passions, resemble<br />

Zola's Le Roman Experimental in dogmatic limitation. The creed<br />

of Mr. Howells is realism, which he has not only faithfully followed<br />

in his creative work, but which he uses as a standard by which to<br />

measure the value of other novelists, both living and dead. As genius<br />

always refuses to be measured by any standard, and usually defies<br />

classification, Mr. Howells's literary estimates of other men's work are<br />

far more valuable as self-revelation than as adequate appraisal. Indeed,<br />

some of his criticisms seem bizarre. Where works of fiction do not<br />

run counter to his literary dogmas, he is abundantly sympathetic and<br />

more than generous; many a struggling young writer has cause to bless<br />

him for powerful assistance; apparently there has never been one grain


264 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

of envy, jealousy, or meanness in the mind of our American dean. But,<br />

broadly speaking, Mr. Howells has not the true critical mind, which<br />

places itself for the moment in the mental attitude of the author criticised;<br />

he is primarily a creative rather than a critical writer. . .<br />

Mr. Howells's literary career has two rather definite periods. The<br />

break was caused largely by the influence of Tolstoi. The earlier novels<br />

are more purely artistic; they are accurate representations of American<br />

characters, for the most part joyous in mood, full of genuine humour,<br />

and natural charm. A story absolutely expressive of the author as we<br />

used to know him is The Lady of the Aroostook. As a sympathetic and<br />

delightful portrayal of a New England country girl, this book is one of<br />

his best productions. . .This charming novel was rapidly followed in<br />

the next few years by a succession of books that are at once good to<br />

read, and of permanent value as reflections of American life, manners,<br />

and morals. These were A Modern Instance, A Woman's Reason, The Rise<br />

of Silas Lapham, and Indian Summer; making a literary harvest of which<br />

not only their author, but all Americans, have reason to be justly<br />

proud.. .<br />

I think that Indian Summer, despite its immense popularity at the<br />

time of publication, has never received the high praise it really deserves.<br />

It is written in a positive glow of artistic creation. I believe<br />

that of all its author's works, it is the one whose composition he most<br />

keenly enjoyed. . .This story in its way is a masterpiece; and anyone<br />

who lacks enthusiasm for its author ought to read it again.<br />

His most powerful novel is probably A Modern Instance. . .This is<br />

a study of degeneration, not dealing with remote characters in far-off<br />

historical situations, but brought home to our very doors. One feels<br />

that this dreadful fate might happen to one's neighbours—might happen<br />

to oneself.. .<br />

When A Modern Instance was first published, a contemporary review<br />

called it "a book that all praise but none like." I imagine that<br />

the unpleasant sensations it awakens in every reader are like those<br />

roused by Mr. Barrie's Sentimental Tommy. The picture is simply too<br />

faithful to be agreeable. Every-one beholds his own faults and tendencies<br />

clearly portrayed, and the result is quite other than reassuring.<br />

The book finds us all at home. But, as Gogol, the great Russian, used<br />

to say, quoting an old Slavonic proverb, "We must not blame the<br />

mirrror if the face looks ugly". . .<br />

In the year 1902, by the publication of The Kentons, Mr. Howells<br />

gave us a most delightful surprise. It was like the return of an old<br />

friend from a far journey.. .Political, social, and ethical problems are<br />

conspicuously absent, and the only material used by the writer is human<br />

nature. This is one of the best books he has ever written; it has<br />

all the charm of Their Wedding Journey, plus the wisdom and observation<br />

that come only by years. . .<br />

The Kentons, like some other novels by Mr. Howells, may seem to<br />

many readers superficial, because it is so largely taken up with the<br />

trivial details of daily existence. It is really a profound study of life,


WASHINGTON'S LETTER ON INDEPENDENCE 265<br />

made by an artist who has not only the wisdom of the head but the<br />

deeper wisdom of the heart.<br />

In "My Literary Passions" Mr. Howells says that "to o-i ve<br />

an account of one's reading is in some sort to give an account<br />

of one's life" and attributes his bent in the direction of literature<br />

to the influence of the fact that he came of a reading race<br />

and that in childhood he not only had access to a family ''bookcase,"<br />

but that he was incited to reading by a father to whom<br />

literature was a passion.<br />

Such an influence was the beginning of what proved in Mr.<br />

Howells's case a very liberal education. Fortunately for the<br />

ambitious, the development of the public library in America<br />

makes possible to almost anyone just such a liberal education<br />

even though the family "bookcase" may be lacking.<br />

Maintaining the Independence of the United States<br />

Ge<strong>org</strong>e Washington's Letter<br />

Ge<strong>org</strong>e Washington, in his "Circular Letter Addressed to<br />

the Governors of All the States on Disbanding the Army"<br />

written at his headquarters in Newburg, June 8, 1783, gives<br />

his opinion as to what is essential to maintaining the independence<br />

of the United States. The statement is especially interesting<br />

just now when so many insidious forces are at work<br />

to undermine the principles on which our nation was founded<br />

and on which it has grown in power and position. Washington's<br />

words are reproduced here.<br />

There are four things, which, I humbly conceive, are essential to<br />

the well-being, I may even venture to say, to the existence of the<br />

United States, as an independent power.<br />

First. An indissoluble union of the States under one federal head.<br />

Second. A sacred regard to public justice.<br />

Third. The adoption of a proper peace establishment; and,<br />

Fourth. The prevalence of that pacific and friendly disposition<br />

among the people of the United States, which will induce them to<br />

f<strong>org</strong>et their local prejudices and policies; to make those mutual concessions,<br />

which are requisite to the general prosperity; and, in some<br />

instances, to sacrifice their individual advantages to the interest of<br />

the community.<br />

These are the pillars on which the glorious fabric of our independency<br />

and national character must be supported. Liberty is the basis;


266 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

and whoever would dare to sap the foundation, or overturn the structure,<br />

under whatever specious pretext he may attempt it, will merit the<br />

bitterest execration, and the severest punishment, which can be inflicted<br />

by his injured country.<br />

The Hudson's Bay Company<br />

The great Hudson's Bay Company whose romantic history<br />

is closely bound up with the history of the whole North American<br />

continent and with that of the business interests of the<br />

world, is this year celebrating the two hundred fiftieth anniversary<br />

of the granting of its charter. H. Gordon Selfridge,<br />

in his "The Romance of Commerce," says:<br />

The oldest commercial company in existence is the Hudson's Bay<br />

Company. Established.. .two hundred and fifty years ago,it is still<br />

live, aggressive and powerful, while of the hundreds or thousands of<br />

concerns <strong>org</strong>anized at the same time, or even fifty or more years later,<br />

hardly one survives. Such virility is superb, and shows how deeply<br />

and securely the foundations of this great company were laid. It<br />

proves the marvellous ability of its chiefs during the early years, and<br />

also of those who have directed its affairs down to the present day. . .<br />

As Bryce says in his most fascinating and complete history of the<br />

Hudson's Bay Company: 1 "The London merchants were mighty men,<br />

men who could select their agents, and send their ships, and risk their<br />

money on every sea and on every shore;" and that newly discovered<br />

but still unknown and untravelled country comprising the northern<br />

half of North America offered to these intrepid and fearless merchantadventurers<br />

a field doubly enticing because of its great risk and its<br />

possible very large profit. . .<br />

On May 2nd, 1670, the Charter of the Hudson's Bay Company<br />

was signed and sealed by the King. The privileges he bestowed were<br />

enormous, for it was easy to be generous with regard to a country of<br />

which he knew nothing more than thatit was now to be called Prince<br />

Rupert's land in honour of his cousin, their chief and active head...<br />

What now seems most remarkable to us is that the Charter gave this<br />

great tract, extending from Hudson's Bay to the Pacific—a tract including<br />

about one-third of all North America, "in free and common<br />

socage," i.e. the Company as proprietor was the absolute possessor.<br />

It was given entire military control. It could raise armies and<br />

ships of war within its boundaries when it chose, and it could appoint<br />

governors; and this absolute control was held and exercised for two<br />

and a quarter centuries.. .<br />

For a hundred years the Company satisfied itself by maintaining<br />

stations, which were forts and places of protection as well, only on<br />

1 Ge<strong>org</strong>e Bryce, The Remarkable History of the Hudson's Bay Company.


THE HUDSON'S BAY COMPANY 2(17<br />

the shores of Hudson's Bay. There was no occasion for penetrating<br />

further inland, because the Indians brought their year's catch to these<br />

points to exchange them for the wonderful merchandise of the white<br />

men. The Company was a keen trader, as its coat of arms implied—<br />

"Pro Pelle Cutem" (skin for skin); but it never f<strong>org</strong>ot the great principles<br />

of fair trading, and the Indians soon learnt to trust its agents<br />

implicitly. . .<br />

It is largely to this spirit of integrity, this reputation for honourable<br />

and fair trading, a .principle which should permeate all business<br />

transactions, that the Hudson's Bay Company owes its success and its<br />

long life.. .<br />

The colony of Canada had gradually assumed a more important<br />

place in the mind of the British public. It had become better known;<br />

its vast size was impressive; and a feeling of discontent had steadily<br />

grown that this enormous territory continued practically the property<br />

of one Company. By i860 this had become a public question. By 1867<br />

a confederation of Canadian provinces had been formed to advocate<br />

the Canadian claim to the north-west. . .<br />

The Hudson's Bay Company recognized the overwhelming sentiment<br />

in England and Canada against their continued monopolistic<br />

hold, but shrewdly insisted on making terms before accepting the inevitable.<br />

..<br />

At the end of two hundred years of practically absolute ownership,<br />

this great Hudson's Bay Company stepped back into the ranks as a<br />

trading Company instead of a governing power...<br />

The romance and fascination of the Hudson's Bay Company is no<br />

longer what it was. It is still interesting; it still calls for men of ability<br />

and nerve; it is still a great business. But the royal touch received<br />

through the hands of Prince Rupert, of the Duke of York and of the<br />

Duke of Marlborough; the long voyages of discovery of Mackenzie,<br />

of Fraser and of Franklin; the philanthropic failure of the Earl of<br />

Selkirk; the great Company meetings and wonderful dinners in old<br />

forts in the then wild country, are all things of the past. . .<br />

Long life then to this splendid and honourable Hudson's Bay Company...Its<br />

history is one of the most fascinating and inspiring which<br />

one can read.<br />

The Origin of Commencement<br />

Quoted from William S. Walsh's "Curiosities of Popular Customs."<br />

In English and American colleges, [Commencement is] the day<br />

when degrees are conferred, the day when graduating classes commence<br />

bachelors (or lawyers, or doctors, or what not). The term is<br />

now extended to academies and primary schools of all grades. In the


268 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

mediaeval universities graduation was simply the conferring of a qual<br />

fication and right to teach (or, in the case of law and medicine, to<br />

practise).<br />

Commencement, then, existed at first for those taking what are<br />

now called the higher degrees, and was the time when young men<br />

ceased to be pupils and commenced to teach. The bachelor's degree<br />

marking the end of the trivium, or preparatory course, was first given<br />

at Paris; and it seems that the bachelors were required to serve an<br />

apprenticeship at teaching, as a part of their preparation for the<br />

master's degree. The student having performed the requirements of<br />

the trivium, he was named a bachelor by the masters of that subject,<br />

and had now the right \o wear a round cap, and not only the right, but<br />

the obligation, to teach freshmen. He was then said incipere in artibus<br />

("to commence in arts"). Hence, even when extended to the graduation<br />

of bachelors, Commencement still carried the implication of commencing<br />

to teach. The requirement that all graduates should serve<br />

as teachers was gradually relaxed,till teaching was made entirely<br />

optional, and Commencement came to be, as at present, simply the<br />

occasion when degrees of all grades were conferred.<br />

Hazelwood Branch<br />

Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh<br />

The Hazelwood Branch Library which was opened to the<br />

public August 16, 1900, is on Monongahela Street in the heart<br />

of a district of the Fifteenth Ward which, when the building<br />

was erected, was exclusively a residence section, but which is<br />

now rapidly being given over to industries. This change has<br />

affected radically the character of the work done at the branch,<br />

so that a large part of the present demand is for technical books<br />

and information of a technical character, for work with children,<br />

and for books in foreign languages. The largest group<br />

of Hungarians in the city is in Hazelwood, and there are also<br />

numbers of Poles and Italians. For these the Hazelwood<br />

Branch Library has collections of books in their own languages,<br />

and for those of other nationalities, books will be provided as<br />

soon as possible. This building has an auditorium which is<br />

much used for meetings and entertainments.<br />

Since the interests of the community are largely of one<br />

type, there is a corresponding lack of variety in the service<br />

which the branch is called upon to give; but it serves, nevertheless,<br />

a very definite need and does much work.


LIBRARY NEWS AND NOTICES 269<br />

New Periodicals<br />

The following periodicals have recently been added to the<br />

list of those regularly received in the Periodical Room:<br />

Bulletin of the Cleveland Museum of Art.<br />

Chemical Age. New York.<br />

Christian Statesman. Pittsburgh.<br />

Commerce Monthly. New York.<br />

Community Leadership. New York.<br />

Discovery. London.<br />

Equity. New York.<br />

Export Trade and Exporters' Review. New York.<br />

Family. New York.<br />

Foreign Born. New York.<br />

Journal of Educational Research. Bloomington, 111.<br />

Journal of the American Judicature Society. Chicago.<br />

Pittsburgh Realtor.<br />

Raw Material. New York.<br />

See America First. Milwaukee.<br />

Present Day Problems<br />

The books in this list are entered also, in fuller form and with annotations,<br />

under their proper headings in this issue of the "Bulletin."<br />

They are brought together here to show the additions of books which<br />

are of interest in connection with problems of the day. The date of<br />

publication is 1920 unless otherwise stated.<br />

Aronovici, Carol. Housing and the housing problem 331-83 A76<br />

Bloomfield, Daniel, ed. Selected articles on modern industrial<br />

movements. 1919 330-4 B56<br />

Brasol, B. L. Socialism vs. civilization 335 B71<br />

Butler, F. C. Community Americanization r 325.73 B97<br />

Canadian National Reconstruction Groups.<br />

national reconstruction. 1918<br />

Carver, T. N. Principles of political economy. 1919<br />

Fisher, Irving. Stabilizing the dollar<br />

Problems of<br />

r 330.9 C16<br />

330 C24<br />

338.5 F53S<br />

Gibbons, H. A. France and ourselves 940.921 G36<br />

Hanson, Ole. Americanism versus bolshevism<br />

335 H24<br />

Hillis, N. D. Rebuilding Europe in the face of world-wide<br />

bolshevism<br />

940.921 H56<br />

Parker, C. H. The casual laborer<br />

Spargo, John. The psychology of bolshevism. 1919<br />

331-8 P23<br />

335 S73P


Books Added to the Library<br />

May 1 to June 1, 1920<br />

An r or b prefixed to the call number indicates that the book must be<br />

called for and used in the Reference or the Technology Room; j that it i<br />

especially suitable for children; and q that it is quarto size or larger<br />

Fiction<br />

Annunzio, Gabriele d', (pseud, of Gaetano Rapagnetta). A6i5t<br />

Tales of my native town; tr. by Rafael Mantellini, with an introduction<br />

by Joseph Hergesheimer. Doubleday.<br />

Contents: The hero.—The countess of Amalfi.—The return of Turlendana.—Turlendana<br />

drunk.—The gold pieces.—Sorcery.—The idolaters.—Mungia.—The downfall<br />

of Candia.—The death of the duke of Ofena.—The war of the bridge.—The virgin<br />

Anna.<br />

Semi-autobiographical stories of Pescara, a seaport in southern Italy.<br />

Benson, Edward Frederic. B443ro<br />

Robin Linnet. Doran.<br />

Shows the spirit born in the youth of England by the call of the world war.<br />

Benson, Edward Frederic. B443U<br />

Up and down. Doran.<br />

The story of the friendship of two men. The setting is Italy and the action, colored<br />

by the world war, takes place from May 1014 to April 1917.<br />

Butler, Ellis Parker. B9762S<br />

Swatty; a story of real boys. Houghton.<br />

Adventures of three small boys, narrated by one of them in boyish vernacular.<br />

Cadmus, pseud. & Harmonia, pseud. Cn6i<br />

Island of sheep. Houghton.<br />

A group of representative American, English, and French people are gathered at<br />

a house-party in Scotland, where they cleverly discuss the questions of the day—the<br />

peace treaty, the League of Nations, labor and capital, democracy, etc.<br />

Cohen, Octavus Roy. C668g<br />

Gray dusk. Dodd.<br />

A detective story centering about the mysterious murder of a bride.<br />

Copplestone, Bennet. C7g62la<br />

Last of the Grenvilles. Dutton.<br />

In this story Richard Grenville, the last descendant of a race of famous seafighters,<br />

is placed in business with Lloyd's at his father's desire. When the great war<br />

comes, he is recalled to his natural place in the navy.


BOOKS ADDED—JUNE 1920 271<br />

Cutting, Mrs Mary Stewart (Doubleday).<br />

C955SO<br />

Some of us are married. Doubleday.<br />

Contents: The purveyor of the funds.—An opening for Mariana.—As Lochinvar.<br />

—Leslie's friend.—The wonder-worker.—Boggybrae.—Benson's day.—Dance-mad Billy.<br />

—Clytie comes back.—The shell.—Child of the heart.—Her job.—Two autobiographical<br />

stories: The man who went under; The song of courage.<br />

Short stories of suburban life, some gay, some sad.<br />

Dostoyeffsky, Feodor Mikhailovitch. D748I1<br />

An honest thief, and other stories; from the Russian by Constance<br />

Garnett. Heinemann. (Novels, v.n.)<br />

Other stories: Uncle's dream.—A novel in nine letters.—An unpleasant predicament.—Another<br />

man's wife.—The heavenly Christmas tree.—The peasant Marey.—The<br />

crocodile.—Bobok.—The dream of a ridiculous man.<br />

Hannay, James Owen. H237U<br />

Up, the rebels! by G. A. Birmingham [pseud.]. Doran.<br />

A humorous story of the Sinn Feiner and his politics.<br />

Lincoln, Joseph Crosby. L7162P0<br />

The Portygee; a novel. Appleton.<br />

Appeared in the "Delineator," v.95-96, Oct. 1919-May 1920.<br />

The Portygee (vernacular among old Cape Cod sea captains for foreigner) is the<br />

orphaned grandson of Cap'n Snow whose daughter had eloped with a Spanish opera<br />

singer. The story centers around his life on the cape.<br />

MacGrath, Harold. Mi62ma<br />

The man with three names. Doubleday.<br />

The hero is a novelist, a lover, and a crusader for justice. He wins fame under<br />

one name, a millionaire's daughter under another, and under the third restores the<br />

honor of his family name.<br />

Mackay, Mrs Helen Gansevoort (Edwards). M1753C<br />

Chill hours. Duffield.<br />

Contents: At the end.—Odette in pink taffeta.—Their places.—The second hay.—<br />

One or another.—The cauldron.—Nostalgia.—Madame Anna.—The little cousin of<br />

no.12.—"He cost us so much."—"Here are the shadows 1"—She who would not eat<br />

SOUp.—The vow.—"I take pen in hand."—Footsteps.—The 9 and the 10.—The<br />

moment.<br />

Short stories with the great war as a background.<br />

Maxwell, William Babington.<br />

M525I<br />

Life can never be the same [stories]. Bobbs.<br />

Contents: A German in the village.—Rather late.—Christmas is Christmas.—The<br />

strain of it.—The chateau.—The woman's portion.—A widow.—The short cut.—What<br />

Edie regretted.—The wrong direction.—The changing point of view.—Joan of Arc.<br />

Merrick, Leonard. M6395P<br />

Position of Peggy Harper, with an introduction by Arthur Pinero.<br />

Dutton.<br />

A novel of theatrical life in which the heroine's success in musical comedy turns<br />

her head. Her long engagement to a young writer dies a natural death, leaving him<br />

free to marry the girl he really loves.<br />

Mix, Jennie Irene. M758a<br />

At fame's gateway; the romance of a pianiste. Holt.<br />

A beautiful girl from a small Ohio town goes to New York to study piano She<br />

has some interesting adventures and the usual struggles and heartaches, but all ends<br />

serenely.<br />

Oemler, Marie Conway. I5<br />

Slippy McGee, sometimes known as the Butterfly man. Century.<br />

A reformed crook takes up his abode in a South Carolina village and becomes an<br />

authority on butterflies.


272 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Ostrander, Isabel Egenton. 0297a<br />

Ashes to ashes. McBride.<br />

The story of a man who commits two murders, the first in a fit of jealous passion,<br />

the second deliberately to obtain possession of a large sum of money.<br />

Payne, Will. P334S<br />

The scarred chin. Dodd.<br />

Detective story involving a bank robbery, two murders, and a man who paid blackmail<br />

money for years to shield his feeble-minded brother.<br />

Slosson, Mrs Annie (Trumbull). S634si<br />

Simples from the Master's garden. Sunday School Times Co.<br />

Contents: The Master's garden.—A simple cross-bearer.—A simple child trainer.—<br />

A simple Pentecost.—A simple dreamer.—A simple faith.—A simple expositor.<br />

Spofford, Mrs Harriet Elizabeth (Prescott). S762e<br />

The elder's people. Houghton.<br />

Contents: The deacon's whistle.—A change of heart.—A rural telephone.—The<br />

step-father.—John-a-Dreams.—Miss Mahala's miracle.—An old fiddler.—The blessing<br />

called peace.—Father James.—The impossible choice.—A village dressmaker.—Miss<br />

Mahala's will.—A life in a night.—Miss Mahala and Johnny.<br />

Tarbell, Ida Minerva. Tig62i<br />

In Lincoln's chair. Macmillan.<br />

The recollections of an old man, told in story form, as his listener sat in Lincoln's<br />

chair. A companion study to her earlier one, "He knew Lincojn."<br />

Turner, John Hastings. T865P<br />

A place in the world [a novel]. Scribner.<br />

A beautiful Russian woman with a past comes to live in a quiet English village.<br />

The great war breaks out, and through its effect on her and the village, she finds her<br />

rightful place in the world.<br />

Zamacois, Eduardo. Z24t<br />

Their son, and The necklace; tr. by G. A. England. Boni. (Penguin<br />

series.)<br />

Tragic stories, in the manner of de Maupassant.<br />

French Fiction<br />

Blanc, Mme Therese (de Solms), (pseud. Th. Bentzon). 843 B53g<br />

La Grande Sauliere, et Ma tante Hermine.<br />

Bordeaux, Henry. 843 B63P<br />

La petite mademoiselle; roman.<br />

Dombre, Roger, (pseud, of Mme Sisson). 843 D71<br />

Dardanelle & Cie.<br />

Marechal, Marie. 843 M37<br />

Un mariage a l'etranger. (Bibliotheque des meres de familie.)<br />

Sassone, Felipe. 863 S25<br />

El tone! de Diogenes; novela.<br />

Spanish Fiction


BOOKS ADDED—JUNE 1920 273<br />

Libraries<br />

Columbia University, New York—Library. r 027.7 C72H<br />

Library rules. 1916.<br />

Delisle, Leopold Victor.<br />

r 027.5 P23d<br />

Le cabinet des manuscrits de la Bibliotheque Nationale; etude sur la<br />

formation de ce depot, comprenant les elements d'une histoire de la<br />

calligraphie, de la miniature, de la reliure, et du commerce des livres a<br />

Paris avant l'invention de 1'imprimerie. 3v. 1868-81. (Histoire generale<br />

de Paris.)<br />

"Appendice comprenant un choix d'anciens catalogues de livres du ne au I5e<br />

siecle," v.2, p.427-550; v.3, p.1-195.<br />

"Explication des planches," v.3, p.197-318.<br />

Planches. 1881 r 027.5 P23d2<br />

Franklin, Alfred Louis Auguste.<br />

r 027 F87<br />

Les anciennes bibliotheques de Paris; eglises, monasteres, colleges,<br />

etc. 3v. 1867-73. (Histoire generale de Paris.)<br />

Illustrated with facsimile reproductions of early views, plans, autograph signatures,<br />

manuscripts, bookplates, artistic bindings, etc. Several of the monographs included<br />

have been issued separately.<br />

Paris, Bibliotheque Nationale.<br />

r 027.5 P23<br />

La Bibliotheque Nationale. 2v. in I. 1907. (Les grandes institutions<br />

de France.)<br />

Contents: Batiments, collections, <strong>org</strong>anisation; Departement des estampes; Departement<br />

des medailles et antiques, par Henry Marcel [et les autres].—Le Departement<br />

des imprimes et la Section de geographie; Le Departement des manuscrits, par<br />

Paul Marchal et Camille Couderc.<br />

Philosophy<br />

Coakley, Thomas Francis.<br />

J 34 C62<br />

Spiritism, the modern Satanism. 1920. Extension Press.<br />

Regards spiritism as a plot to destroy Christianity and contends that the teachings<br />

of the church and those of the spirits are absolutely irreconcilable.<br />

Drever, James.<br />

J 5° D819<br />

Instinct in man; a contribution to the psychology of education.<br />

1917. Cambridge University Press.<br />

"Bibliography," p.270-274. .<br />

Originally a thesis for the doctorate in philosophy of the University of Edinburgh,<br />

here published without material change.<br />

"An assembling of scattered literature on instinct coupled with an interpretative<br />

point of view." American journal of sociology, 1919.<br />

Hunt, H. Ernest.<br />

1^° H 93<br />

Self-training; the lines of mental progress. [1918.] McKay.<br />

Discusses the nature of mind, the relation between thought and health, the power of<br />

suggestion, and the training of the mental faculties in the development of individual<br />

character.<br />

I 3 I Rl8<br />

Randall, John Herman.<br />

The spirit of the new philosophy. 1919- Brentano.<br />

The author believes that the new world must be built on a stable < o u "^' 0 n ° f<br />

spiritual unity in the individual with his fellows, society, democracy, the world, and<br />

religion.


274 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Williams, Gail. 134 W74<br />

Fear not the crossing. 1920. Clode.<br />

The message of one who has lately crossed over to the other world, transmitted<br />

by automatic writing.<br />

Zeller, Eduard. 180 Z45<br />

Grundriss der geschichte der griechischen philosophie. 1886.<br />

Ethics<br />

Maday, Mme Marthe (Hentzelt). 173 M23<br />

L'amour maternel; son origine, son evolution. 1918.<br />

Treats of three phases of the maternal instinct—the <strong>org</strong>anic among insects and<br />

fishes, the symbiotic among birds and mammals, and the social among human beings.<br />

The second part of the book traces the evolution of mother love from the patriarchal<br />

family to modern feminism.<br />

Steele, Ge<strong>org</strong>e McKendree. 170 S81<br />

Rudimentary ethics. 1915. Sibley.<br />

A text-book for schools and colleges, designed to give the more essential principles<br />

of ethics in simple and familiar language.<br />

Religion<br />

Bradshaw, Marion John, comp. r 016.261 B68<br />

The war and religion; a preliminary bibliography of material in<br />

English, prior to Jan. 1, 1919; comp. for the Committee on the War<br />

and the Religious Outlook. 1919. Y. M. C. A. Press.<br />

Contents: General influence of the war on religion.—Religion in the army.—<br />

Christianity and war.—The church and its task in the light of the war.—Christian<br />

belief as affected by the war.—Christianity and social problems.—Christianity, the state<br />

and internationalism.—The war and education.—Collections of sources.<br />

Cram, Ralph Adams. 204 C86<br />

Gold, frankincense and myrrh. 1919. Marshall Jones Co.<br />

Contents: Monasticism and the world crisis.—Sacramentalism and the future.—<br />

The philosophical necessity.<br />

Appeared in the "American church monthly."<br />

Emmott, Elizabeth Braithwaite. 289.6 E59<br />

Story of Quakerism. 1916. Headley.<br />

"Principal authorities used," p.273-275.<br />

"Undertaken by the Central Education Committee of the Society of Friends, in<br />

response to a suggestion from Lancashire and Cheshire Quarterly Meeting." Introductory<br />

note.<br />

Pittsburgh Council of the Churches of Christ. r 206 P67<br />

Annual report [1918]. 1919. Pittsburgh.<br />

Principles of Quakerism; a collection of essays. 1909. 289.6 P95<br />

Contents: Historical sketch.—The inward light.—Redemption through Christ.—<br />

The Scriptures.—The ordinances.—Worship and ministry.—Principles of Quaker government.—Friends'<br />

views in regard to war, etc. — Friends' views concerning oaths.—<br />

Friends' views concerning dress, language, etc.—Church government.<br />

Issued by the representatives of the Society of Friends for Pennsylvania, New<br />

Jersey and Delaware.<br />

245 S52<br />

Shadow of the rock, and other religious poems. 1866. Randolph.<br />

Companion book to "The changed cross."


BOOKS ADDED—JUNE 1920 275<br />

Slattery, Charles Lewis. 248 S63<br />

Why men pray. 1918. Macmillan. (Church principles for lay<br />

people.)<br />

Contents: All men pray.—Prayer discovers God.—Prayer unites men.—God depends<br />

on men's prayer.—Prayer submits to the best.—Prayer receives God.<br />

Tiplady, Thomas. 261 T49<br />

Social Christianity in the new era. 1919. Revell.<br />

Contents: Ploughshares for swords.—A league of churches.—Church union by<br />

easy stages.—The test of a Christian.—The church and industry.—"Holy orders" in<br />

business.—The debt of class to class.—"The man's the gowd."—Workman and gentleman.—The<br />

emergence of woman.—The cry of the children.—The boy in the pew.—<br />

Knights of the church.<br />

Weddell, John Weaver. 220.7 W41<br />

Your study Bible; keys that unlock each of the 66 books of the<br />

Word of God, from a pastor's notes through 40 years of personal<br />

study. 1919. Sunday-school Times Co.<br />

Wright, Charles Henry Hamilton. 221 W93<br />

Introduction to the Old testament. 1891. Whittaker. (Theological<br />

educator.)<br />

Contains bibliographies.<br />

"Endeavors to give the ascertained results of modern criticism, as far as is possible<br />

within very confined limits." Preface.<br />

Sociology<br />

Burgess, Ernest Watson. 301 B89<br />

Function of socialization in social evolution. 1916. University of<br />

Chicago Press.<br />

Contents: The role of socialization in discovery and invention.—The role of socialization<br />

in social progress.—The role of socialization in personal development.<br />

Contains bibliographical foot-notes.<br />

Thesis for Ph. D., University of Chicago.<br />

Du Bois, William Edward Burghardt. 326 D8sd<br />

Darkwater; voices from within the veil. 1920. Harcourt.<br />

Contents: The shadow of years.—The souls of white folk.—The hands of Ethiopia.<br />

—Of work and wealth.—"The servant in the house."—Of the ruling of men.—The<br />

damnation of women.—The immortal child.—Of beauty and death.—The comet.<br />

A collection of essays, poems, and stories dealing with the dark races. The author<br />

is (1920) editor of "The Crisis," and believes that the solution of the negro question<br />

lies in treating it as an integral part of all social problems.<br />

Massachusetts—Education board. r 365 M45<br />

Report on investigation regarding establishing schools in county<br />

jails and houses of correction, Jan. 1918. 1918. (House no. 1255.)<br />

United States—Children's bureau. r 362.7 U25S<br />

Summary of child-welfare laws passed in 1916. 1917. (Miscellaneous<br />

series no.7.)<br />

Bureau publication no.21.<br />

Veblen, Thorstein B. 3°4 V24<br />

Place of science in modern civilisation, and other essays. 1919-<br />

Huebsch.<br />

Other essays: The evolution of the scientific point of view.—Why is economics not<br />

an evolutionary science?—The preconceptions of economic science.—Professor Clark s


276 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Veblen, Thorstein B.—continued.<br />

304 V24<br />

economics.—The limitations ol marginal utility.—Gustav Schmoller's economics.—Industrial<br />

and pecuniary employments.—On the nature of capital.—Some neglected points<br />

in the theory of socialism.—The socialist economics of Karl Marx.—The mutation theory<br />

and the blond race.—The blond race and the Aryan culture.—An early experiment in<br />

trusts.<br />

Americanization and Immigration<br />

Beck, Frank Orman. r 325.73 B36<br />

The Italian in Chicago; a study made by the Bureau of surveys of<br />

the Department of public welfare. [1919.] (Chicago—Public welfare<br />

department. Bulletin, v.2, no.3.)<br />

Butler, Fred Clayton.<br />

r 325.73 B97<br />

Community Americanization; a handbook for workers. 1920.<br />

(United States—Education bureau. Bulletin, 1919, no.76.)<br />

"Bibliography." p.77-82.<br />

The same. (In United States—Education bureau. Bulletin, 1919, no.<br />

76) r 370 U25 1919, no.76<br />

Sets forth the general principles of Americanization, the educational and social<br />

phases of the problem, and suggests plans for <strong>org</strong>anizing and making surveys of the<br />

community.<br />

Politics and Government<br />

Chicago Bureau of Public Efficiency. r 352.1 C4322e<br />

Excess condemnation; why the city of Chicago should have the<br />

power, in making public improvements, to take property in excess of<br />

actual requirements; lessons to be drawn from certain unfortunate aspects<br />

of the 12th street and Michigan avenue widening projects and the<br />

proposed Ogden avenue extension. [1918.]<br />

Fox, Emma Augusta. 328.1 F85<br />

Parliamentary usage for women's clubs; a manual of parliamentary<br />

law and practice, designed for the use of societies, literary, social,<br />

musical, philanthropic and fraternal. 1919. Doubleday.<br />

The same<br />

r 328.1 F85<br />

Maxey, Chester Collins.<br />

352.g8 M51<br />

County administration; a study based upon a survey of county government<br />

in the state of Delaware, with an introduction by C. A. Beard.<br />

1919. Macmillan.<br />

The research was conducted under the direction of the Bureau of municipal research,<br />

New York.<br />

"General references consulted," pref. p. 15-21.<br />

"The volume has a special merit in that it is the product of a field study, thus<br />

supplementing studies which rely largely upon documentary material." American economic<br />

review, 1920.<br />

National Civil Service Reform League.<br />

Report on the foreign service. 1919.<br />

r 327.73 N15


BOOKS ADDED—JUNE 1920<br />

Economics<br />

Aronovici, Carol. „„ T Q . ,<br />

„ , , 331-83 A76<br />

Housing and the housing problem. 1920. McClurg. (National<br />

social science series.)<br />

Contents: The problem—Economic factors in housing.-Land.-Legislation -<br />

The housing survey—Garden ctt.es.-The garden-city idea in urban development-<br />

The community of the future.<br />

'"""'<br />

"General references," p.161-163.<br />

Bloomfield, Daniel, ed. _„ A R ,,<br />

c 1 . J x- 1 , 33°-4 056<br />

Selected articles on modern industrial movements, with an introduction<br />

by Meyer Bloomfield. 1919. Wilson. (Handbook series.)<br />

The same _ „ ,<br />

r 330.4 B56<br />

Contents: Workers' co-operative movement.-Syndicalism, industrial unionism<br />

and the I. W. W.—Shop stewards.—Scientific management.—Guild socialism — Management<br />

shanng.-Bolshevism.-Labor parties.-Industrial reconstruction programs<br />

s<br />

Bibliography," pref. p. 11-22.<br />

Brasol, Boris L. 335 B?l<br />

Socialism vs. civilization, with an introduction by T. N. Carver.<br />

1920. Scribner.<br />

Contents: Modern socialism; its theories and aims.—Criticism of the Marx theory<br />

— ihe great socialistic experiment in Russia.—Socialist explanations of the failure in<br />

Russia.—Socialistic agitation in Europe and America.—Social revolution or social<br />

reconstruction.<br />

Bibliographical foot-notes.<br />

Canadian National Reconstruction Groups. r 330.9 C16<br />

Problems of national reconstruction; a summary by the Standing<br />

committee on plans and propaganda of the Canadian National Reconstruction<br />

Groups. 1918.<br />

"Bibliography of literature referred to," p.68-71.<br />

Carver, Thomas Nixon. 330 C24<br />

Principles of political economy. 1919. Ginn.<br />

Contents: The underlying conditions of national prosperity.—Production: The<br />

productive forces ; The productive industries.—Exchange.—The distribution of wealth.<br />

—The consumption of wealth.—Public finance.—Reform.<br />

Fisher, Irving. 338.5 F53S<br />

Stabilizing the dollar; a plan to stabilize the general price level<br />

without fixing individual prices. 1920. Macmillan.<br />

"Bibliography," p.286-296.<br />

The author believes that the high cost of living is caused by the uncertain purchasing<br />

power of the dollar, and as a remedy proposes to abolish gold coins and issue<br />

gold bullion dollar certificates which would be standard in value, but redeemable in<br />

varying weights of gold according to price fluctuations.<br />

Hanson, Ole. 335 H24<br />

Americanism versus bolshevism. 1920. Doubleday.<br />

The former mayor of Seattle scores bolshevists, communists, syndicalists, and<br />

I. W. W. as revolutionary criminals, and outlines a constructive remedial program.<br />

Ohio—Health and old age insurance commission. r 331.2 O183<br />

Health, health insurance, old age pensions; report, recommendations,<br />

dissenting opinions, Feb. 1919. 1919-


278 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Parker, Carleton Hubbell. 331-8 P23<br />

The casual laborer, and other essays, with introduction by C S.<br />

Parker. 1920. Harcourt.<br />

Other essays: Toward understanding labor unrest.—The I. W. W.—Motives in<br />

economic life.—Appendix: Report on the Wheatland hop fields' riot.<br />

Pennsylvania. Statutes. r 338.9 P39C<br />

Compilation of the laws relating to trades, occupations and professions,<br />

by J. H. Fertig. 1918. (Pennsylvania—Legislative reference<br />

bureau. Bulletin no.18.)<br />

Rowntree, Benjamin Seebohm, & Pigou, A. C 331-83 R79<br />

Lectures on housing. 1914. University Press. (Warburton lectures<br />

for 1914.)<br />

Contents: How far it is possible to provide satisfactory houses for the working<br />

classes at rents which they can afford to pay, by B. S. Rowntree.—Some aspects of<br />

the housing problem, by A. C. Pigou.<br />

Manchester University lectures, no.18.<br />

Spargo, John.<br />

335 S73P<br />

The psychology of bolshevism. 1919. Harper.<br />

An indictment of bolshevism as anti-social. The author explains the causes of the<br />

movement and suggests as a remedy the socialization of human thought, with the bettering<br />

of labor conditions and the banishment of poverty.<br />

Straus, Simon William.<br />

331-84 S91<br />

History of the thrift movement in America. 1920. Lippincott.<br />

(Lippincott's thrift text series.)<br />

The author is (1920) president of the American society for thrift. He discusses<br />

thrift in its broader aspects, as one of the great constructive forces necessary to human<br />

advancement, with special emphasis upon the inculcation of the habit in school children.<br />

Illustrated with five cartoons by Rollin Kirby of the New York "World."<br />

United States—Tariff commission. r 337.9 U2535<br />

Reciprocity and commercial treaties. 1919.<br />

• r-~<br />

Banking. Finance<br />

Ham, Arthur Harold, & Robinson, L. G. r 334.2 H19<br />

Credit union primer; an elementary treatise on cooperative banking,<br />

containing questions and answers concerning methods of <strong>org</strong>anization<br />

and operation, necessary books and forms, suggested by-laws<br />

and the credit union law of New York. 1914. (Russell Sage Foundation—Remedial<br />

loans division. [Pamphlet publications] no.15.)<br />

Harris, Ralph Scott. 332.1 H29<br />

Practical banking, with a survey of the Federal reserve act. 1915.<br />

Houghton.<br />

"Bibliography," p.297-300.<br />

"Intended for the student of finance who wishes a glimpse into the practical<br />

conduct of the bank or for the business man who daily has relations with the bank<br />

and yet...is unfamiliar with [its] details." Preface.<br />

Herrick, Clay. 332.14 H47<br />

Trust companies; their <strong>org</strong>anization, growth and management.<br />

1915. Bankers Pub. Co<br />

"Bibliography." p.477-486.<br />

Appeared in "The bankers magazine" of New York during the years 1904-1907.<br />

"Valuable chiefly for those interested in the technical side of trust companies."<br />

Journal of political economy, igio.


BOOKS ADDED—JUNE 1920 279<br />

Kniffin, William Henry. 332.1 K34S<br />

The savings bank and its practical work; a practical treatise on<br />

savings banking, covering the history, management and methods of<br />

operation of mutual savings banks, and adapted to savings departments<br />

in banks of discount and trust companies. 1918. • Bankers Pub. Co.<br />

National City Company, New York city.<br />

r 336.3 N155<br />

Internal war loans of belligerent countries, also consolidation loan<br />

of Spain and mobilization loans of Switzerland and Holland. 1918.<br />

Gives synopses of war loan prospectuses in the various countries, describes miscellaneous<br />

loans in smaller countries, and ends with war loan summary chart.<br />

National Woman's Liberty Loan Committee.<br />

r 336.3 N15<br />

Report for the fourth Liberty loan campaign, Sept. 28th to Oct. 19th,<br />

1918. 1918.<br />

Taken from the Report of the secretary of the treasury for the year 1918.<br />

Whitaker, Albert Conser.<br />

33 2 -45 W62<br />

Foreign exchange. 1919. Appleton.<br />

"Deals, not with the subject of international trade in its entirety, but with the<br />

plans of payment and the methods of banking and financing followed in that trade.<br />

It treats of 'foreign exchange'... as meaning the commercial paper of international<br />

trade, or the checks, drafts, and bills utilized therein." Preface.<br />

Willis, Henry Parker.<br />

332.1 W75<br />

American banking. 1918. La Salle Extension University. (Business<br />

adminstration [a series of texts].)<br />

"Presents a concise description and analysis of contemporary commercial banking<br />

with especial emphasis upon the federal reserve system." Journal of political economy,<br />

1916.<br />

Law<br />

Baldwin, Simeon Eben.<br />

340-7 B19<br />

The young man and the law. 1920. Macmillan. (Vocational<br />

series.)<br />

Bibliographical foot-notes. .<br />

Discusses the attractions, drawbacks, and ideals of the legal profession ; the personal<br />

qualities and education requisite for success as a lawyer.<br />

Crippen, Hawley Harvey, defendant.<br />

343-1 C88<br />

The trial of Hawley Harvey Crippen; ed. with notes and an introduction<br />

by Filson Young. [1920.] Canada Law Book Co. (Notable<br />

English trials.)<br />

New York (city), Charity Organization Society.<br />

r 343 N26<br />

The f<strong>org</strong>otten army; six years' work of the Committee on criminal<br />

courts, 1911-17; a story of its work for the clean, intelligent and kindly<br />

administration of our inferior criminal courts. [1918.]<br />

Describes the army of misery, misfortune, ignorance, and vice that passes through<br />

our criminal courts at the rate of 240,000 cases a year, with a sketch of the committee s<br />

activities.<br />

United States—Judiciary committee. (House.)<br />

r 347-6 U2532<br />

Uniform laws as to marriage and divorce; hearings before the committee<br />

on the judiciary, House of representatives, 6 5 th congress, 2d<br />

session on H.J. res.187, serial 69, Oct. 2, 1918. 1919.


280 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Williston, Samuel. 347_ 7 w ? 5<br />

Negotiable instruments; prepared for the American Institute of<br />

Banking. 1915. Amer. Institute of Banking. (Study course.)<br />

Treats of the negotiable instruments law in the various states, bills of exchange<br />

promissory notes, and checks. Ends with a chapter of practical exercises.<br />

'<br />

Military and Naval Science<br />

Crowder, Enoch Herbert. 3S5 62 Cgg<br />

Spirit of selective service. 1920. Century.<br />

Presents a history of the <strong>org</strong>anization of the selective service system in the United<br />

States, as well as a study of foreign systems of compulsory military training.<br />

La Ronciere, Charles Germain Marie Bourel de. r 359.944 L32<br />

Histoire de la marine frangaise. 4v. 1906-14.<br />

v.i. Les origines.<br />

v.2. La guerre de cent ans.—Revolution maritime.<br />

v.3. Les guerres d'ltalie.—Liberte des mers.<br />

v.4. En quete d'un empire colonial.—Richelieu.<br />

Contains bibliographical foot-notes.<br />

Education<br />

Alexander, Charles Beatty. 3?? As?<br />

Moral science and academic freedom; address delivered by invitation<br />

of the faculty and board of trustees of Washington and Lee University,<br />

at Lexington, Va., June 11, 1913. 1913. [Trow Press.]<br />

Printed for the university.<br />

England-Education board. qr 3 E6<br />

Report for the year 1917/18. 1919.<br />

North Central Association of Colleges and r , 7Q r , M..<br />

4<br />

Secondary Schools.<br />

Directory, standards, statistical analysis and list of accredited<br />

secondary schools; also the special study respecting the effect of the<br />

war on secondary schools in North Central Association territory ed<br />

by C. O. Davis. 1919.<br />

Stearns, John William, ed. r g<br />

Columbian history of education in Wisconsin. 1893<br />

Contents: Introduction.—General sketch of the history of education in Wisconsin<br />

-Early schools m Wisconsin, by R. G. Thwaites—Universities, colleges academ es<br />

and private schools—Institutions for the preparation of teachers.-State institutTons<br />

for special classes—Special forms and agencies of education.-City school sv ems-<br />

County school systems—Lutheran education in Wisconsin—Catholic educaticm in<br />

Wisconsin-Milwaukee College for Women; Layton Art Gallery, by L. B MaHory<br />

Published under authority of State committee on educational exhibit for W sconsin<br />

West, Andrew Fleming. „„„ „, ,<br />

T, . , . 37°-4 W56<br />

Ihe war and education; addresses. 1919. Princeton University<br />

Press.<br />

and C l ntC "! S: . In ! he ar - ° ur educational birthright; The immortal conflict; France<br />

and the classics by M. LaFerre—The close of the war: The humanities after the<br />

war; Vocational and general education.<br />

Humanities alter the<br />

1 " F , r Vr C T, a " d "" classics " is a translation of the address spoken to the graduating<br />

class of the University of Montpellier, by the Minister of public instruction !„ France


BOOKS ADDED—JUNE 1920 281<br />

Whipple, Guy Montrose. 371.9 W62<br />

Classes for gifted children; an experimental study of methods of<br />

selection and instruction [written] with the cooperation of T. S. Henry<br />

[and others]. 1919. Public School Pub. Co. (School and home education<br />

monographs, no.i.)<br />

"Annotated bibliography of references consulted in this study of talent in drawing,"<br />

p.142-147; "Partial bibliography on gifted children and their education," p.148-151.<br />

Wright, Henry Parks. 371 W93<br />

The young man and teaching. 1920. Macmillan. (Vocational<br />

series.)<br />

Considers teaching as a profession, the objections to the vocation, personal and<br />

educational qualifications, methods of instruction, discipline, and teaching in colleges.<br />

Ends with a chapter of inspiration from the lives of great teachers.<br />

Commerce. Communication<br />

Sabin, Edwin Legrand. 385 Sn<br />

Building the Pacific railway; the construction-story of America's<br />

first iron thoroughfare between the Missouri river and California, from<br />

the inception of the great idea to the day, May 10, 1869, when the<br />

Union Pacific and the Central Pacific joined tracks at Promontory<br />

Point, Utah, to form the nation's transcontinental. 1919. Lippincott.<br />

United States—Library of Congress. qr 016.382 U25<br />

Brief list of references on trade opportunities of the United States.<br />

1919.<br />

Carbon copy.<br />

Women<br />

Hutchinson, Emilie Josephine. 331-4 H969<br />

Women's wages; a study of the wages of industrial women and<br />

measures suggested to increase them. 1919. Columbia University.<br />

(Columbia University, New York. Studies in history, economics and<br />

public law, v.89, no.i.)<br />

Contains bibliographical foot-notes.<br />

The same. (In Columbia University, New York. Studies in history,<br />

economics and public law, v.89, no.i.) r 330 C72 v.89, no- 1<br />

Submitted as a doctor's thesis to Columbia University.<br />

"As a history of data and opinions before the war the book is useful, and with<br />

the persistence of many of the same tendencies in women's work it will have continued<br />

value." American journal of sociology, 1920.<br />

McMahon, Theresa Schmid. r 396 M21<br />

Women and economic evolution; or, The effects of industrial<br />

changes upon the status of women. 1912. [University of Wisconsin.]<br />

(Wisconsin University. Bulletin; economics and political science<br />

series, v.7, no.2.)<br />

"Bibliography," p.125-131<br />

Thesis for Ph.D., University of Wisconsin.


282 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Language<br />

Hadley, Tames.<br />

485 H12<br />

Greek grammar for schools and colleges; rev. and in part rewritten<br />

by F. D. Allen. 1889. Appleton.<br />

Mooney, W. D.<br />

475 M87<br />

Brief Latin grammar. 1897. Amer. Book Co.<br />

M<strong>org</strong>an, Morris Hicky.<br />

475 M89<br />

School Latin grammar; chiefly from Lane's Latin grammar. 1899.<br />

Harper. (Harper's Latin series.)<br />

Vizetelly, Francis Horace.<br />

r 421.5 V35<br />

Desk-book of 25,000 words frequently mispronounced, embracing<br />

English words, foreign terms, Bible names, personal names, geographical<br />

names and proper names of all kinds current in literature, science<br />

and the arts, that are of difficult pronunciation, carefully pronounced,<br />

annotated and concisely defined and indicating the preferences of the<br />

leading dictionaries from 1732 to 1916. 1919. Funk. (Standard deskbook<br />

series.)<br />

"Some authorities consulted in preparing this book," pref. p.35.<br />

Science<br />

Bigelow, Maurice Alpheus, & Bigelow, Mrs Anna (Neiglich). 570 B47<br />

Applied biology; an elementary textbook and laboratory guide.<br />

1919. Macmillan.<br />

"The word 'applied' in the title should not be understood in the limited sense of<br />

economics. . .It has been attempted to present the science of biology applied to the daily<br />

life of the average intelligent citizen. The book presents an order of study and selection<br />

of materials which have long appealed to the authors as a very helpful answer to the<br />

widespread criticisms of the common elementary courses of botany and zoology from the<br />

pure-science point of view." Preface.<br />

Dana, John Cotton.<br />

r 507 D19<br />

New relations of museums and industries; the story of the first<br />

ten years of a group of experimental museums. 1919.<br />

Published by the Newark Museum Association.<br />

Dommett, William Erskine.<br />

r 533.603 D71<br />

Dictionary of aircraft. 1918. Electrical Press.<br />

A glossary of aeronautical terms, with a few symbols and abbreviations.<br />

Fitzsimons, Frederick William.<br />

591.96 F58<br />

Natural history of South Africa, v.1-2. 1919. Longmans.<br />

v. 1-2. Mammals.<br />

A non-technical work, written in interesting style. Drawings and photographic illustrations.<br />

M<strong>org</strong>an, Thomas Hunt.<br />

575.! M89P<br />

Physical basis of heredity. 1919. Lippincott. (Monographs on<br />

experimental biology.)<br />

"Literature," p.274-300.<br />

Pierce, Ge<strong>org</strong>e Washington.<br />

538.56 P55<br />

Electric oscillations and electric waves, with application to radiotelegraphy<br />

and incidental application to telephony and optics. 1920.<br />

McGraw.<br />

Mathematical treatment of theoretical principles.


BOOKS ADDED—JUNE 1920 283<br />

St. Mars, F.<br />

591.5 S14<br />

Snapshots of the wild; illustrated by G. V. Stokes. 1919. Chambers.<br />

Interesting short stories of animal life, mainly in England.<br />

Steinheil, Hugo Adolph, & Voit, Ernst. 535.8 S82<br />

Applied optics; the computation of optical systems; being the<br />

"Handbuch der angewandten optik;" tr. and ed. by J. W. French. 2v.<br />

1918-19. Blackie.<br />

The same<br />

r 535.8 S82<br />

Appendices: Concerning the determination of the refraction and dispersive ratios<br />

of various media, by C. A. Steinheil and L. von Seidel.—Trigonometrical formulae for<br />

the general case of the refraction of light by a system of centred spherical surfaces, by<br />

L. von Seidel.<br />

"Embodies the trigonometrical method developed by von Seidel for the rigid computation<br />

of optical systems. The formulae have been employed for this purpose in the<br />

workshops of C. A. Steinheil and Sons for at least 30 years. The presentation of optical<br />

theory is condensed and does not conform with the traditional teaching of most English<br />

text-books—where the subject is developed algebraically.. .The work appears to be a<br />

translation of the original work of 1890. . .No attempt has been made to bring the signs<br />

and symbols employed into conformity with English practice." /. G. S. Thomas, in<br />

Journal of the Society of Chemical Industry, igig.<br />

Chemistry<br />

Klooster, Henry Sjoerd van.<br />

541.i K32<br />

Lecture demonstrations in physical chemistry. 1919. Chemical<br />

Pub. Co.<br />

A collection of experiments chosen to illustrate various subjects in physical chemistry.<br />

"Bibliography," p.188-189.<br />

McCoy, Herbert Newby, & Terry, E. M. 540 M14<br />

Introduction to general chemistry. Ed.2. 1920. McGraw.<br />

A good, modern text-book. Metallurgy is included, but treatment is very brief.<br />

Namias, Radolfo. r 543.7 N12<br />

II chimico siderurgico; analisi dell' acciaio e dei prodotti siderurgici;<br />

nonche delle materie prime e prodotti ausiliarii impiegati nelle fonderie<br />

d'acciaio e ghisa. 1919. (Manuali Hoepli.)<br />

Guided by an experience of twenty-five years in steel-works chemistry, the author<br />

endeavors to present the best analytical methods and to safeguard these against<br />

sources of error.<br />

Snell, John Ferguson. 54° S67<br />

Elementary household chemistry; an introductory textbook for<br />

students of home economics. 1919. Macmillan.<br />

Based on experience with students lacking previous training in chemistry.<br />

Geology<br />

Smith, Ge<strong>org</strong>e Otis, ed. 553 S648<br />

Strategy of minerals; a study of the mineral factor in the world position<br />

of America in war and in peace, with an introduction by F. K.<br />

Lane. 1919. Appleton. (Problems of war and of reconstruction.)<br />

Deals with resources and economic importance of America's mineral deposits. Sections<br />

of the book are contributed by various authors most of whom are on the staff of<br />

the United States geological survey.


284 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Snider, Luther Crocker. 553-28 S67<br />

Oil and gas in the mid-continent fields. 1920. Harlow Pub. Co.<br />

The same<br />

r 553.28 S67<br />

Contains maps showing oil and gas fields of Kansas, Oklahoma and Texas.<br />

Following a brief general introduction to oil and gas geology, there is a concise summary<br />

of the geological features and the development up to the early part of 1919- Includes<br />

all gas and oil developments in Kansas and Oklahoma, those in Texas—except the<br />

salt dome fields of the gulf coast—and the fields of the Sabine uplift in northwestern<br />

Louisiana.<br />

Botany<br />

Britton, Nathaniel Lord, & Rose, J. N. qr 583.471 B75<br />

Cactaceae; descriptions and illustrations of plants of the cactus<br />

family, v.i. 1919. (Carnegie Institution of Washington. Publication<br />

no.248, v.i.)<br />

Based on examination of American and foreign herbaria and on investigation of the<br />

more important cactus regions of the world.<br />

Twining, Alfred. r 581.9748 T92<br />

Flora of northeastern Pennsylvania. 1917.<br />

Published by the Everhart Museum of Natural History, Science and Art, Scranton,<br />

Pa.<br />

Includes 115 orders and 1534 species. The author's herbarium, now in the Everhart<br />

museum, is practically complete for Lackawanna and Luzerne counties, and it is<br />

to that section of Pennsylvania that the present publication particularly applies.<br />

Useful Arts<br />

Association Nationale d'Expansion ficonomique. r 670.2 A84<br />

Index to French production, 1918. [1918?]<br />

A review of the industries of France, with a classified trade directory. English edition.<br />

Crussell, Edward H. 694 C89<br />

Jobbing work for the carpenter. 1914. Will Williams.<br />

Practical book with useful information on general repairs and on alteration of<br />

bouses. Has chapters, also, on many definite projects such as crating of goods, fence<br />

building, picture framing, and making of show-cases, counters, roll-top desks, drawingboards,<br />

and ladders.<br />

Doubleday, Page & Company, Garden City, N. Y. r 655.473 D75<br />

The Country Life Press, Garden City, New York. 1919.<br />

Information about the activities of this publishing company, with notes on certain<br />

authors.<br />

Henry Street Settlement, New York. r 607 H450<br />

Opportunities for vocational training in New York; pub. by Committee<br />

for vocational scholarships, administered by Henry Street Settlement;<br />

comp. by E. B. Goldsmith. [Ed.3.] 1918.<br />

Jones, Bernard E. cd. r 686.41 J39<br />

Gilding, silvering and bronzing. [1919.] Cassell. (.Cassell's<br />

"Work" handbooks.)<br />

Deals with decoration of wood, metals, etc., by leaf metals and immersion, and by<br />

lacquers, enamels, and bronze paints. Includes glass silvering, and methods of metal<br />

coloring and finishing for protective purposes. Book is compiled from "Work" and<br />

many of the processes are only briefly treated.


BOOKS ADDED—JUNE 1920 285 .<br />

Mueller, F. Walter.<br />

Our trip through a paper mill. 1919.<br />

Published by the McGraw-Phillips Printing Co.<br />

An illustrated pamphlet describing paper-making processes.<br />

r 676 M95<br />

Painters magazine.<br />

r 698 Pi6n<br />

Nineteen ninety five paint questions answered; a reference encyclopedia<br />

answering knotty problems that are met daily by painters, decorators<br />

and paint and varnish manufacturers. 1919.<br />

Sequel to "One thousand more paint questions answered" (qr 69S P160).<br />

Compiled from the "Painters' magazine." Supersedes two earlier volumes—"739<br />

paint questions answered" (qr 698 P16), and "One thousand more paint questions<br />

answered" (qr 698 P160) but does not include all the material contained therein.<br />

United Lead Company. r 696 U25<br />

Lead wool; how to use it.<br />

Trade literature describing lead wool and illustrating some of its applications.<br />

Medicine, Physiology, Hygiene<br />

Pennsylvania—Fire protection bureau. r 614.84 P399<br />

Monthly bulletin, Sept. 1917-date. no. 18-date. 1917-date.<br />

No.19-21, 23, 25-30, 33-35 wanting.<br />

July 1, 1919 the Bureau of fire protection was established to replace the office of<br />

the State fire marshal.<br />

Posey, William Campbell.<br />

617.75 P84<br />

Hygiene of the eye. 1918. Lippincott.<br />

Non-technical presentation of the importance of sight, the influence of optical defects,<br />

and the prevention of injury and disease.<br />

Seaman, Louis Livingston.<br />

r 613.67 S43<br />

Shall disease triumph in our army? 1904. Amer. Defense Soc.<br />

Extracts from his "From Tokio through Manchuria with the Japanese" (952 S43).<br />

Engineering<br />

Boileau, Ch.<br />

q r 621.432 B59<br />

Le moteur a essence adapte a l'automobile et a l'aviation; preface<br />

de Gabriel Koenigs. 1918.<br />

"Bibliographie," p.176.<br />

Principles and theory. A text for advanced students having some knowledge of the<br />

internal combustion engine.<br />

Bowles, Oliver.<br />

622 - 2 3 B66<br />

Rock quarrying for cement manufacture. 1918. (United States—<br />

Mines bureau. Bulletin 160.)<br />

The same. (In United States—Mines bureau. Bulletin<br />

jg 0 \<br />

r 622.009 U25 no.160<br />

Castigliano, Alberto. r 624.044 C26<br />

Elastic stresses in structures; tr. by E. S. Andrews. 1919- Scott.<br />

"Referred to as a classic in the leading text-books dealing with the advanced Theory<br />

of Structures... Gives us the most complete analysis of the theory of elasticity applied to<br />

the determination of stresses in structures that we have yet met." Translators preface.<br />

Of considerable interest, although not capable of wide application to-day. the<br />

French edition, published some 40 years ago, has long been out of print, and this is<br />

the first English translation.


286 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Coal dealers' "blue book," March 1919. v.65. IQI9-


BOOKS ADDED—JUNE 1920 287<br />

Gardner, Frank Duane, and others. 633 G18<br />

Farm crops; their cultivation and management; a non-technical<br />

manual for the cultivation, management and improvement of farm<br />

crops. 1918. Winston. (Farming for profit.)<br />

"References" at the end of each chapter.<br />

Covers the subject broadly, including both Northern and Southern crops.<br />

Rolet, Antonin.<br />

r 633.45 R63<br />

Plantes a parfums et plantes aromatiques. 1918. (Encyclopedie<br />

agricole.)<br />

Industrial guide, including cultural methods and technology.<br />

Domestic Economy<br />

Friedman, Jacob.<br />

642 F95<br />

Friedman's common-sense candy teacher, and an enlarged supplement<br />

by W. H. Kennedy; a most complete line of up-to-date formulas,<br />

with all instructions in the art of making candies, both steam and open<br />

fire work, for the large manufacturer or the beginner; up-to-date ice<br />

cream and fountain work in all its branches. Ed.4. I9 T 5- Bell.<br />

Schmit, Celestine Leontine. 646 S35<br />

Garments for girls. 1919. Century.<br />

Smith, Joseph Russell.<br />

r 641.1 S65<br />

The world's food resources. 1919. Holt.<br />

A valuable economic study of foods and food supplies—the present status and the<br />

possibilities.<br />

Wright, Eleanor Lee.<br />

Wilson's meat cookery. 1919. [Wilson & Co.]<br />

Business. Communication<br />

641 W93<br />

Baker, Josephine Turck. 652 B17<br />

Correct business letter writing and business English. [1917-]<br />

Correct English Pub. Co.<br />

The treatment of business letters is confined to consideration of the form and style.<br />

Offers, also, some helpful discussion of proper English construction, and contains two<br />

useful reference lists—a fairly good list of abbreviations and a selected list of compound<br />

words.<br />

Brooklyn Vocational Guidance Association, Brooklyn, N. Y. 657 B77<br />

Accountancy and the business professions. [1919?]<br />

Contents: Accountancy and the business professions, by J.J. Klein.—The business<br />

engineer and his work, by £. W. Weaver.—How I became a public accountant, by F. J.<br />

Batchelder.—From a school counsellor's correspondence files.<br />

"Helpful literature," p.30-31.<br />

Butler, Ralph Starr, & Burd, H. A. _ 652 B97<br />

Commercial correspondence; prepared in the Extension division of<br />

the University of Wisconsin. 1919. Appleton. (Commercial education<br />

series.)<br />

Good manual of instruction in both the form and the substance of business letters<br />

for various definite purposes.


288 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Chambonnaud, L. r 658.01 C35<br />

Les affaires et la methode scientifique. 1918. (La technique des<br />

affaires.)<br />

Devoted mainly to theory and psychology of salesmanship.<br />

Culver, L. A.<br />

r 654.1 C91<br />

Radio telephony [and] telegraphy simply explained; not a text<br />

book to be studied but an interesting story to be read. 1919. Iconocraft<br />

Pub. Co.<br />

A pamphlet, attempting very brief elementary instruction.<br />

Douglas, Archer Wall.<br />

658.3 D75<br />

Merchandising. 1918. Macmillan.<br />

Brief chapters including buying, selling, advertising, credit, and care of stock.<br />

Based on forty years' expcience in one of the largest distributing houses in the country.<br />

r 659 M25<br />

Mahin's advertising data book; facts and statistics in condensed form<br />

for the man who has advertising and merchandising problems to solve.<br />

Ed.14. 1916.<br />

r 658.705 N15<br />

National efficiency quarterly, May 1918-Feb. 1919. v.i. 1918-19.<br />

Published by the National Efficiency Society, which was formed by the merging of<br />

the National Institute of Efficiency and the Efficiency Society.<br />

Continuation of the "Journal" of the Efficiency Society.<br />

Publication suspended Feb. 1919.<br />

Packard Motor Car Company, Detroit.<br />

r 658.7 P12<br />

Packard advance training school; lecture course 1919; delivered<br />

before the foreman's assemblies of the Packard Motor Car Co. 1919.<br />

A series of lectures on various topics connected with production and management,<br />

featuring mainly the methods in use in the Packard <strong>org</strong>anization.<br />

Risque, Ferdinand William.<br />

657.262 R49<br />

Loose leaf books and systems for general business. 1907. Privately<br />

printed.<br />

Illustrates many forms and discusses their application in various lines of work.<br />

Stone, Ellery W.<br />

654.1 S87<br />

Elements of radiotelegraphy. 1919. Van Nostrand.<br />

"Bibliography," p.256-258.<br />

Manual based on instruction in the United States navy. Good, practical presentation,<br />

with only elementary mathematics.<br />

Chemical Technology<br />

Broniewski, Witold.<br />

r 669.9135 B76<br />

Introduction a I'etude des alliages; cours libre fait a la Sorbonne;<br />

preface de Henry Le Chatelier. 1918.<br />

Bibliography, p.9-14; "Memoires cites" at end of chapters.<br />

A concise, systematic treatise of high value.<br />

Chalmers, Thomas Wightman.<br />

r 665.3 C35<br />

Production and treatment of vegetable oils, including chapters on<br />

the refining of oils, the hydrogenation of oils, the generation of hydrogen,<br />

soap making, the recovery and refining of glycerine and the splitting<br />

of oils. 1919. Constable. (Engineer series.)<br />

Appeared in "The Engineer," v.123, Feb. 9-June 29,' 1917.<br />

Treated from the engineering rather than the chemical point of view.


BOOKS ADDED—JUNE 1920 289<br />

Galvanizing Corporation of America, Brooklyn. r 669.58 G15<br />

Electro galvanizing; the "standard" electro galvanizing solution.<br />

1918. (Galvanizing series, no.2.)<br />

Trade literature on electrolytic plating with zinc.<br />

Kansas City Testing Laboratory, Kansas City, Mo. r 665.5 Kl 2<br />

Petroleum and its products; properties, specifications and tables.<br />

1915. (Bulletin no.9.)<br />

A pamphlet giving, in concise form, valuable information regarding petroleum technology<br />

and trade.<br />

Mariller, Charles.<br />

La distillation fractionnee et la rectification. 1917.<br />

Confined almost entirely to alcohol mixtures.<br />

r 663.55 M38<br />

Marshall, John Albert.<br />

662.2 M417<br />

Manufacture and testing of military explosives. 1919. McGraw.<br />

(International chemical series.)<br />

"Bibliography," p.213-253.<br />

The same<br />

r 662.2 M417<br />

A very valuable book, though commercial specifications are lacking and the author<br />

has been obliged to omit many manufacturing details considered confidential by the<br />

United States ordnance department or safeguarded by manufacturers. Deals with<br />

manufacture, analysis, inspection, and storage of propellants and high explosives, including<br />

information on practically all the military high explosives (1919).<br />

Wheeler, Harold Leslie, comp.<br />

r 016.6695 W61<br />

Bibliography on the roasting, leaching, smelting and electrometallurgy<br />

of zinc; rev. to June 1919. [1919.] (Missouri University—School<br />

of mines and metallurgy. Bulletin; technical series, v.4, no.3.)<br />

White, Albert Easton. qr 669.17 W63<br />

Notes on metallurgy. [1918.]<br />

Multigraph copy.<br />

Notes and diagrams relating to inspection work of the Ordnance department,<br />

United States army.<br />

Fine Arts<br />

Chavannes, fidouard. r 73 2 C41<br />

La sculpture sur pierre en Chine au temps des deux dynasties Han.<br />

i893-<br />

Contents: Explication des bas-reliefs de l'epoque des Han: Les sepultures de la<br />

familie Ou.—Les bas-reliefs du Hiao-T'ang-Chan et la pierre du village de Lieou.<br />

Illustrated with 66 plates, some folded.<br />

La Sizeranne, Robert de.<br />

7°9 L34<br />

L'art pendant la guerre, 1914-18. 1919-<br />

Contents: Leur art.—Ce qu'ils n'ont pu detruire ; les tapisseries de Reims.—Les<br />

ruines.—La caricature et la guerre.—La nouvelle esthetique des batailles.<br />

Miintz, Eugene.<br />

r 709-45 M6gar<br />

Les arts a la cour des papes Innocent VIII, Alexandre VI, Pie III<br />

(1484-1503); recueil de documents inedits ou peu connus. 1898. (Fondation<br />

Eugene Piot.)<br />

Publie sous les auspices de I'Academie des Inscriptions et Belles-lettres.<br />

Bibliographical foot-notes.


CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Petrucci, Raphael.<br />

759-93 P46<br />

Chinese painters; a critical study; tr. by Frances Seaver, with a<br />

biographical note by Laurence Binyon. 1920. Brentano.<br />

"Bibliography," p.149.<br />

In two parts, the first dealing with technique, and the second with the evolution<br />

of Chinese painting.<br />

Ross, Denman Waldo.<br />

q 752 R73<br />

The painter's palette; a theory of tone relations, an instrument of<br />

expression. 1919. Houghton.<br />

Description of a palette-system which the author calls the "system of the spectrum<br />

band with complementaries in corresponding values."<br />

Gardening<br />

Holmes, Eber.<br />

716.2 H73<br />

Commercial rose culture under glass and outdoors; a practical guide<br />

to modern methods of growing the rose for market purposes. 1919.<br />

De La Mare Co.<br />

"The author has endeavored to make known the best way to be successful in growing<br />

good roses." Preface.<br />

Profusely illustrated with photographs of the commercial roses of to-day.<br />

Teall, Gardner Callahan.<br />

716 T26<br />

A little garden the year round. 1919. Dutton.<br />

The author is (1919) on the editorial staff of "House and garden," and was editor<br />

of "American homes and gardens," 1911-15. Illustrated with photographs of<br />

attractive gardens.<br />

Architecture<br />

Cataneo, Pietro.<br />

qb 720 C27<br />

L'architettvra di Pietro Cataneo Senese; alia quale oltre all' essere<br />

stati dall' istesso autore riuisti, meglio ordinati, e di diuersi disegni, e<br />

discorsi arricchiti i primi quattro libri per l'adietro stampati, sono aggiunti<br />

di piu il quinto, sesto, settimo, e ottauo libro. [1567.]<br />

Printer's mark of Aldus at end.<br />

qb 728.6 F39<br />

Fermes et habitations rurales; projets primes au concours ouvert entre<br />

les architectes frangais. 3v.<br />

v.i. Nord.—Pas-de-Calais.—Somme.<br />

v.2. Seine-et-Marne.—Oise.—Aisne.—Marne.—Ardennes.<br />

v.3. Meuse.—Vosges.—Meurthe-et-Moselle.—Alsace.<br />

Mortet, Victor.<br />

b 720.944 M92<br />

Recueil de textes relatifs a I'histoire de l'architecture et a la condition<br />

des architectes en France, au moyen age Iie-I2e siecles; publie<br />

avec une introduction, des notes, un glossaire et un repertoire archeologique.<br />

1911. Picard. (Collection de textes pour servir a I'etude et<br />

a l'enseignement de I'histoire.)<br />

Rivoira, G. Teresio.<br />

qb 726 R52<br />

Moslem architecture, its origins and development; tr. from the<br />

Italian by G. M. Rushforth. 1918. Milford.<br />

Bibliographical foot-notes.<br />

In two parts: the first describes some of the chief stages in the development of the<br />

mosque from its birth down to the 12th century; the second discusses the theory according<br />

to which the origin and development of the systematic use of the horse-shoe arch<br />

belong to the Iberian peninsula.


BOOKS ADDED—JUNE 1920 291<br />

Souster, Ernest Ge<strong>org</strong>e William.<br />

725.4 S72<br />

Design of factory and industrial buildings, with chapters on welfare<br />

work and industrial research departments. 1919. Scott. (Broadway<br />

architectural handbooks, v.i.)<br />

Principles governing modern factory design, from an English point of view.<br />

Music<br />

Beethoven, Ludwig van.<br />

qM 786.4901 B38<br />

Concertos for the pianoforte; provided with fingering and with a<br />

complete arrangement, for pianoforte, of the orchestral accompaniment<br />

by Franz Kullak; the introduction and notes tr. from the German by<br />

Th. Baker. 5 nos. in 5v. 1901. Schirmer.<br />

no.i. Concerto in C major. Op.15.<br />

no.2. Concerto in B flat major. Op.19.<br />

no.3. Concerto in C minor. Op.37.<br />

no.4. Concerto in G major. Op.58.<br />

no.5. Concerto in E flat major. Op.73.<br />

Beethoven, Ludwig van.<br />

qM 785.6 B38<br />

Konzert no.i, C dur [fiir pianoforte mit orchester]. Op.15. Breitkopf.<br />

Carpenter, John Alden.<br />

qM 784 C22<br />

Gitanjali (song-offerings); poems by Rabindranath Tagore. I9M-<br />

Schirmer.<br />

Chapman, Clifford C. comp. . qM 784.88 C36<br />

Twenty sacred two-part songs for women's voices. 1919. Ditson.<br />

(Half dollar choral series.)<br />

Chopin, Frederic Francois.<br />

qM 786.4901 C45ce<br />

Concerto, in E minor, with the orchestral accompaniment arranged<br />

for a second piano; ed. by Rafael Joseffy, with an introductory note<br />

by James Huneker. Op.11. 1918. Schirmer. (Complete works for<br />

the pianoforte, book 14.)<br />

Chopin, Frederic Francois.<br />

qM 786.4901 C45cf<br />

Concerto, in F minor, with the orchestral accompaniment arranged<br />

for a second piano; ed. by Rafael Josef fy, with an introductory note by<br />

James Huneker. Op.21. 1918. Schirmer. (Complete works for the<br />

pianoforte, book 15.)<br />

Grieg, Edvard.


292 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Liszt, Franz. qM 785.4 L73C<br />

Ce qu'on entend sur la montagne (nach V. Hugo); poeme symphonique,<br />

partitur. Breitkopf. (Symphonische dichtungen fiir groses<br />

orchester, no.i.)<br />

Liszt, Franz.<br />

qM 785.4 L73i<br />

Die ideale [symphonische dichtung nr.12, orchestral score]. Breitkopf.<br />

MacDowell, Edward Alexander.<br />

qM 786.4901 M14<br />

Zweites konzert, in D moll, fiir pianoforte und orchester, pianoforte-solostimme<br />

mit hinzugefiigtem 2. pianoforte (partitur). Op.23.<br />

Breitkopf.<br />

Rimsky-Korsakov, Nicolai Andreievich.<br />

qM 786.4902 R46S<br />

Sadko; tableau musical pour orchestre [pour piano, arrangement a<br />

4 mains par N. Pourgold]. Jurgenson.<br />

Rubinstein, Anton.<br />

qM 786.4901 R82<br />

Concerto no.4, in D minor, for pianoforte, two pianos, four hands<br />

(in score); ed. and rev. by Rafael Joseffy. Op.70. 1905. Schirmer.<br />

Saint-Saens, Charles Camille.<br />

qM 785.6 S15C<br />

Concerto (2e), pour piano et orchestre. Op. 22. Durand.<br />

Saint-Saens, Charles Camille.<br />

qM 786.4901 S15P<br />

Premier concerto, pour piano, avec accompagnement d'orchestre<br />

[pour piano principal, avec I'accompt d'orchestre reduit pour un 2d<br />

piano]. Op.17. Durand.<br />

Saint-Saens, Charles Camille.<br />

qM 786.4901 Sisd<br />

Deuxieme concerto, pour piano avec I'accompt d'orchestre reduit<br />

pour un 2d piano par Adam Laussel. Op.22. Durand.<br />

Saint-Saens, Charles Camille.<br />

qM 786.4901 Si5t<br />

Troisieme concerto [pour piano, avec accompagnement d'orchestre,<br />

piano seul]. Op.29. Durand.<br />

Schumann, Robert.<br />

qM 786.4901 S39<br />

Concerto, in A minor, for the pianoforte, with the orchestral accompaniment<br />

arranged for a second piano; ed. by Edwin Hughes. 1918.<br />

Schirmer.<br />

Tschaikowsky, Peter Ilyitch.<br />

qM 786.4901 T78<br />

Concerto no.i, in Bb minor, for pianoforte, two pianos, four hands<br />

(in score); ed. by Rafael Joseffy. Op.23. 1905. Schirmer.<br />

Literature<br />

Franc, Miriam Alice.<br />

839.82 Ii2zf<br />

Ibsen in England. 1919. Four Seas Co.<br />

"English translations of Ibsen," p.163-167; "Performances of Ibsen in England,"<br />

p.168-185.<br />

The same<br />

r 839.82 Ii2zf<br />

Thesis for Ph. D., LTniversity of Pennsylvania.<br />

Discusses Ibsen's introduction to England, the Ibsen controversy, and parodies<br />

and sequels to Ibsen plays, in an attempt to show his influence on English drama.


BOOKS ADDED—JUNE 1920 293<br />

Gardner, Samuel Jackson. 814 G183<br />

Autumn leaves [essays]. 1865. Hurd.<br />

Mendenhall, John Cooper. r 820.9 M61<br />

Aureate terms; a study in the literary diction of the 15th century.<br />

1919. Wickersham Printing Co.<br />

"Bibliography," p.73-82.<br />

Thesis for Ph. D., University of Pennsylvania.<br />

"Aureate tennis were those new words, chiefly Romance or Latinical in origin,<br />

continually sought, under authority of criticism and the best writers, for a rich and<br />

expressive style in English, from about 1350 to about 1530." Author.<br />

North Carolina University—English department. r 820.7 N45<br />

National ideals in British and American literature; a syllabus. 1918.<br />

(North Carolina University. War information series, 110.14.)<br />

Contents: From the beginnings to Shakespeare, by J. M. Steadman.—The English<br />

renaissance, by Edwin Greenlaw.—The rise of modern democracy, by J. H. Hanford.<br />

—England democratizing under Victoria (1832-77); The rise of imperialism (1877-<br />

I9J4). by J- M. Booker.—American ideals, by Norman Foerster.—The war and democracy:<br />

Materials in state papers and public discussions, by R. H. Thornton; Materials<br />

in the personal narrative and in literature of the imagination, by J. H. Hanford.<br />

Contains numerous bibliographies.<br />

Issued in the series of extension leaflets.<br />

Plutarch. 888 P72S<br />

Selected essays. 2v. 1913-18. Clarendon Press.<br />

v.i. Dinner-party of the seven sages.—On old men in public life.—Advice to<br />

married couples.—Concerning busybodies.—On garrulousness.—On the student at<br />

lectures.—On moral ignorance in high places.—Fawner and friend.—On bringing up<br />

a boy.—Notes on persons and places.—Appendix: Notes on the Greek text.<br />

v.2. On the genius of Socrates.—Three Pythian dialogues.—On the instances of<br />

delay in divine punishment.—From the dialogue "On the soul."—On superstition.—<br />

On the face which appears on the orb of the moon.—Notes.—Note on the myths in<br />

Plutarch.—Note on the plurality of worlds and the five regular solids.<br />

v.l is tr. with introduction by T. G. Tucker, v.2 by A. O. Prickard.<br />

Russell, Frances Theresa. 823 R91<br />

Satire in the Victorian novel. 1920. Macmillan.<br />

"Bibliographical note," p.317-327.<br />

Discusses the satiric spirit in its relation to fiction in the 19th century; the romantic,<br />

realistic, and ironic methods of the novelists; the objects of their satire; and their contribution<br />

to satiric philosophy; the whole illustrated with many quotations from their<br />

works.<br />

Thucydides. 888 T42S<br />

Speeches; selected from Jowett's translation, with an introduction<br />

by Gilbert Murray. 1919. Clarendon Press.<br />

Contents: The purpose of the History.—The Corinthians at Sparta.—Archidamus<br />

against the war.—Final demands of the Lacedaemonians.—Funeral oration of Pericles.<br />

—The great plague of Athens.—The character of Pericles.—The revolt of Mitylene.—<br />

The revolutions in Corcyra.—Cleon against peace.—Peace made and broken.—The<br />

Melian dialogue.—Nicias and Alcibiades on the Sicilian expedition.—Alcibiades at<br />

Sparta.—The final catastrophe.<br />

Humor<br />

Rinehart, Mrs Mary E. (Roberts). 817 R47<br />

"Isn't that just like a man!" 1920. Doran.<br />

Contains also "Oh, well, you know how women are!" by I. S. Cobb, inverted, with<br />

separate t. p.<br />

Appeared in the "American magazine," v.88, Oct. 1919.<br />

Mrs Rinehart's sketch is a humorous account of the frailties of the male sex; Mr<br />

Cobb's companion study deals with the foibles of women.


294 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Poetry<br />

Collins, V. H. comp. 821.08 C714<br />

Poems of action. 1919. Clarendon Press.<br />

"Notes," p.161—200.<br />

The same<br />

j 821.08 C71<br />

Thirty-four story poems including "The white ship," by Rossetti; "The jackdaw<br />

of Rheims," from "The Ingoldsby legends;" Browning's "Herve Riel" and Kipling's<br />

"Ballad of East and West."<br />

Duhamel, Ge<strong>org</strong>es. 841 D88<br />

Compagnons; poemes. 1918.<br />

Leonard, Robert Maynard, cd. 821.08 L62p<br />

Poetry of peace. 1918. Milford.<br />

An anthology of peace poems by English and American writers from John Gower<br />

(i325?-l408) to Francis Thompson (1859-1907).<br />

Lyall, Sir Charles James. qr 892.7 L98<br />

Some aspects of ancient Arabic poetry, as illustrated by a littleknown<br />

anthology. [1918.] Milford.<br />

Reprinted from the "Proceedings" of the British Academy, v.8.<br />

The anthology is the eighth century Mufaddaliyat, edited according to the revision<br />

by al-Anbari (who died 916 A. D.), with the complete commentary of that author, and<br />

English translation and notes.<br />

Sassoon, Siegfried. 821 S250<br />

The old huntsman, and other poems. [1920.] Dutton.<br />

Widdemer, Margaret, comp. 821.08 W67<br />

The haunted hour; an anthology. 1920. Harcourt.<br />

A collection of poems relating to the return of spirits to earth.<br />

Drama. Theatre<br />

Ashton, Leonora Sill. 812 A82<br />

The nativity; a mystery play. [1912.] Young Churchman Co.<br />

A Twelfth night play.<br />

Benelli, Sem.<br />

L'amore dei tre re; poema tragico in tre atti. [1919.]<br />

Benelli, Sem. 852 B43C<br />

852 B43am<br />

La cena delle beffe; poema drammatico in quattro atti. 1918.<br />

Ellison, Lee Monroe. 822.09 E53<br />

Early romantic drama at the English court. 1917. Banta.<br />

Contents: Romantic elements in the early English mask.—The influence of the<br />

mask on the early court drama.—The early romantic drama of the court.—Early surviving<br />

romantic plays.—The early romantic drama in contemporary criticism.<br />

"Bibliography," p.141-145.<br />

Thesis for Ph.D., University of Chicago.<br />

Williams, Laura M. 812 W746<br />

Up-to-the-minute monologues; a collection of "plays for one character."<br />

1919. Baker.<br />

Contents: Their only child.—The theatre party.—A game of bridge.—What Susie<br />

saw from the auto.—Casting the play.—The bride.—Clara's husbands.—Buying Billy's<br />

Christmas present.—Luncheon for two.—Mrs Slattery seeks an apartment.—Lady<br />

barbers.—A modern linguist.—Before the wedding.—At the canteen—1918.—Keeping<br />

sister home.—Mickey goes to the movies.—On the beach.—Choosing a hat.—Over the<br />

wire.—Worse than war.—Learning to drive.


BOOKS ADDED—JUNE 1920' 295<br />

Biography<br />

Calhoun, John Caldwell. 92 032m<br />

Meigs, William Montgomery. Life of John Caldwell Calhoun. 2v.<br />

1917. Neale Pub. Co.<br />

Contains bibliographical foot-notes.<br />

"The long-desired complete and impartial life of the Great Nullifier. Evidently<br />

it rests on an industrious examination of the available sources and is constructed, on<br />

the whole, with an admirable sense of the relations of the various phases of Calhoun's<br />

career to the whole story of his long and important life." American political science<br />

review, 1918.<br />

Davis, Henry Gassaway. 92 D318P<br />

Pepper, Charles Melville. Life and times of Henry Gassaway<br />

Davis, 1823-1916. 1920. Century.<br />

Deals with two phases of Senator Davis's long life—the practical side as railway<br />

builder and creator of industrial communities, and the visionary side as public servant,<br />

political leader, and private citizen.<br />

Irving, Washington. 92 l288ir<br />

Journals of Washington Irving (from July 1815 to July 1842); ed.<br />

by W. P. Trent and G. S. Hellman. 3v. ,1919.<br />

v.i. The tour in Wales, 1815.—France, 1820.—Aix-la-Chapelle, etc.—The Rhine<br />

country, Dresden, etc.<br />

v.2. France, Aug. 1824 to Feb. 8, 1826.<br />

v.3. Spain.—Tour through the West.—Esopus and Dutch tour.<br />

Published by the Bibliophile Society.<br />

Lincoln, Abraham. 92 Lyisbt<br />

Barton, William Eleazar. The soul of Abraham Lincoln. 1920.<br />

Doran.<br />

Contents: A study of religious environments.—An analysis of the evidence.—<br />

The religion of Lincoln.—APPENDICES: Extract from Newton Bateman's Lecture on<br />

Lincoln with variants of the Springfield farewell address.—"High-handed outrage at<br />

Utica," by Artemus Ward.—"The conversion of Abraham Lincoln," by the Rev. E. L.<br />

Watson.—The Reed lecture.—Two Herndon letters concerning Lincoln's religion.—<br />

The Irwin article, with letters.—"The Christian's defence."—Lincoln and the churches,<br />

by Nicolay and Hay.—"Bound together in Christianity and patriotism," hitherto<br />

unpublished address of Lincoln.<br />

"Bibliography," p.387-400.<br />

Swinnerton, Frank Arthur. 92 89783b<br />

Bennett, Arnold, and others. Frank Swinnerton; personal sketches.<br />

1920. Doran.<br />

The same r 92 89782b<br />

Contents: Frank Swinnerton; a personal sketch, by Arnold Bennett.—Concerning<br />

Mr Swinnerton, by H. G. Wells.— A conversation about Frank Swinnerton, by P. M.—<br />

Frank Swinnerton, as seen by an editor, by G. M. Overton.—Books by Frank Swinnerton;<br />

description and comment<br />

Whitman, Walt. - 92 W648ba<br />

Bazalgette, Leon. Walt Whitman, the man and his work; tr. from<br />

the French by Ellen FitzGerald. 1920. Doubleday.<br />

Contains bibliographical foot-notes.<br />

Written in 1907 by the French translator of Whitman to acquaint his nation with<br />

the poet who to him expressed the whole western continent. This translation, slightly<br />

abridged from the original, is offered as a centenary tribute.


296 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Wood, Leonard. 9 2 W854I1<br />

Hobbs, William Herbert. Leonard Wood, administrator, soldier<br />

and citizen, with an introduction by H. A. W. Wood. 1920. Putnam.<br />

"Partial list of writings of General Leonard Wood," p.269-270; "Books and articles<br />

concerning General Leonard Wood," p.271-272.<br />

The author is (1920) member of the executive committee of the National Security<br />

League. His "attempt has been, so far as possible, to substitute for his own words the<br />

statements of those who by reason of their direct relation to the events recorded speak<br />

with the greatest authority." Preface.<br />

Wood, Leonard. 92 W854W<br />

Wood, Eric Fisher. Leonard Wood, conservator of Americanism;<br />

a biography. 1920. Doran.<br />

The author, a lieutenant-colonel during the world war, was on the executive board<br />

which conducted the Plattsburg Military Training Camps Association. He has based<br />

his biography upon General Wood's official reports, upon personal knowledge, and<br />

upon information gained from Theodore Roosevelt and other associates.<br />

Collected Biography<br />

Figuier, Louis.<br />

r 925 F47<br />

Vies des savants illustres depuis l'antiquite jusqu'au I9e siecle.<br />

[Sv.] 1881-84.<br />

v.l. Savants de l'antiquite.<br />

v.2. Savants du moyen age.<br />

v.3. Savants de la renaissance.<br />

v.4. Savants du i7e siecle.<br />

v.5. Savants du i8e siecle.<br />

922 Q16<br />

Quaker biographies; a series of sketches, chiefly biographical, concerning<br />

members of the Society of Friends, from the 17th century to more<br />

recent times, v.l. 1916.<br />

v.i. Ge<strong>org</strong>e Fox, by D. H. Forsythe.—William Penn, by L. B. Roberts.—Margaret<br />

(Fell) Fox, by R. E. Chambers.—The Barclays, by D. H. Forsythe.<br />

Issued by the representatives of the Society of Friends for Pennsylvania, New<br />

Jersey and Delaware.<br />

r 920 W6655<br />

Who's who and why, 1919-20. 1919-20. International Press.<br />

"Designed. .. to provide a record of the men and women who in one capacity or<br />

another are contributing to the building up of Canada and Newfoundland." Preface.<br />

Illustrated with photographs.<br />

Travel and Description<br />

Europe<br />

Isaia, Cesare.<br />

r 914.51 I29<br />

Torino e dintorni; pubblicazione illustrata della "Pro Torino."<br />

1909.<br />

Soteriades, Ge<strong>org</strong>ios. qr 914.95 S71<br />

Ethnological map illustrating Hellenism in the Balkan peninsula<br />

and Asia Minor. 1918. Standford.<br />

Waldie, Ge<strong>org</strong>e. 914.144 W15<br />

History of the town and palace of Linlithgow, with notices, historical<br />

and antiquarian, of places of interest in the neighbourhood. 1868.<br />

Waldie.<br />

Appendix: Sketch of the geology of Linlithgow, by Sir Archibald Geikie.


BOOKS ADDED—JUNE 1920 297<br />

United States<br />

Holyoake, Ge<strong>org</strong>e Jacob.<br />

917-3 H75<br />

Among the Americans, and A stranger in America. 1881. Belford.<br />

"Among the Americans" is reprinted from the Manchester "Co-operative news"<br />

and "A stranger in America" from the "Nineteenth century."<br />

Van Dyke, John Charles. 917.91 V18<br />

Grand canyon of the Colorado; recurrent studies in impressions and<br />

appearances. 1920. Scribner.<br />

Attempts to point out the majestic beauty of the canyon by calling attention to the<br />

forms of nature, her lights and colors, her methods of building and stages of development.<br />

Condensed from Preface.<br />

Other Countries<br />

Blichfeldt, Emil Harry.<br />

917.2 B55<br />

A Mexican journey. 1919. Chautauqua Press. (Chautauqua reading<br />

circle literature.)<br />

Chautauqua home reading series.<br />

"Bibliography," p.271.<br />

The author lived in Mexico for three years, and the journey he describes was<br />

made in 1911 at the time of the Madero revolution. His interest is largely archaeological,<br />

although he summarizes the political situation.<br />

Gauguin, Paul. 919.62 G23<br />

Noa noa; tr. from the French by O. F. Theis. 1920. Brown.<br />

Sets forth the fragrance (noa, noa) and color of the tropics as it appeared to the<br />

modern French painter in his return to nature on the island of Tahiti. Contains an<br />

interesting account of Tahitian mythology.<br />

History<br />

General<br />

Mombert, Jacob Isidor.<br />

904 M81<br />

Great lives; a course of history in biographies. First series. [1886.]<br />

Leach.<br />

Contents: ANCIENT HISTORY : Greek: Hercules.—Lycurgus.—Solon.—Miltiades.—<br />

Leonidas and Themistocles.—Pericles.—Alcibiades and Socrates.—Alexander the Great.<br />

—Roman: Romulus.—Tarquinius the Proud.—Duilius and Regulus.—Hannibal.—Scipio<br />

Africanus Junior.—Julius Ca;sar.—Constantine the Great.—Attila.—MEDIEVAL HISTORY:<br />

Justinian.—Mohammed.—Boniface.—Charlemagne.—Alfred the Great.—Godfrey of<br />

Bouillon.—Columbus.—MODERN HISTORY: Martin Luther.—Elizabeth.—Peter the Great.<br />

—Frederic the Great.—Ge<strong>org</strong>e Washington.—Benjamin Franklin.—Napoleon I.—Abraham<br />

Lincoln.—Ulysses S. Grant.<br />

"References," at the end of each section.<br />

Europe<br />

Wheeler, Arthur Martin, ed. 942 W61<br />

Sketches from English history; selected and ed. with an introduction<br />

(from the Roman conquest to the revolution of 1688). 2 pts. in<br />

iv. 1886. Chautauqua Press.<br />

Issued by the Chautauqua Literary and Scientific Circle.<br />

United States<br />

Bates, Samuel Penniman.<br />

The battle of Gettysburg. 1875. Davis.<br />

Author was state historian of Pennsylvania from 1866 until 1873.<br />

973-7 B31


298 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Morton, Oliver Throck. 973-7 M92<br />

The southern empire, with other papers. 1892. Houghton.<br />

Other papers: Oxford.—Some popular objections to civil service reform.<br />

qr 977.5 W812<br />

Wisconsin magazine of history, Sept. 1917-date. v.i-date. 1917-date.<br />

Published quarterly by the State Historical Society of Wisconsin.<br />

Other Countries<br />

McLennan, John Stewart. qr 971.6 M19<br />

Louisbourg, from its foundation to its fall, 1713-58. 1918. Macmillan.<br />

"Bibliography," p.426-435.<br />

"A remarkably full account of the life and trade of Louisbourg, and of the military<br />

and naval operations of which it was the scene. . .Illustrated. . .with reproductions<br />

of old plans and sketches, and with photographs which elucidate the narrative of the<br />

sieges." Spectator, 1920.<br />

European War<br />

Gibbons, Herbert Adams. 940.921 G36<br />

France and ourselves; interpretative studies, 1917-19. 1920. Century.<br />

Contents: How we can help France.—The Tiger of France [Clemenceau].—World<br />

justice for France.—The industrial effort of France during the war.—Human currents<br />

of the war.—The attitude of France toward peace.—The reconstruction of northern<br />

France.—The case against Caillaux.—What confronts France.<br />

Hillis, Newell Dwight.<br />

940.921 H56<br />

Rebuilding Europe in the face of world-wide bolshevism; a study of<br />

repopulation. 1920. Revell.<br />

Traces the results of the world war and the influence of bolshevism in the various<br />

countries of Europe and in the LTnited States. Indicates a means of combatting the<br />

menace.<br />

Indiana—Education board.<br />

r 940.919 I24<br />

Indiana war service text-book for Indiana high schools; planned by<br />

the State council of defense, authorized by the governor. 1918.<br />

Contents: Address, April 2, 1917, by Woodrow Wilson.—Address to soldiers, by<br />

J. P. Goodrich.—Address, by S. M. Ralston.—Our councils of defense, by Ge<strong>org</strong>e Ade.<br />

—A patriotic appeal, by Horace Ellis.—The schools and the war, by E. V. Graff.—<br />

Our flag, by A. M. Hall.—War-time savings, by Evans Woollen.—A reserve of manpower,<br />

by I. D. Straus.—The service flag, by William Herschell.—Necessity for food<br />

conservation, by H. E. Barnard.—The carol of Liberty-clan, by W. S. Greenough.—<br />

Food production, by G. I. Christie.—Fighting with dollars, by F. E. Hering.—The<br />

meaning of the war, by Louis Howland.—Address, Dec. 3, 1917, by Woodrow Wilson.<br />

—The star spangled banner, by F. S. Key.<br />

Ionescu, Take. 940.911 I25<br />

Some personal impressions, with an introduction by Viscount Bryce.<br />

1920. Stokes.<br />

Vivid sketches, by the former prime minister of Roumania, of notable personages<br />

and events in the European war.<br />

Lichnowsky, Karl Max, furst von. r 940.912 L68m<br />

Le memoire Lichnowsky et les documents Muehlon, avec une preface<br />

de Joseph Reinach. [1918.]<br />

A pamphlet written in August 1916 by the man who was German ambassador to<br />

Great Britain during the years 1912-14, but withheld from publication by Germany.<br />

The Muehlon documents include a memorandum and a letter to the "Journal de<br />

Geneve," dated April 27, 1918.


BOOKS ADDED—JUNE 1920 299<br />

Whitehouse, Mrs Vira (Boarman).<br />

A year as a government agent. 1920. Harper.<br />

940.916 W64<br />

A record of the author's experiences in 1918 in Switzerland as representative for the<br />

Committee on public information.<br />

Miscellaneous<br />

Caldwell, Ge<strong>org</strong>e Walter.<br />

398.097 C13<br />

Legends of southern California; illustrated by J.J. Flippin. 1919.<br />

Phillips.<br />

Contents: The lights of Elsinore.—The stepping stones.—The echo.—Arrowhead<br />

Hot Springs.—The blue lizard of San Jacinto.—The rumblings of Tarquitz.—The<br />

prince of plenty.—How the road runner won his red feather.<br />

The "stories are founded on legends of the Soboba Indians of southern California."<br />

Introduction.<br />

Clark C. Griffith Ball and Bat Fund. qr 940.917 C52<br />

Final report, by C. H. Genslinger. 1919.<br />

Dutton, W. H. qr 391 D95<br />

Boots and shoes of our ancestors as exhibited by the Worshipful<br />

Company of Cordwainers, with a brief history of the company. 1898.<br />

Chapman.<br />

Illustrated with thirty photographic plates of the Cordwainers' Hall and various<br />

collections of shoes, buckles, and boots.<br />

Rendle, Thomas McDonald. 79i R33<br />

Swings and roundabouts; a yokel in London. 1919. Chapman.<br />

"Looking back over thirty years of life in London as a hard-working journalist<br />

and an inveterate playgoer [the author] describes. . .the infinite variety of London's<br />

amusements which he can remember, with a brief prelude about the Press Gallery in<br />

the early Home Rule days." Spectator, 1919.<br />

Washington, Ge<strong>org</strong>e.<br />

r 929.3 W27<br />

Authenticated copy of the last will and testament of Ge<strong>org</strong>e Washington,<br />

embracing a schedule of his real estate and notes thereto by the<br />

testator; to which is added historical notes and biographical sketches<br />

by the publisher. 1868. Jackson.<br />

Books for the Blind<br />

The Library has a collection of about 3,700 books and 75 periodicals for the blind.<br />

The Pennsylvania Home Teaching Society and Free Circulating Library for the Bhnd<br />

supports in this district a teacher, herself totally blind, who, under the direction of this<br />

Library visits the adult blind in their homes and teaches them to read. This service<br />

and the'use of the books are absolutely free to all the adult blind in Pittsburgh and western<br />

Pennsylvania and the Director requests that names and addreses of such persons be<br />

sent to him in order that the teacher may call upon them.<br />

Revised Braille with Contractions<br />

Dix, „, Beulah ._ Marie.<br />

Soldier Rigdale. 7 pts. in 7v. Howe Pub. Soc. for the Blind.<br />

E<br />

D64?s


CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Young People's Books<br />

Collins, V. H. comp.<br />

j 821.08 C71<br />

Poems of action. 1919. Clarendon Press.<br />

"Notes," p.161-200.<br />

Thirty-four story poems including "The white ship," by Rossetti; "The jackdaw<br />

of Rheims," from "The Ingoldsby legends;" Browning's "Herve Riel" and Kipling's<br />

"Ballad of East and West."<br />

Cornell, Louise Frances.<br />

j 646 C82<br />

A little sewing book for a little girl. 1918. Page. (Ideal series for<br />

girls.)<br />

"To inspire little girls with the desire to learn sewing, and to help their elders teach<br />

them, this story of Annalu was written." Introduction.<br />

Goss, Warren Lee.<br />

j G6g8je<br />

Jed's boy; a story of adventures in the great world war. Crowell.<br />

Webber, Winfred Paul, & Plant, L. C.<br />

Introductory mathematical analysis. 1919. Wiley.<br />

The same<br />

510 W36<br />

r 510 W36<br />

Mulets, Lenore Elizabeth.<br />

j 914 M95<br />

Sunshine lands of Europe; illustrated by Elias Goldberg. 1918.<br />

World Book Co. (Children of the world.)<br />

Contents: Sancho, the Portuguese.—Fernando, the Spaniard.—Jacques and Odette<br />

of France.—Amerigo, the Italian.<br />

Interesting stories of children in Portugal, Spain, France, and Italy. Illustrated<br />

with pencil sketches.<br />

Waterman, Mrs Amy Harlow (Lane).<br />

j 642 W2g<br />

A little candy book for a little girl; with a frontispiece in full color<br />

by Harriet O'Brien. 1918. Page. (Ideal series for girls.)<br />

"Betsey Bobbitt"' learns how to make many delicious candies, including fudge, taffy,<br />

mints, and caramels.


Publications of the Library Now in Print<br />

Prices. Where two prices are given, the first is that for which<br />

the publication is sold at the Library only. All prices are strictly net,<br />

except for individual publications ordered in lots of twenty or more.<br />

Remittances must be made in advance, payable to Carnegie Library of<br />

Pittsburgh. All publications not marked * may be had free at the<br />

Library, or will be sent postpaid for 5 cents each.<br />

•Classified Catalogue of the Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh.<br />

FIRST SERIES, 1895-1902. 1907. vol. 1-3. 3,890 pp. $12.00.<br />

SECOND SERIES, 1902-1906. 1908. vol. 4-5. 2,020 pp. $5.00.<br />

THIRD SERIES, 1907-1911. 1914. vol. 6-8. 3,475 pp. $8.00.<br />

Bound in buckram with gilt tops. Include full author and subject indexes.<br />

The same [in pamphlet form].<br />

FIRST SERIES, 1895-1902. 10 parts. 1903-07.<br />

Part 1. General Works. 1907. 67 pp. 10 cents, postpaid.<br />

Part 2. Philosophy and Religion. 1903. 223 pp. Out of print.<br />

Part 3. Sociology and Philology. 1904. 340 pp. 15 cents; postpaid, 25 cents.<br />

Part 4. Natural Science and Useful Arts. 1904. 598 pp. 35 cents; postpaid,<br />

50 cents.<br />

Part 5. Fine Arts. 1905. 351 pp. 15 cents; postpaid, 25 cents.<br />

Part 6. Literature. 1905. 308 pp. 15 cents; postpaid, 25 cents.<br />

Part 7. Fiction. 1906. 446 pp. 25 cents; postpaid, 40 cents.<br />

Part 8. History and Travel. 1907. 691 pp. 50 cents; postpaid, 65 cents.<br />

Part 9. Biography. 1907. 381 pp. 20 cents; postpaid, 30 cents.<br />

Part 10. Indexes, Title-pages, Contents, Preface and Synopsis of Classification.<br />

1907. 850 pp. $1.00; postpaid, $1.20.<br />

SECOND SERIES, 1902-1906. 5 parts. 1907-08.<br />

Part 1. General Works, Philosophy, Religion, Sociology and Philology. 1907.<br />

425 pp. Out of print.<br />

Part 2. Natural Science, Useful Arts and Fine Arts. 1907. 477 PP- 45<br />

cents ; postpaid, 60 cents.<br />

Part 3. Literature, English Fiction and Fiction in Foreign Languages. 1908.<br />

342 pp. 40 cents ; postpaid, 50 cents.<br />

Part 4. History and Travel, Collected Biography and Individual Biography.<br />

1908. 465 pp. 45 cents; postpaid, 60 cents.<br />

Part 5. Indexes, Title-pages, Contents, Preface and Synopsis of Classification.<br />

1908. 460 pp. 80 cents; postpaid, 95 cents.<br />

THIRD SERIES, 1907-191 I. 10 parts. 1912-14.<br />

Part 1. General Works, Philosophy, Religion. 1912. 372 pp. 40 cents;<br />

postpaid, 50 cents.<br />

Part 2. Sociology, Philology. 1912- 418 pp. 45 cents; postpaid, 60 cents.<br />

Part 3. Natural Science, Useful Arts. 1913- 623 pp. 60 cents; postpaid,<br />

75 cents.<br />

Part 4. Fine Arts. 1913- 237 PP- 25 cents; postpaid, 35 cents.<br />

Part 5. Literature. 1913- 271 PP- 30 cents; postpaid, 40 cents.<br />

Part 6. English Fiction, Fiction in Foreign Languages. 1913- 294 PP- 30<br />

cents; postpaid, 40 cents.<br />

Part 7. History and Travel. 1914. 401 PP- 40 cents; postpaid, 50 cents.<br />

Part 8. Biography. 1914. 276 PP- 30 cents; postpaid, 40 cents.<br />

Part 9. Books for the Blind. 1914- 44 PP- S cents; postpaid, 10 cents.<br />

Part 10. Indexes, Title-pages, Contents, Preface and Synopsis of Classification.<br />

1914. 816 pp. 80 cents; postpaid, $1.00.<br />

FOURTH SERIES, 1912-1917. 10 parts. 1919-<br />

Part 1. General Works, Philosophy, Religion. 1919- 208 pp. 50 cents; postpaid,<br />

65 cents.<br />

Part 2. Sociology, Philology. 1919- 360 pp. 80 cents; postpaid, $1.00.<br />

3°i


CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Monthly Bulletin. 50 cents a year, postpaid.<br />

Not published in August and September.<br />

Annual Reports, ist-23d, 1896-1918. Sent free upon request.<br />

Except the 3d, 6th and 20th, which are out of print.<br />

Books in the Library of the American Philatelic Society. 1910. 20 pp<br />

Catalogue of the Carnegie Library School; a school for training in<br />

General Library Work, Library Work with Children and School<br />

Library Work. Sent free upon request.<br />

•Debate Index. 3d edition. 1919. 116 pp. 25 cents; postpaid, 30 cents.<br />

The Function of the Public Library in a Democracy. 1920. 20 pp. .<br />

Periodicals and Other Serials Currently Received by the Carnegie<br />

Library of Pittsburgh. 7th edition. 1915. 42 pp.<br />

Rules for Filing Cards in the Dictionary Catalogues of the Carnegie<br />

Library of Pittsburgh. Reprint of 2d edition. 1918. 32 pp.<br />

What a Public Library Finds to Do; by Elisa May Willard. 1917. 18 pp.<br />

Reference Lists<br />

History<br />

Books of Interest in Connection with the European War. 1914. 26 pp.<br />

Braddock's Expedition. 11 pp. (Monthly Bulletin, Nov. 1906.)<br />

England and the English; a Few Suggestions for Reading. 1918. 12 pp.<br />

Expeditions of General Forbes against Fort Duquesne. 1908. 20 pp.<br />

Expeditions of General Bouquet to the Ohio Country, 1763 and 1764.<br />

11 pp. (Monthly Bulletin, Dec. 1909.)<br />

Letters of General Forbes; Reprint of 35 Letters Relating to the Expedition<br />

against Fort Duquesne. 63 pp. 20 cents, postpaid.<br />

(Monthly Bulletin, Feb.-May 1909.)<br />

•Pennsylvania; a Reading List for the Use of Schools, with Special<br />

Reference to Indian Warfare and the Local History of Pittsburgh,<br />

1911. 83 pp. 20 cents; postpaid, 25 cents.<br />

Pittsburgh in 1816. 1916. 75 pp.<br />

Washington's Visits to Pittsburgh and the Ohio Country. 15 pp.<br />

(Monthly Bulletin, Feb. 1908.)<br />

The Whiskey Insurrection. 9 pp. (Monthly Bulletin, July 1906.)<br />

Biography<br />

Famous Royal Women; a Reading List for Girls. 1908. II pp.<br />

Lives and Letters; a Selected and Annotated List. 1910. 36 pp.<br />

•Men of Science and Industry; a Guide to the Biographies of Scientists.<br />

Engineers, Inventors and Physicians, in the Carnegie Library of<br />

Pittsburgh. 1915. 189pp. 20 cents; postpaid, 30 cents.<br />

Sociology<br />

Housing. 1912. 45 pp.<br />

Immigration. 1918. 12 pp.<br />

Vocational Guidance. Supplement. 10 pp. (Monthly Bulletin, Dec.<br />

1915.)


PUBLICATIONS OF THE LIBRARY 303<br />

Publications of Interest to Engineers<br />

Air-Brakes. 1915. 55 pp.<br />

Air Conditioning. 1914. 58 pp.<br />

Brick Manufacture and Bricklaying. 26 pp.<br />

(Monthly Bulletin, Jan.<br />

1912.)<br />

By-Product Coking. 1915. 40 pp.<br />

Case-Hardening. 1918. 10 pp.<br />

Electric Driving in Rolling-Mills and Foundries. 11 pp. (Monthly<br />

Bulletin, Nov. 1907.)<br />

Electric Heating and Cooking. 1910. 16 pp.<br />

Engineering Ethics. 1917. 17 pp.<br />

Floods and Flood Protection. 48 pp. (Monthly Bulletin, July 1908.)<br />

Floods and Flood Protection. Supplement. 1911. 19 pp.<br />

The Gyroscope. 1917. 23 pp.<br />

*Index to Proceedings of the Engineers' Society of Western Pennsylvania,<br />

Volumes 1 to 20, 1880-1904; Compiled by Harrison W.<br />

Craver. 1906. 144 pp. $1.00 postpaid.<br />

•Index to the Classified Catalogue of the Technology Department. 2d<br />

edition. 1916. 63 pp. 10 cents.<br />

Lampblack. 1919. 8 pp.<br />

List of Technical Indexes and Bibliographies Appearing Serially. 1910.<br />

17 PP-<br />

Market Prices Appearing Currently in Technical and Trade Journals.<br />

1918. 6 pp.<br />

*Men of Science and Industry; a Guide to the Biographies of Scientists,<br />

Engineers, Inventors and Physicians, in the Carnegie Library of<br />

Pittsburgh. 1915. 189pp. 20 cents; postpaid, 30 cents.<br />

Metal Corrosion and Protection. 2d edition, revised and enlarged.<br />

58 pp. (Monthly Bulletin, July 1909-)<br />

Mica. 12 pp. (Monthly Bulletin, Oct. 1908.)<br />

One Hundred Recent Books on Agriculture. 1910. 19 PP-<br />

Refuse and Garbage Disposal. 1909. 39 pp.<br />

Road Dust Preventives. 1916. 39 pp.<br />

*Sand; Its Occurrence, Properties and Uses. 1918. 72 pp. IS cents.<br />

postpaid.<br />

Scientific and Technical Reference Books. 19 PP- (Monthly Bulletin,<br />

Nov. 1916.)<br />

•Sewage Disposal and Treatment. 1910. 96 pp. 15 cents, postpaid.<br />

Smoke Prevention. 18 pp. (Monthly Bulletin, May 1907.)<br />

Sodium Nitrate Industry of Chile. 7 PP- (Monthly Bulletin, March<br />

1908.)<br />

Steam Turbines. 21 pp. (Monthly Bulletin, Nov. 1904.)<br />

•Technical Book Review Index, v.i-date, March 1917-date. 50 cents<br />

a year, postpaid.<br />

No. 1-3, March, April, May, published in the Monthly Bulletin of those months,<br />

c cents each, postpaid. .<br />

v.i, no.4-v.3, no.4 (July 1917-December 1919), issued separately, quarterly, 15<br />

cents each, postpaid.


304 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Trees and Forestry. 1917. 18 pp.<br />

Water Softening. 8 pp. (Monthly Bulletin, June 1904.)<br />

Library Work with Children<br />

•Catalogue of Books, Annotated and Arranged, and Provided by the<br />

Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh for the Use of the First Eight<br />

Grades in the Pittsburgh Schools. 1907. 331 pp. 35 cents;<br />

postpaid, 50 cents.<br />

•Annotated Catalogue of Books Used in the Home Libraries and<br />

Reading Clubs. 1905. no pp. 20 cents; postpaid, 25 cents.<br />

Patriotism Through Literature; by Elva S. Smith. 1919. 17 pp.<br />

(Monthly Bulletin, June 1919.)<br />

Story-Telling<br />

Stories from the Ballads of Robin Hood; Outlines for Story-Telling.<br />

1914- 38 pp.<br />

Stories from the Norse; Outlines for Story-Telling. 1914. 22 pp.<br />

•Stories to Tell to Children. 2d edition. 1918. 72 pp. 25 cents.<br />

Reading Lists<br />

Famous Royal Women; a Reading List for Girls. 1908. II pp.<br />

Favorite Books of Well-known People When They Were Boys and<br />

Girls. 2d reprint. 1918. 12 pp.<br />

"Foreign Lands Where Wonders Are." 1911. 14 pp.<br />

•Pennsylvania; a Reading List for the Use of Schools, with Special<br />

Reference to Indian Warfare and the Local History of Pittsburgh.<br />

1911. 83 pp. 20 cents; postpaid, 25 cents.<br />

June S, 1920.


CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

MONTHLY BULLETIN<br />

VOL. 25<br />

JULY 1920 NO. 7<br />

•1<br />

EAST LIBERTY BRANCH<br />

CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

PITTSBURGH<br />

CARNEGIE LIBRARY<br />

1920


Board of Trustees<br />

S. H. CHURCH, President<br />

ANDREW W. MELLON, Vice-President<br />

J. D. HAILMAN, Secretary<br />

JAMES H. REED, Treasurer<br />

E. V. BABCOCK DAVID B. OLIVER<br />

W.W.BLACKBURN<br />

H.K.PORTER<br />

JOHN H. DAILEY<br />

W. H. ROBERTSON<br />

W. Y. ENGLISH CHARLES L. TAYLOR<br />

ROBERT GARLAND<br />

J. J. TURNER<br />

JOHN H. HENDERSON<br />

H. D. WILLIAMS<br />

JOHN S. HERRON<br />

DANIEL WINTERS<br />

Library Committee<br />

J. J. TURNER, Chairman<br />

E. V. BABCOCK J. D. HAILMAN<br />

ROBERT GARLAND<br />

DANIEL WINTERS<br />

Director<br />

JOHN H. LEETE<br />

Branch Libraries<br />

Central Library, Schenley Park<br />

Lawrenceville Branch, 279 Fisk Street<br />

West End Branch, Wabash and Neptune Streets<br />

Wylie Avenue Branch, Wylie Avenue and Green Street<br />

Mount Washington Branch, 315 Grandview Avenue<br />

Hazelwood Branch, 4748 Monongahela Street<br />

East Liberty Branch, Station Street and Larimer Avenue<br />

South Side Branch, Carson and Twenty-second Streets<br />

Homewood Branch, Hamilton and Lang Avenues


Contents<br />

Page<br />

Business Information in Print 309<br />

Carnegie Library School - 311<br />

Indian Origin of Local Names 314<br />

Some Japanese Art Books - 316<br />

East Liberty Branch - - - 318<br />

Prices of Library Publications<br />

- - - - - - 318<br />

Present Day Problems - - 319<br />

Books Added, June 1 to<br />

July 1, 1920.<br />

Aerial Navigation - 331<br />

Agriculture - - - - - 335<br />

Americanization - 325<br />

Amusements - - - - - 339<br />

Architecture - 337<br />

Army - - - - - - - 328<br />

Biography - - - - - 343<br />

Blind, Books for the - - - 348<br />

Business. Communication - 335<br />

Chemical Technology - - 336<br />

Commerce - - - - - 329<br />

Composition - - - - - 340<br />

Crystallography - - - 331<br />

Domestic Economy - - - 335<br />

Drama. Theatre - - - 342<br />

Economics - - - - - 326<br />

Education - - - - - 328<br />

Electrical Engineering - - 334<br />

Engineering - 3S3<br />

Page<br />

Ethics - - - - - - - 723<br />

European War - - - 346<br />

Fiction - - - - - - 320<br />

Fine Arts - 336<br />

French Fiction - 323<br />

History - - - - - - 345<br />

Humor. Satire - 340<br />

Insurance. Pensions - - 328<br />

Japanese Art - - - - - ^37<br />

Language - - - - - 330<br />

Literature - - - - - 340<br />

Mathematics - - - - 330<br />

Mechanical Drawing - - - 338<br />

Medicine, Physiology, Hygiene<br />

- - - - - - 332<br />

Mental Tests - - - - - 323<br />

Music - - - - - - 338<br />

Photography - - - - - 338<br />

Poetry - - - - - - 341<br />

Politics and Government - 325<br />

Religion - - - - - - 3 2 3<br />

Science - - - - - - 330<br />

Sociology - - - - - 324<br />

Spanish Fiction - 323<br />

Travel and Description - 344<br />

Useful Arts - - - - - 332<br />

Women - - - - - - 329<br />

Young People's Books - - 348


:<br />

I<br />

I


Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh<br />

Monthly Bulletin<br />

Published monthly, except in August and September, by the Carnegie Library of<br />

Pittsburgh, Forbes Street and Bellefield Avenue, Schenley Park, Pittsburgh, Pa. President,<br />

S. H. Church, Carnegie Library, Forbes Street and Bellefield Avenue; Secretary,<br />

J. D. Hailman; Treasurer, James H. Reed, 1027 Carnegie Building; Director, John H.<br />

Leete, Carnegie Library, Forbes Street and Bellefield Avenue.<br />

Subscription 50 cents a year.<br />

Vol- 25 July 1920 No. 7<br />

Business Information in Print<br />

In modern business, scientific method is rapidly superseding<br />

the haphazard procedure of former times. The larger<br />

industries are depending largely on well planned investigation<br />

and research ; but in smaller business undertakings it is perhaps<br />

even more important that all available knowledge shall be utilized.<br />

Much valuable business information is now accessible<br />

in print, and the manufacturer or business man who disregards<br />

printed resources is overlooking one of the most valuable<br />

assets at his command.<br />

There are several reasons why business literature has not<br />

been used as much as it should be. In his very first use of a<br />

library collection a man may fail to find exactly what he wants,<br />

but he should not make this single experience the basis of his<br />

estimate of what the library affords. No good business man<br />

would trust an assistant with no training or experience in<br />

bookkeeping, to take a trial balance from his own account<br />

books. He would not expect a beginner to make dependable<br />

•calculations on a slide-rule, nor would he expect an untrained<br />

workman to produce perfect results the first time he tried to<br />

use a mechanical tool; but indexes and reference books are<br />

309


310 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

merely tools, and, as with other tools, some practice is required<br />

for their successful manipulation.<br />

"Proficiency in the use of<br />

books does not come by intuition" and the ability to find information<br />

is a matter of training as well as judgment.<br />

The problems of business, and hence the books on business,<br />

are in some respects less definite and less tangible than those<br />

concerned with science or engineering.<br />

The chemist or the<br />

engineer works with inert materials, and so far as he has gained<br />

a mastery of these and a knowledge of their properties he can<br />

work quite definitely, reproducing the results achieved by other<br />

workers, except for slight variations clue to the personal equation<br />

of the individual worker. But in business, the human factor<br />

is much more prominent. In a very recent book entitled<br />

"Human Nature in Business" the author cites hundreds of<br />

ways in which human vagaries may affect business projects—<br />

why a business which flourishes on one side of a street may<br />

fail on the other side; why a shower at 11 a.m. may be advantageous<br />

to the big department store and disastrous to the small<br />

shopkeeper; why bad weather is good for the restaurant business<br />

; and why abbreviated skirts are good for the shoe and<br />

hosiery trades. One shoe manufacturer estimates that the<br />

lengthening of women's skirts would hamper the shoe business<br />

in the ratio of about $1,000,000 a year per added inch of skirt.<br />

All the above instances go to show why business contains<br />

so many variables, and why business literature is not readily<br />

standardized. Another thing that has probably retarded the<br />

widespread use of business books is the fact that in the past<br />

many of them have been very unbusinesslike; that is, they have<br />

been poorly arranged, and indexed poorly or not at all. But<br />

fortunately, many of the defects of business literature are beingremedied,<br />

and the American literature is becoming more abundant<br />

and more accessible. There is now one printed list called<br />

"1600 Business Books." Though based on a broad interpretation<br />

of the term "business," the length of the list serves to<br />

indicate the extent to which business literature is developing.<br />

Students and research workers have always placed their chief<br />

dependence in "abstract" journals which digest and summarize


CARNEGIE LIBRARY SCHOOL 311<br />

the scattered literature in their respective fields. While these<br />

have long been available in many branches of science and industry,<br />

it is only very recently that any such help has been offered<br />

to the business man. The "Business Digest" now fills this<br />

gap quite effectively. Appearing weekly, and cumulating<br />

semi-annually, it points the way to (and gives the substance of)<br />

most of the good literature in current periodicals in the broad<br />

field of business. Another weekly publication, "Public Affairs<br />

Information Service," indexes much scattered literature including<br />

Federal and state reports, timely lists in typewritten and<br />

mimeographed form, and certain periodicals not covered by<br />

any other index. It covers economics, sociology, and business.<br />

The "Investor's Book of Booklets," appearing monthly,<br />

covers a unique field. It reviews the hundreds of financial reports,<br />

prospectuses, and pamphlets dealing with securities and<br />

investments. This literature is largely of an ephemeral nature<br />

and its value to the business man depends on his being promptly<br />

informed regarding it. The three above-mentioned publications<br />

gather up the loose ends for the busy man who could in<br />

no other way effect a contact with the flood of current commercial<br />

literature. For information on the more stable literature<br />

of business—the standard guides and reference books—<br />

the business man can with confidence refer to a recent book by<br />

Louise B. Krause—"The Business Library; AVhat It Is and<br />

What It Does." Here he will find a wealth of valuable suggestions,<br />

both on the selection of business literature and on the<br />

practical every-day use of this literature in such a manner as<br />

to make it effective in enhancing his interests.<br />

Carnegie Library School<br />

Interest in public libraries and the demand for library service<br />

has never been so great as it is to-day, either in our own<br />

country or abroad. If this demand is to be met. there must<br />

be enlisted in library ranks an increased number of workers<br />

with a wide knowledge of books and the ability to make these


312 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

books of greatest service to the community. To meet these requirements<br />

special training is necessary. Even for the college<br />

graduate with a general knowledge of literature, a course in<br />

the technique of library science and administration is highly<br />

desirable.<br />

Among the schools which give this training is the Carnegie<br />

Library School which twenty years ago was started as a class<br />

to train young women for positions on the staff of the Childrens<br />

Department of the Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh. At<br />

that time, specialized training in library work with children<br />

had received little or no attention, but immediately officials in<br />

other libraries recognized the value of such training and requested<br />

that they be permitted to send members of their staffs<br />

to the class. In response to this appeal, the original plan was<br />

extended and the Training School for Childrens Librarians<br />

was <strong>org</strong>anized. From that time until 1916 the School was<br />

conducted as a department of the Library and gave training<br />

only in work with children.<br />

But in 1916 the field was broadened. The School, while<br />

still closely affiliated with the Library and remaining under<br />

the direction of the Director of the Library, became a department<br />

of the Carnegie Institute, an institution endowed by Mr.<br />

Andrew Carnegie for educational purposes; it officially<br />

changed its name to Carnegie Library School; and by reason<br />

of the endowment given it, was able to extend its training to<br />

other branches of library service. In 1917 it added a course<br />

in School Library Work and in 1918 a course in General Library<br />

Work. The expenses of administration of the three<br />

courses are comparatively little more than for the one, since<br />

there is a group of basic subjects common to ail. To the student<br />

the benefits of the broader vision which comes from the<br />

more comprehensive view of the entire field of library work<br />

within the School is patent, and these changes have strengthened<br />

not only the general work of the School, but also that of<br />

the course in Children's Work for which the School was originally<br />

planned.


CARNEGIE LIBRARY SCHOOL 3i 3<br />

In 1919 came a further step—this time a matter of affiliation<br />

with another educational institution. An Academic Library<br />

Course leading to an appropriate degree became a part of<br />

what the School has to offer. The first three years of the<br />

course are given by the Carnegie Institute of Technology, the<br />

fourth'year by the Carnegie Library School; the degree is<br />

conferred by the Institute of Technology. Very recently, arrangements<br />

have been completed for a similar, though slightly<br />

different, course in connection with the University of Pittsburgh.<br />

To students who feel that they cannot spend four years<br />

in obtaining an academic degree and an additional year for<br />

professional training, yet who recognize the value of academic<br />

training and of a degree, these courses offer obvious advantages.<br />

These extensions do not, however, mark the limit of possibility,<br />

or even of present plans, for the School. Already it is<br />

looking forward to a raising of the standard of entrance requirements<br />

with a corresponding raising of the standard of<br />

professional training; and as the broadening of the field of<br />

library service develops new needs for specialized service, it<br />

expects to add courses which will meet the new demands.<br />

The alumnae and friends of the School and those who are<br />

looking forward to being, some day, enrolled among the alumnae,<br />

will be interested in the announcement of the appointment<br />

of Miss Nina C. Brotherton as the new Principal of the School.<br />

Miss Brotherton is a graduate of Vassar College and of Western<br />

Reserve Library School and has been connected with library<br />

work and the teaching of library science ever since her<br />

graduation. She is already known to many Pittsburghers in<br />

connection with her work in the Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh<br />

during the last three years, in charge of the work with<br />

schools.<br />

With its present plans for greater scope, the School stands,<br />

it is hoped, on the eve of an era of increased usefulness and of a<br />

steady development worthy of its past history.


314 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Indian Origin of Local Names<br />

Quoted from Charles A. Hanna's "The Wilderness Trail."<br />

Readers of American Colonial history are more or less familiar<br />

with the account of the destruction of Kittanning Indian Town in<br />

September 1756, by Colonel John Armstrong's command of three hundred<br />

troopers recruited from the Scotch-Irish of Cumberland'County.<br />

Few readers, however, are aware of the importance of this town in Indian<br />

and frontier history some twenty-five years before that date.<br />

Known to the French under its Seneca name of Attigue, Atiga, or<br />

Adigo, 1 it was the first and chief settlement made by the Delawares<br />

when they began to migrate westward from the Susquehanna in 1723-24;<br />

and for fifteen years or more thereafter,it was the most important Indian<br />

centre west of the Alleghany Mountains. A few years after it came<br />

into existence, the Susquehanna and Potomac Shawnees took up their<br />

belongings and followed the Delawares over the mountains, establishing<br />

themselves a few miles below Kittanning, on the Allegheny, and<br />

along its tributary, the Conemaugh, or Kiskiminetas. What became<br />

known after its abandonment by them as Chartier's Old Town, at the<br />

mouth of Bull Creek, near the present borough of Tarentum, Allegheny<br />

County, seems to have been the principal village of the Shawnees during<br />

the decade from 1735 to 1745. This town and Kittanning, with two<br />

or three smaller villages between, and three or more along the banks<br />

of the Kiskiminetas, constituted a centre of Indian population and influence<br />

known for many years in Pennsylvania Colonial history as "Alleghenia,"<br />

or "Allegheny on the Main Road." Just what was the<br />

"Main Road" at the time the term was applied to distinguish the settlements<br />

thereon cannot now positively be asserted. In all probability,<br />

however, it was the road which later was known as the Frankstown<br />

Path, leading along the Juniata to the Alleghany Mountain, thence<br />

across the present counties of Cambria and Indiana; and thence, by<br />

two different branches, to Kittanning and to the Shawnee town afterwards<br />

called Chartier's Town. The original path to Kittanning from<br />

Shamokin by way of the West Branch of the Susquehanna. Bald<br />

Eagle Creek, Chinklaclamoose, and Punxsatawney, was so difficult<br />

and barren as to be almost entirely destitute of game for man, or fodder<br />

for beast; so that it could never have been a much travelled route. The<br />

southern Pennsylvania, or Raystown Path, in the opinion of the writer,<br />

was, at first, only a westward branch of the great Warriors' Path which<br />

led south from what is now Lock Haven, Pennsylvania, up Bald Eagle<br />

Valley, through Frankstown, along the valley to the east of Warriors'<br />

Ridge, in the present Bedford County, thence down Old Town Run to<br />

iThe Delaware Indian name Kittanning means "at the Great River," great river<br />

being the equivalent of the Iroquois word Ohio. As the Great River of the Senecas, the<br />

name, Ohio, was at first applied to this river by the Iroquois from the sources of the<br />

Allegheny to the mouth of the Mississippi. The secondary meaning of io, as "grand,"<br />

or "beautiful," came to be applied to the Ohio only after the discovery of the upper Mississippi<br />

by tlie French.


INDIAN ORIGIN OF LOCAL NAMES 315<br />

Old Shawnee Town, on the Potomac (Opessa's Town), where Captain<br />

Thomas Cresap had settled, perhaps as early as 1742...The Shawnees<br />

who emigrated from Opessa's Town on the Potomac to the Allegheny<br />

before 1732 were probably the first of whom there is any record in<br />

history to use this Path westward. Christopher Gist, who travelled<br />

from Cresap's house to the Forks of the Ohio in 1750. went over the<br />

same Path, and has left us a detailed account of the route. An intersecting<br />

path from Harris's Ferry through the Cumberland Valley,<br />

westward, joined the Warriors' Path at some point near the crossing<br />

of the Raystown Branch of Juniata. That this Lower Path from the<br />

Susquehanna to the Allegheny was used by the Traders at a comparatively<br />

early date seems evident from the fact that one of the noted<br />

landmarks along the Path, after it crossed the Alleghany Mountain,<br />

was called "Edmund's Swamp," after Edmund Cartlidge, one of the<br />

first of the Conestoga Traders to venture westward of the Mountains.<br />

Nevertheless, it is probable that the earliest "main road" to Allegheny<br />

was the more central Frankstown Path; as it was more direct and<br />

easier to travel over. It is now followed for most of the way by the<br />

Pennsylvania Railroad.<br />

The first definite reference by the English authorities to the Indian<br />

settlements and trade at Kittanning, and the adjacent villages on<br />

the Allegheny, to be found in the Colonial Records of Pennsylvania,<br />

appears under date of July 4, 1727. In a Council held that day at Philadelphia<br />

between Governor Patrick Gordon and some chiefs of the<br />

Five Nations and the Susquehannocks, Madame Montour, "a French<br />

woman, who had lived long among these people, and is now interpretress,"<br />

acted in that capacity. At this conference, the Indians "desire<br />

there may be no settlements made up Susquehanna higher than Pextan<br />

[now Harrisburg], and that none of the settlers thereabouts be suffered<br />

to sell or keep any rum there, for that being the road by which their<br />

people go out to war [with the Southern Indians], they are apprehensive<br />

of mischief if they meet with liquor in these parts. They desire also,<br />

for the same reasons, that none of the Traders be allowed to carry<br />

any rum to the remoter parts where James Le Tort trades (that is,<br />

Allegheny, on the branches of the Ohio)." The Governor promised<br />

them that the sale of rum should be prohibited, both at Pextan and at<br />

Allegheny; and Secretary Logan issued letters of instruction to that<br />

effect, addressed "To the several Traders of Pennsylvania with the<br />

Indians at Allegheny, and the other remote parts in or near to the said<br />

Province."<br />

An earlier reference than this, however, to the Allegheny settlement<br />

is to be found in the Minutes of the New York Provincial Council,<br />

under date of September 7, 1726. On that day Governor Burnet attended<br />

an Indian Council at Albany, where he met twelve chiefs of the<br />

Iroquois, two from each of the Six Nations.<br />

The Governor asked the chiefs whether they knew of a war hatchet<br />

having been given by the French against the Six Nations. The Indians


316 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

replied, "That they had heard that the Governor of Canada, by two of<br />

his interpreters, had given a hatchet of war to the Indians living to the<br />

southward [Okowela's clan?], near a branch of Susquehanah, on a<br />

branch [Conemaugh] of a river called Adiego, which vents into the<br />

Great River, Mississippi. . ."<br />

On the page of the manuscript volume containing this speech of<br />

the Indians (N. Y. Council Minutes, xv., 92) there appears the following<br />

marginal note opposite the word, "Adiego": "Called by the French<br />

Olio [Ohio]." This seems to be conclusive proof, in connection with<br />

what has already been given, that the word, "Adiego," written by the<br />

French, "Adigo," "Atiga," "Attique," etc., was simply another rendering<br />

of the Seneca word, "O-hee-yo," the meaning of which is the<br />

"Great River," the name applied by the Senecas to the Ohio. It was<br />

later localized by the Traders among the Iroquois to the town of Kittanning,<br />

and the French erroneously applied it to two or three different<br />

tributaries of the Ohio, when it really meant to the Iroquois that River<br />

itself.<br />

Some Japanese Art Books<br />

Several Japanese books which are of general interest because<br />

of their beauty, and of particular interest to students of<br />

design, have recently been purchased for the Reference Collection<br />

of the Library. "Sensho-ku-taikan" ("Great Mirror<br />

of Dyed Fabric"), compiled by S. Tsuji, consists chiefly of<br />

colored plates illustrating the fundamental principles of Japanese<br />

textile design and decoration. "Mon-zukushi" ("The Crest<br />

Book"), compiled by Heihichi Katani, gives reproductions of<br />

Japanese coats of arms and trade marks. "Bigitsukai"<br />

("Ocean of Fine Art") is a periodical consisting chiefly of<br />

colored plates showing Japanese art designs. It was a monthly<br />

publication, begun probably about thirty years ago, and continued<br />

for sixty-five numbers. The set purchased has eleven<br />

numbers missing. Its continuation, "Shin-bigitsukai" ("New<br />

Ocean of Fine Art"), appeared in thirty-six numbers, and of<br />

these a complete set was secured.<br />

The most important of these books is, however, "Ayanishiki"<br />

("Dancing Costumes of the Famous No-Dancers") which<br />

consists of six volumes. According to the dealer from whom<br />

the books were purchased, the imperial seal at the end of each


SOME JAPANESE ART BOOKS 317<br />

volume of "Ayanishiki" indicates that the compilation was<br />

arranged under imperial auspices. This six volume set is, he<br />

says, to the best of his knowledge the only complete one in<br />

existence in the United States. It pictures costumes worn at<br />

the imperial ceremonies and later preserved. Many of these<br />

costumes are hundreds of years old. They represent a very<br />

ancient Japanese custom which is still so much a part of the<br />

national life that it seems worth while, in view of the present<br />

interest in characteristic national customs, to reproduce what<br />

the "Encyclopaedia Britannica" says about the No dances and<br />

dancers.<br />

The so-called dark age of Japanese literature was not entirely unproductive:it<br />

gave the drama (No) to Japan. Tradition ascribes the<br />

origin of the drama to a religious dance of a pantomimic character,<br />

called Kagura and associated with Shinto ceremonials. The No, however,<br />

owed its development mainly to Buddhist influence. During the<br />

medieval era of internecine strife the Buddhist priests were the sole<br />

depositaries of literary talent, and seeing that, from the close of the<br />

14th century, the Shinto mime (Kagura) was largely employed by the<br />

military class to invoke or acknowledge the assistance of the gods, the<br />

monks of Buddha set themselves to compose librettos for this mime,<br />

and the performance, thus modified, received the name of No. Briefly<br />

speaking, the No was a dance of the most stately character, adapted to<br />

the incidents of dramas "which embrace within their scope a world of<br />

legendary lore, of quaint fancies and of religious sentiment." Their<br />

motives were chiefly confined to such themes as the law of retribution<br />

to which all human beings are subjected, the transitoriness of life and<br />

the advisability of shaking off from one's feet the dust of this sinful<br />

world. But some were of a purely martial nature. This difference is<br />

probably explained by the fact that the idea of thus modifying the<br />

Kagura had its origin in musical recitations from the semi-romantic<br />

semi-historical narratives of the 14th century. Such recitations were<br />

given by itinerant Bonzes, and it is easy to understand the connexion<br />

between them and the No. Very soon the No came to occupy in the<br />

estimation of the military class a position similar to that held by the<br />

tanka as a literary pursuit, and the gagaku as a musical, in the Imperial<br />

court. All the great aristocrats not only patronized the No but were<br />

themselves ready to take part in it. Costumes of the utmost magnificence<br />

were worn, and the chiselling of masks for the use of the performers<br />

occupied scores of artists and ranked as a high glyptic accomplishment.<br />

There are 335 classical dramas of this kind in a compendium<br />

called the Yokyoka Tsi'ige, and many of them are inseparably connected<br />

with the names of Kwanami Kiyotsugu (1406) and his son


3i8 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Motokiyo (1455), who are counted the fathers of the art. For a<br />

moment, when the tide of Western civilization swept over Japan, the<br />

No seemed likely to be permanently submerged. But the renaissance<br />

of nationalism (kokusui hoson) saved the venerable drama, and owing to<br />

the exertions of Prince Iwakura. the artist Hosho Kuro and Umewaka<br />

Minoru,it stands as high as ever in popular favour.<br />

East Liberty Branch<br />

Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh<br />

On the tenth of October 1905, the East Liberty Branch Library<br />

opened its doors to the public. This branch is on Station<br />

Street and Larimer Avenue in the business district of East<br />

Liberty and serves both the business district and the adjacent<br />

residence section. In this part of the city there are many<br />

Italians and for them the branch has a collection of books in<br />

their own language, but it does not have as great a variety of<br />

foreign books as do some of the branches which are in districts<br />

inhabited by many nationalities.<br />

Both adults and children borrow books to take home and<br />

many people come to the branch for information which is<br />

looked up for them by the library assistants. The high schools,<br />

grade schools, and parochial schools of the district send their<br />

pupils to this library for much of the material necessary in the<br />

preparation of assigned lessons, and the library, in addition<br />

to supplying such material, trains the boys and girls in the use<br />

of its catalogues and reference books so that they are better<br />

able to get information for themselves.<br />

The auditorium and rooms of the building are much used<br />

by clubs and <strong>org</strong>anizations representing community interests.<br />

Prices of Library Publications<br />

The list of "Publications of the Library Now in Print" at<br />

the back of this "Bulletin" gives the price of each. Any publication<br />

not marked * in that list will be sent postpaid on receipt<br />

of five cents.


PRESENT DAY PROBLEMS 319<br />

Present Day Problems<br />

The books in this list are entered also, in fuller form and with annotations,<br />

under their proper headings in this issue of the "Bulletin."<br />

They are brought together here to show the additions of books which<br />

are of interest in connection with problems of the day. The date of<br />

publication is 1920 unless otherwise stated.<br />

Atwood, H. F. Back to the republic. 1918 321.8 A88<br />

Barron, C. W. A world remaking 330.9 B26<br />

Bogardus, E. S. Essentials of Americanization. 1919 3 2 5-73 658<br />

Cantacuzene, Julia (Grant), princess. Russian people 947 Ci7r<br />

Davis, M. W. Open gates to Russia 330.9 D32<br />

Fisk, G. M. International commercial policies. 1919 382 F53<br />

Fitch, A. P. Can the church survive in the changing order?. . .261 F55<br />

Jackson, H. E. A community church. 1919<br />

Jastrow, Morris. The Eastern question and its solution<br />

Lettres d'un vieil Americain a un Frangais. 1918<br />

Murray, J. L. The call of a world task. 1918<br />

261 J12<br />

949-6 J21<br />

33°-9 L65<br />

266 M97<br />

Pennsylvania—Council of national defense. Americanization<br />

in Pennsylvania. [1918.] q 325-73 P.39<br />

Spargo, John. Russia as an American problem<br />

Wister, Owen. A straight deal<br />

Withers, Hartley. Our money and the state. 1917<br />

947 S73r<br />

327-73 W81<br />

336.2 W82<br />

Woolf, L. S. Co-operation & the future of industry. [1919.] . .334 W87<br />

Woolf, L. S. International government. 1916<br />

34 J -6 W87


Books Added to the Library<br />

June 1 to July 1, 1920<br />

An r or b prefixed to the call number indicates that the book must b<br />

called for and used in the Reference or the Technology Room; j that it is<br />

especially suitable for children; and q that it is quarto size or larger<br />

Fiction<br />

Besant, Sir Walter, & Rice, James. B4661110<br />

Monks of Thelema; a novel. Dodd.<br />

An order of men and women take vows not to disdain wedlock, riches, and living<br />

as each pleases.<br />

Blasco Ibaiiez, Vicente. B5412W<br />

Woman triumphant (La maja desnuda); tr. from the Spanish by<br />

Hayward Keniston, with a special introductory note by the author.<br />

Dutton.<br />

A powerful story of a great artist's career in modern Madrid. In his ceaseless effort<br />

to find the ideal beauty and to recreate his lost masterpiece, he is the personification<br />

of human desire, always striving and always unsatisfied.<br />

Bojer, Johan. B597t<br />

Treacherous ground; tr. from the Norwegian by Jessie Muir. Moffat.<br />

The story of a wealthy landowner who tries to save his soul and expiate past sins by<br />

settling the peasants of his estate on farms. The attempt ends in tragedy.<br />

Buck, Charles Neville. B853t<br />

The tempering. Doubleday.<br />

A story of the power of love in transforming a crude, unlettered boy of the Kentucky<br />

mountains into a cultivated man, a lawyer and member of Congress. Written partly in<br />

dialect.<br />

Gale, Zona. G145P<br />

Peace in Friendship village. Macmillan.<br />

Short stories of the village after the world war.<br />

Galsworthy, John. Gi57t<br />

Tatterdemalion. Scribner.<br />

Contents: OF WAR TIME: The grey angel; Defeat; Flotsam and jetsam; The bright<br />

side; "Cafard;" Recorded; The recruit; The peace meeting; "The dog it was that<br />

died;" In heaven and earth; The mother stone; Poirot and Bidan ; The muffled ship;<br />

Heritage; *'A green hill far away."—OF PEACE-TIME: Spindleberries; Expectations;<br />

Manna; A strange thing; Two looks; Fairyland; The nightmare child; Buttercupnight.<br />

320


BOOKS ADDED—JULY 1920 321<br />

Gibbs, Ge<strong>org</strong>e, 6.1870. G364SP<br />

The splendid outcast. Appleton.<br />

An adventure story of a soldier with a twin brother; a lovely Irish woman; a<br />

scheme to blackmail a rich Frenchman; and a mysterious murder.<br />

Haggard, Sir Henry Rider. Hi4ian<br />

The ancient Allan. Longmans.<br />

Another tale of Allan Quatermain's adventures in ancient Egypt. By the breathing<br />

of an African herb "Taduki," he and Lady Ragnall dream of former incarnations<br />

as Shabaka, the Egyptian general, and as Amada, priestess of Isis.<br />

Harris, Mrs Corra May (White). H2gih<br />

Happily married. Doran.<br />

Story of society life in a southern village during the European war, centering about<br />

a woman of latent power and strength of personality.<br />

Harrison, Mrs Mary St. Leger (Kingsley), (pseud. Lucas Malet). H2ggt<br />

The tall villa. Doran.<br />

The story of the love of a very modern woman for a visitor from "beyond the crossing."<br />

James, Henry, 1843-1916. Ji64la<br />

A landscape painter [and other stories]. Scott.<br />

Other stories: Poor Richard.—A day of days.—A most extraordinary case.<br />

Straightforward tales of romance with unexpected endings, written before the author's<br />

twenty-fifth year and published in magazines shortly after the Civil war. The<br />

style is simple and direct, in distinct contrast to James's later involved style.<br />

Lincoln, Natalie Sumner. L7i63r<br />

The red seal. Appleton.<br />

A detective story involving an envelope with a red seal, a mysterious death, a<br />

f<strong>org</strong>ery, and a romance. The scene is laid in Washington.<br />

Locke, William John. Lysgh<br />

House of Baltazar [a novel]. Lane.<br />

Appeared in "Good housekeeping," v.68-70, May 1919-Feb. 1920.<br />

The hero is a mathematical genius of Cambridge who, because of a love affair,<br />

buries himself in China for eighteen years. His reaction to the great war and his adventures<br />

in English politics, together with the happy termination of his romance, make an<br />

interesting tale.<br />

McKenna, Stephen. Mi78sh<br />

Sheila intervenes. Doran.<br />

A love story of London society before the war. Sheila, the madcap granddaughter<br />

of a shrewd old Tory, endeavors to direct the lives of four people and all but succeeds<br />

in bringing about the ruin of their happiness.<br />

Marshall, Edison. M4164V<br />

The voice of the pack. Little.<br />

An adventure tale about a young man threatened with speedy death from tuberculosis.<br />

He answers the call of the wild, finds romance, and recovers his health in the<br />

mountains of Oregon.<br />

Merwin, Samuel. M6394«i<br />

Hills of Han; a romantic incident. Bobbs.<br />

Appeared in the "Delineator," v.95-96, Aug. 1919-May 1920.<br />

The story of a missionary's daughter educated in the United States, who returns to<br />

China to teach.<br />

Morley, Christopher Darlington. M8ggk<br />

Kathleen. Doubleday.<br />

Humorous tale of the havoc wrought by love among the members of a literary club<br />

of Oxford undergraduates.


322 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Mundy, Talbot. Mg662e<br />

Eye of Zeitoon. Bobbs.<br />

An adventure tale of the Near East.<br />

Nicholson, Meredith.<br />

N3igb<br />

Blacksheep! Blacksheep! Scribner.<br />

Appeared in "Harper's bazar," v.54-55, Oct. 1919-May 1920.<br />

A mystery tale in which a wealthy, conventional clubman finds himself involved with<br />

a gang of the biggest crooks in America.<br />

Raine, William McLeod. R16120<br />

Oh, you Tex! Houghton.<br />

A tale of Western adventure dealing with the exploits of a Texas ranger in the days<br />

of the Civil war.<br />

Reed, Myrtle. R283ma<br />

Master of the vineyard. Putnam.<br />

A love story which involves the tangled threads of four lives. Ends happily.<br />

Schweikert, Harry C. ed.<br />

S4i3r<br />

Russian short stories; ed. for school use. Scott. (Lake English<br />

classics.)<br />

Contents: The shot, by Pushkin.—The cloak, by Gogol.—The thief, by Dostoevski.—Biryuk;<br />

A Lear of the steppes, by Turgenev.—God sees the truth but waits;<br />

Master and man; Three arshins of land, by Tolstoi.—The signal, by Garshin.—In exile,<br />

by Chekhov.—The old bell-ringer, by Korolenko.—V'alia, by Andreev.—Comrades;<br />

Chelkash, by Gorki.—Cain, by Kuprin.<br />

"Helps to study;" prepared by G. L. Marsh, p.441-450.<br />

Singmaster, Elsie.<br />

Basil Everman. Houghton.<br />

S6i7b<br />

The romance of a young couple, the love affair of a beautiful woman, a family<br />

tragedy, and an old sorrow are woven together by the pervading personality of Basil<br />

Everman, though he does not appear in person in the story.<br />

Smith, Sheila Kaye-. S6sgf<br />

The four roads. Doran.<br />

A story of the great war and its effect upon the lives of six people in a little village<br />

of Sussex.<br />

Published in England under the title, "Little England."<br />

Somerville, Edith CEnone, & Ross, Martin, (pseud, of<br />

Violet Martin).<br />

Mount Music. Longmans.<br />

A story of Irish life which makes an appeal for religious toleration.<br />

Planned and partly written before the death of "Martin Ross."<br />

S6g6m<br />

Swinnerton, Frank Arthur.<br />

Sg782se<br />

September [a novel]. Doran.<br />

The story of two women, their conflict and their friendship. The scene is a country<br />

house in Suffolk and, later, London just before and at the beginning of the European<br />

war.<br />

Wells, Florence, comp. W4g43t<br />

Tama; the diary of a Japanese school girl. Womans Press.<br />

Her life and her romance, told in quaint English of Japanese idiom.<br />

Authentic.<br />

Willsie, Mrs Honore (McCue).<br />

Wy62f<br />

The forbidden trail. Stokes.<br />

A love story of the American West, bringing in the outbreak of the European war<br />

and the German spy system.


BOOKS ADDED—JULY 1920 323<br />

French Fiction<br />

Vismes, Henriette de. 843 V35<br />

Les petites ames; roman.<br />

Spanish Fiction<br />

Perez Lugin, Alejandro. 863 P427<br />

La casa de la Troya.<br />

Mental Tests<br />

Cody, Sherwin. 136.8 C65<br />

Commercial tests and how to use them. 1919. World Book Co.<br />

(School efficiency monographs.)<br />

A discussion, followed by two series of the National Business Ability Tests, with<br />

directions for giving, grading, and tabulating, and keys to each. The tests included<br />

are for general mental alertness and memory, as well as for ability in arithmetic,<br />

spelling, grammar, business correspondence, stenography, invoicing, filing, etc.<br />

Ethics<br />

Dresser, Horatio Willis. 170 D81I<br />

Living by the spirit. 1905. Putnam.<br />

"The purpose of this little book is to simplify the problem of life. Its aim is also<br />

to increase the reader's knowledge of self, to add to his powers of helpfulness, that. . .he<br />

may be the more ready to manifest the fulness and beauty of the spirit." Preface.<br />

Gannett, William Channing. *79-9 G16<br />

Blessed be drudgery. 1905. Pott.<br />

A little essay on drudgery as the secret of all culture.<br />

Mecklin, John Moffat. qr 172 M557<br />

The war and the dilemma of the Christian ethic. [1919.]<br />

Contains bibliographical foot-notes.<br />

Reprinted from "American journal of theology," v.23, no.i, Jan. 1919.<br />

The author suggests as a solution of the problem the idea "that the difficulties we<br />

experience in trying to apply the priceless treasures of the Christian ethic to the problems<br />

of modern life would be to a very large extent removed by a frank acknowledgement<br />

that this ethic has its limitations."<br />

Religion<br />

Carpenter, Edward. 2 °i C22<br />

Pagan & Christian creeds; their origin and meaning.<br />

1920. Harcourt.<br />

Contains bibliographical foot-notes.<br />

The author's object is to trace along psychological lines the instigating cause of the<br />

evolution of religious rites and ceremonies.<br />

Elder, John Calvin, & Beatty, J. O. comp. r 285.5 E43<br />

History of the Reformed Presbyterian Church of New Alexandria,<br />

Pa., from its <strong>org</strong>anization Sept. 16, 1816 to Sept. 16, 1916; D. C. Matthews,<br />

pastor. [1917-]<br />

Contents: 1816 to 1868, by J. C. Elder.—1868 to 1916, by J. O. Beatty.<br />

Binder's title reads "Centennial of the New Alexandria Reformed Presbyterian<br />

Church, Pittsburgh Presbytery, Oct. ir, 1916-


CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Fitch, Albert Parker.<br />

261 F55<br />

Can the church survive in the changing order? 1920. Macmillan.<br />

A brief account of the forces at work, and a plea for a new accession of faith to enable<br />

the church to survive present day changes.<br />

Jackson, Henry Ezekiel. 261 J12<br />

A community church; the story of a minister's experience which led<br />

him from the church militant to the church democratic. 1919. Houghton.<br />

"List of references," p.381-383.<br />

The author is (1919") special agent in community <strong>org</strong>anization for the United States<br />

bureau of education. His suggested solution to the problem facing the church to-day is<br />

a plan to <strong>org</strong>anize it democratically as a community center.<br />

Mecklin, John Moffatt. qr 201 M55<br />

Revival of the ontological argument. [i9 T 7-]<br />

Reprinted from "Journal of philosophy, psychology and scientific methods," v.14,<br />

no.5, March 1, 1917.<br />

A discussion and criticism of "The meaning of God in human experience," by W. E.<br />

Hocking.<br />

Mecklin, John Moffatt. qr 231 M55<br />

Survival value of miracle. [1917.]<br />

Contains bibliographical foot-notes.<br />

Reprinted from "American journal of theology," v.21, no.2, April 1917.<br />

A brief summary of the forces that have invalidated the traditional conception of<br />

the miracle, with some discussion of the factors making for its re-evaluation in modern<br />

thought.<br />

Murray, John Lovell. 266 M97<br />

The call of a world task. 1918. Student Volunteer Movement.<br />

"Suggestions for auxiliary reading," p.207.<br />

"These studies have been prepared as part of the advance missionary program<br />

which emanated from the Student Volunteer Conference held at Northfield, Mass., January<br />

3-6, 1918. . . [They form] a new course of study interpreting the present world situation<br />

in terms of missionary responsibility." Preface.<br />

Stoughton, John. 274.2 S88<br />

Spiritual heroes; or, Sketches of the Puritans, their character and<br />

times, with an introductory letter by Joel Hawes. 1848. Dodd.<br />

"Not a continuous historical narrative, but rather a series of paintings, presenting<br />

...some of the principal characters and events. . .recorded in the annals of English<br />

history in the times of the Puritans and Nonconformists." Introductory letter.<br />

Sociology<br />

Hardy, Charles Oscar. 326 H26<br />

The negro question in the French revolution. 1919. Banta.<br />

"Bibliography," p.87-91.<br />

Thesis for Ph.D., University of Chicago.<br />

A study of sentiment in relation to the question of slavery, and of suffrage for free<br />

mulattoes in the French colonies.<br />

Secrist, Horace. 3II S44S<br />

Statistics in business; their analysis, charting and use. 1920. Mc­<br />

Graw.<br />

"A handbook for executives and others in responsible positions in the application of<br />

business statistics to problems which currently arise...The discussion is of a practical<br />

character—especial attention being given to the use of graphs and charts." Preface.


BOOKS ADDED—JULY 1920 3-25<br />

Shurter, Edwin DuBois, ed.<br />

385 S56<br />

Government ownership of railroads. [1919.] University of Texas.<br />

(Texas University. Bulletin no. 1903.)<br />

"Bibliography," p.5-9.<br />

The same<br />

r 385 S56<br />

"Prepared primarily for use by schools of Texas belonging to the University Interscholastic<br />

League [of debaters]." Preface.<br />

Warfield, Ge<strong>org</strong>e Alfred. 361 W22<br />

Outdoor relief in Missouri; a study of its administration by county<br />

officials; prepared under the direction of T.J. Riley. 1915. Survey<br />

Associates. (Russell Sage foundation.)<br />

A study of 364 families and individuals receiving public outdoor relief, made by the<br />

department of research in the St. Louis school of social economy between 1908 and 1910.<br />

It is a severe indictment of the county judges, the present administrators of poor relief.<br />

Politics and Government<br />

Atwood, Harry Fuller. 321.8 A88<br />

Back to the republic; the golden mean; the standard form of government.<br />

1918. Laird.<br />

"The purpose of this book is:<br />

(1) To make clear the meaning of the words 'autocracy,' 'democracy' and 'republic' ;<br />

(2) To encourage a more accurate use of governmental terms, and<br />

(3) To urge the importance of avoiding the dangers of the extremes of both autocracy<br />

and democracy." Preface.<br />

Chafee, Zechariah.<br />

r 323.44 C34<br />

Freedom of speech in war times; presented by Mr La Follette, Sept.<br />

22, 1919. 1919. (U. S. 66th cong. ist sess. Senate. Doc. no.95.)<br />

A record of the restrictions placed on speech in the United States during the European<br />

war.<br />

Wister, Owen.<br />

327-73 W81<br />

A straight deal; or, The ancient grudge. 1920. Macmillan.<br />

A plea for the cultivation of friendship between England and America in the interest<br />

of peace and civilization, and an endeavor to make both countries understand Germany's<br />

unchanged position.<br />

Woolf, Leonard Sidney.<br />

341-6 W87<br />

International government; two reports prepared for the Fabian<br />

Research Department, with an introduction by Bernard Shaw, together<br />

with a project by a Fabian committee for a supernational authority<br />

that will prevent war. 1916. Brentano.<br />

"Select bibliography," p.411-412. .<br />

"One of these reports studies the causes of wars, the nature and bearing of interna<br />

tional law, takes up the relation to international government of treaties, conferences,<br />

arbitration and judicial tribunals, and discusses the feasibility and nature of an international<br />

authority. The second report is devoted to the administrative and law-making<br />

problems with which such an authority would have to deal and the internationalism of<br />

commerce, industry, labor and human society." New York Times, 1916.<br />

Americanization<br />

Bogardus, Emory Stephen. 325-73 B58<br />

Essentials of Americanization.<br />

1919. University of Southern California<br />

Press.<br />

"Selected readings," p.277-29^<br />

.. ,,..v,j<br />

To assist the cause of democracy, to aid in the work of the recently established<br />

Division of Americanization, and to help make Americanization attractive, magnetic,<br />

and just, are the three purposes of this book. Condensed from Preface.


CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Pennsylvania—Council of national defense. q 3 2 5-73 p 39<br />

Americanization in Pennsylvania. [1918.] (Supplementary folio<br />

no. 1-4.)<br />

Contents: Organization of schools in English for the foreign-born.—Methods of<br />

teaching English to non-English-speaking foreign-born; first three years' work.—Americanization<br />

in industry.—Suggestions for co-operative agencies.<br />

Plan of the Americanization bureau, Pennsylvania council of national defense.<br />

Economics<br />

Barron, Clarence Walker. 33°-9 B26<br />

A world remaking; or, Peace finance. 1920. Harper.<br />

"Consists of a series of articles written mainly in the spring of 1919 describing economic<br />

and social conditions in Britain, together with remarks on the Peace treaty, Socialism,<br />

inflation, and kindred topics." Review, 1920.<br />

Brotherhood of Locomotive Firemen and Enginemen. r 331.2 B778<br />

Argument and brief submitted on behalf of locomotive firemen and<br />

hostlers, by W. S. Carter, president; hearings of Federal wage commission,<br />

Washington, D. C, Feb. 1918. [1918.] Doyle & Waltz Printing<br />

Co.<br />

A plea for higher wages and better working conditions.<br />

Cole, Ge<strong>org</strong>e Douglas Howard. SS 1 -^ C68i<br />

Introduction to trade unionism; a short study of the present position<br />

of trade unionism in Great Britain, prepared for the trade union<br />

survey of the Labour Research Department. [1918.] Labour Research<br />

Department. (London, Fabian Society—Research department.<br />

Trade union series, no.4.)<br />

"Selected bibliography," p.120-121.<br />

Davis, Malcolm W. 330-9 D32<br />

Open gates to Russia. 1920. Harper.<br />

A plea for co-operation with Russia in her task of reconstruction. The author describes<br />

social, economic, and intellectual conditions in Russia to-day and points out methods<br />

of achieving satisfactory commercial and social relations between Russia and the<br />

United States.<br />

Ebersole, John Franklin. 332.1 E21<br />

Elementary banking. 1918. Amer. Institute of Banking. (American<br />

Institute of Banking. Study course.)<br />

Each chapter ends with a group of practical exercises. The last chapter discusses<br />

the Federal reserve system.<br />

Guaranty Trust Company of New York. r 332 Ggsam<br />

Amortization; some notes of interest to investors, executors, trustees<br />

and beneficiaries under trusts. 1917.<br />

"Amortization, as herein discussed, is the gradual charging off and extinction of<br />

the premium paid for a bond, by setting aside at each interest period a certain amount of<br />

the fixed interest the bond bears, the amounts set aside being so calculated that at the<br />

maturity of the bond they will equal the premium paid."<br />

Guaranty Trust Company of New York. r 338.8 G95<br />

Combining for foreign trade; plans and methods of operation. 1920.<br />

Specific data and detailed information to aid in the formation of combinations<br />

under the Webb-Pomerene law.


BOOKS ADDED—JULY 1920<br />

Hammond, John Lawrence Le Breton, & Hammond,<br />

Mrs Barbara (Bradby).<br />

The skilled labourer, 1760-1832. 1919. Longmans.<br />

3^7<br />

330.9 H22S<br />

"The object is to show in detail how the economic changes produced by the introduction<br />

of machinery affected the workman in respect of his wages and condition of labour."<br />

Spectator, 1920.<br />

As a companion volume to the authors' "The village labourer" and "The town<br />

labourer," this book gives the history of particular groups of skilled workers during<br />

the same period.<br />

330.9 L65<br />

Lettres d'un vieil Americain a un Frangais; tr. de l'anglais par J. L.<br />

Duplan, preface de Lysis. 1918.<br />

These letters from a prominent manufacturer who wishes to remain unknown, discuss<br />

various economic, social, and industrial questions as they concern France and the<br />

United States.<br />

[Pennsylvania—Council of national defense.] 338.1 P39<br />

A year of food administration in Pennsylvania. 1918.<br />

Published in conjunction with the Pennsylvania committee of public safety.<br />

An account of the <strong>org</strong>anization and achievements of the department under the direction<br />

of Mr Howard Heinz.<br />

Preuss, Arthur, ed. 3362 P93<br />

Fundamental fallacy of socialism; an essay on the question of landownership,<br />

comprising an authentic account of the famous McGlynn<br />

case. 1909. Herder.<br />

Appeared in the "Catholic fortnightly review."<br />

"The conclusions reached that 'between Agrarian Socialism and the other Communistic<br />

forms there is no essential difference'. . .and that 'private property in land has<br />

the very same natural basis as private property in general'.. .are unquestionably valid<br />

as general propositions. But they are not novel." Nation, 1908.<br />

Thompson, Holland. 33°-9 T38<br />

The new South; a chronicle of social and industrial evolution. 1919.<br />

Yale University Press. (Chronicles of America series, v.42.)<br />

Contents: The background.—The Confederate soldier takes charge.—The revolt of<br />

the common man.—The farmer and the land.—Industrial development.—Labor conditions.—The<br />

problem of black and white.—Educational progress.—The South of today.—<br />

The repudiation of state debts.<br />

"Bibliographical note," p.235-242.<br />

United States. Statutes. r 336.2 U2j322r<br />

Revenue laws; public no.271, approved Sept. 8, 1916, public no.377,<br />

approved March 3, 1917, public no.50, approved Oct. 3, 1917- i°i7-<br />

(65th cong. ist sess. House. Doc.379. v.31.)<br />

Van Kleeck, Mary. r 331-4 V19<br />

Wages in the millinery trade. 1914. Lyon.<br />

To be incorporated as an appendix to the Fourth report of the New York state factory<br />

investigating commission.<br />

An investigation and study of women's wages in shops in the borough of Manhattan<br />

where women's hats are trimmed.<br />

Withers, Hartley. 336.2 W82<br />

Our money and the state. 1917- Dutton.<br />

Argues that the state has a logical right to take all our goods and services to promote<br />

public good. Of the two possible methods the state can pursue in taking our<br />

money-taxation or loan-the author advocates the first. He criticizes the schemes for<br />

paying off the war debt by means of state enterprise and pleads for direct ct taxation. taxat„,„<br />

Based on lectures delivered at the London School of Economics, Feb.-March 1917-


328 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Woolf, Leonard Sidney. 334 W87<br />

Co-operation & the future of industry. [1919.] Allen.<br />

"The special contribution that this book makes is in tracing the methods whereby<br />

the cooperative system may be further developed into an all-embracing national system<br />

of industry, reconciling the interests of producers and consumers." Survey, 1919.<br />

Insurance.<br />

Pensions<br />

Dodd, Edward Lewis. r 368 D66<br />

Comparison of the premiums of the Teachers Insurance and Annuity<br />

Association with those of other legal reserve companies. [1919.]<br />

University of Texas. (Texas University. Bulletin no.1904.)<br />

The comparison is made with companies having $25,000,000 insurance at the end of<br />

1917. The result as indicated by tables, is that the premiums charged to college teachers<br />

are less than the corresponding non-participating premiums of these companies, with the<br />

exception of the Travelers' premium on whole life at age 35, a premium without disability<br />

provision.<br />

Pennsylvania—Old age pensions, Commission on. r 351.5 P39<br />

Report, March 1919. 1919.<br />

A study of the dependent aged in Pennsylvania, with an investigation of the existing<br />

pension systems of the state and of foreign countries.<br />

Potts, Rufus M. r 368 P86<br />

Addresses and papers on insurance. [1917. Schnepp.]<br />

The author was (1917) Insurance superintendent of Illinois.<br />

Army<br />

Powell, E. Alexander. . 355-973 P87<br />

The army behind the army. 1919. Scribner.<br />

An account of the work of the American army in this country during the European<br />

war. The author describes the services of the signal corps, the engineers, the gas-makers,<br />

the quartermaster corps, the ordnance department, the aviators, the military intelligence<br />

department, the tanks, the motor transport corps, and the medical department.<br />

United States—Adjutant-general's office. r 358.3 U25<br />

Trade specifications and index of professions and trades in the army.<br />

1918. (War department document no.774.)<br />

"The purpose of this manual is to standardize vocational terminology in the Army,<br />

and to define the duties of specialists and skilled tradesmen required by its various technical<br />

<strong>org</strong>anizations. . .The specifications describe the ideal skilled man from the Army<br />

standpoint." Introduction.<br />

Education<br />

Massachusetts—Education, Special commission on. r 379.744 M455<br />

Report of the Special commission on education appointed under<br />

authority of chapter 88 of the Resolves of 1918 to investigate the educational<br />

systems of the commonwealth, Jan. 29, 1919. 1919. (Senate.<br />

no.330.)<br />

The commission pleads for more liberal provision for education in Massachusetts,<br />

and for more generous eo-operation between the state and its communities in using to the<br />

fullest extent the advantages which education offers.


BOOKS ADDED—JULY 1920 329<br />

r 379H R26<br />

"The red code," 1912 (English and Welsh editions combined), containing<br />

the official regulations for public elementary, secondary &<br />

technical schools, schools of art & other forms of provision of further<br />

education; regulations for the preliminary education of teachers;<br />

training colleges & the training of teachers; education & other acts<br />

relating to the training of children, 1902-12, with official decisions &<br />

other information necessary for local education committees, teachers<br />

& managers of schools; N. U. T. edition [ed.] by J. H. Yoxall and<br />

Ernest Gray. 18th year of issue. 1912.<br />

Woodward, William Harrison.<br />

375-8 W86<br />

Vittorino da Feltre and other humanist educators: essays and versions;<br />

an introduction to the history of classical education. 1912. University<br />

Press.<br />

Contents: List of authorities for the life of Vittorino da Feltre.—A study of the<br />

life and work of Vittorino da Feltre.—P. P. Vergerius, "De ingenuis moribus;" an English<br />

version.—Lionardo Bruni D'Arezzo, "De studiis et Uteris;" an English version.—<br />

Aeneas Sylvius, "De liberorum educatione;" an English version.—Battista Guarino,<br />

"De ordine docendi et studenti;" an English version.—The aims and methods of the<br />

humanist educator.—Bibliographical list of works quoted.<br />

Commerce<br />

Fisk, Ge<strong>org</strong>e Mygatt.<br />

382 F53<br />

International commercial policies, with special reference to the<br />

United States; a text book. 1919. Macmillan. (Library of economics,<br />

politics and sociology.)<br />

Bibliography at end of each chapter; "General bibliography," p.259-272.<br />

Discusses the development of "modern commercial politics," including the mercantile<br />

system, free trade, and protection; customs in various phases; commercial treaties;<br />

public trade-promoting institutions; commercial statistics; and "navigation politics."<br />

Harris, Walter Burton, & Cozens-Hardy, W. H. comp. 382 H29<br />

Modern Morocco; a report on trade prospects, with some geographical<br />

and historical notes; comp. for the Bank of British West<br />

Africa. [1919. Adams.]<br />

A report by agents of the Bank of British West Africa, Ltd., on economic conditions<br />

in Morocco. Contains a map, statistics and other data.<br />

Women<br />

Sprague, Henry Harrison.<br />

396.2 S76<br />

Women under the law of Massachusetts; their rights, privileges and<br />

disabilities. 1903. Little.<br />

An attempt to state the position of woman in contrast to that of man. So many<br />

changes have been made by successive statutes since the first edition of this book in 1884,<br />

that the author finds it difficult to decide which sex is the more favored.<br />

Young Women's Christian Associations, United<br />

r 396.2 Y41<br />

States—War work council.<br />

State laws affecting women in the United States, and directions for<br />

making exhibit maps; material compiled by the Research section, Industrial<br />

committee. 1919. Womans press.<br />

Accompanied by 12 outline maps for exhibit and other purposes.


CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Language<br />

r 443-2 F92<br />

French technical words & phrases; an English-French and French-<br />

English dictionary of technical and business terms and phrases used in<br />

commerce, arts, sciences, professions and trades, with appendix of<br />

tables of money, weights and measures; rev. throughout and greatly enlarged<br />

by John Topham. 1919. Marlborough. (Marlborough's series<br />

of foreign technical manuals, no.i.)<br />

Sparkman, Colley Fredward.<br />

468 S736<br />

Industrial Spanish. 1919. Allyn.<br />

"The purpose...is to furnish appropriate Spanish reading on industrial and vocational<br />

subjects. The two guiding principles. . .have been a selection of practical, interesting<br />

material and the use of Spanish exclusively." Preface.<br />

Terry, Thomas Philip.<br />

465 T31<br />

Terry's short cut to Spanish; a new, easy and quick method for<br />

learning the Spanish language as spoken in Spanish-America and in<br />

Spain, combined with a pronouncing phrase book for travelers in Spanish-speaking<br />

countries. 1920. Houghton.<br />

Science<br />

Linville, Henry Richardson, & Kelly, H. A. 59° L729<br />

Text-book in general zoology. 1906. Ginn.<br />

One valuable feature is the number of plates showing dissection of various<br />

animals.<br />

Redfield, Casper Lavater.<br />

r 575.6 R27<br />

Control of heredity; a study of the genesis of evolution and degeneracy,<br />

illustrated by diagrams and types of character. I9°3-<br />

Heredity Pub. Co.<br />

Schoeller, Walter Raymond, & Powell, A. R.<br />

r 543.7 S36<br />

Analysis of minerals and ores of the rarer elements, for analytical<br />

chemists, metallurgists and advanced students. 1919. Griffin. (Griffin's<br />

scientific text-books.)<br />

"Although the extended use of many of the rarer elements and their compounds<br />

in industrial processes has resulted in the publication of several treatises on the<br />

chemistry of such substances, no systematic account of the analytical methods used in<br />

the examination of their ores has hitherto appeared in English. . .The authors have<br />

endeavoured to fill this gap in the literature by dealing systematically not only with<br />

the methods of determination of the forty less common elements but also with the<br />

methods of separation of such groups of these as are likely to occur in the various ore<br />

minerals." Science progress, 1920.<br />

Presents tabular schemes for complete analysis. Weakest part of the book is<br />

the section on mineralogical analysis.<br />

Mathematics<br />

Hamilton, Samuel.<br />

511 H2ie<br />

Essentials of arithmetic. 2v. 1919. Amer. Book Co.<br />

v.i covers work for second, third, fourth, and fifth years of school work; v.2, for<br />

sixth, seventh, and eighth years.<br />

Author is Superintendent of schools, Allegheny county, Pennsylvania.


BOOKS ADDED—JULY 1920 331<br />

International Correspondence Schools, Scranton, Pa. 510 I24<br />

Ingenieria civil [aritmetica, algebra, logaritmos, geometria, dibujo<br />

lineal]. 1911. International Educational Pub. Co. (Biblioteca de las<br />

escuelas internacionales, v.13.)<br />

Correspondence school course.<br />

Aerial Navigation<br />

Illinois University—United States school of military qr 623.74 I22<br />

aeronautics.<br />

Technical notes. 1918.<br />

Contents: Airplanes.—Cooperation with the artillery.—Engines.—Gunnery.—Instruments.—Map<br />

reading.—Meteorology.—Signalling.<br />

Pippard, Alfred John Sutton, & Pritchard, J. L.<br />

533.652 P64<br />

Aeroplane structures, with an introduction by L. Bairstow. 1919.<br />

Longmans.<br />

Theoretical principles of design.<br />

Sweetser, Arthur, & Lamont, Gordon.<br />

533607 S97<br />

Opportunities in aviation. 1920. Harper. (Opportunity books.)<br />

Has a chapter on qualifications for an airplane mechanic ; deals briefly with training<br />

of aviators, but has little to say about the requirements. States in the introduction<br />

that "If there may be one deduction drawn from the experience of instructors in<br />

the Royal Air Force, it is that it is the training, not the individual, that makes the<br />

pilot."<br />

Woodhouse, Henry.<br />

qr 533652 W86t<br />

Textbook of applied aeronautic engineering. 1920. Century.<br />

Compilation, with illustrated description of many types of aeroplane. Contains<br />

some theoretical material. Reference value impaired by lack of index.<br />

Crystallography<br />

Martius-Matzdorff, J. qr 548 M43<br />

Die elemente der krystallographie, mit stereoskopischer darstellung<br />

der krystallformen, fiir hohere lehranstalten und zum selbststudium.<br />

1871.<br />

Sella, Quintino.<br />

548-7 S46<br />

Abhandlungen zur kristallographie; hrsg. von F. Zambonini. 1906.<br />

(Oswald's klassiker der exakten wissensehaften, nr.155.)<br />

Contains bibliographical foot-notes.<br />

Ulrich, Fr.<br />

V 548 U23<br />

Krystallographische figurentafeln, zum gebrauche bei mineralogischen<br />

vorlesungen zusammengestellt. [1884.]<br />

Vrba, Karl. r 548 V39<br />

Krystallographische tafeln fur die mineralogischen vortrage an der<br />

Prager Universitat; copien nach Naumann u.a. nebst eigenen construktionen.<br />

Ed.3. 1876.<br />

r


CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Useful Arts<br />

Corrugated Bar Company, Inc. r 693.5508 C82<br />

Useful data on reinforced concrete buildings for the designer and<br />

estimator. 1919.<br />

Fisher, Elizabeth Florette. 609.73 F53<br />

Resources and industries of the United States. 1919. Ginn.<br />

Elementary information on the more important productive industries of the United<br />

States, exclusive of outlying possessions. An attractive book and, despite minor inaccuracies,<br />

a useful one.<br />

Kelly, Albanis Ashmun.<br />

698.22 K17<br />

Expert calciminer; a handy manual for interior decorators. 1912.<br />

Master Painter Pub. Co.<br />

Use of water colors for interior and exterior application.<br />

qr 696.05 P718<br />

Plumbing news [monthly], April 1918-date. v.2i-date. 1918-date.<br />

Pittsburgh.<br />

qr 607 V364<br />

Vocational summary; monthly, May 1918-date. v.i-date. 1918-date.<br />

Issued by the United States Federal board for vocational education.<br />

Medicine, Physiology, Hygiene<br />

Dresser, Horatio Willis. 615.851 D8ihi<br />

History of the New thought movement. 1919. Crowell.<br />

Deals with the subject of mental healing and its various stages of development in<br />

America and foreign countries.<br />

Keith, Arthur.<br />

r 617.3 K16<br />

Menders of the maimed; the anatomical & physiological principles<br />

underlying the treatment of injuries to muscles, nerves, bones & joints.<br />

1919. Frowde.<br />

Not concerned with methods of treatment, but outlines the history of the subject by<br />

tracing the careers of surgeons prominent in development of the field indicated. Written<br />

from the British point of view.<br />

Kellogg, John Harvey.<br />

615.82 K16<br />

The art of massage; a practical manual for the nurse, the student<br />

and the practitioner. Ed.12, rev. 1919. Modern Medicine Pub. Co.<br />

"Purpose... is to picture as clearly as possible the various procedures of massage<br />

as practiced at the Battle Creek Sanitarium, where there has been perhaps a larger<br />

and more continuous experience with this method than at any other center in the United<br />

States." Preface.<br />

Smith, Job Lewis.<br />

r 618.9 S65<br />

Treatise on the diseases of infancy and childhood. Ed.4, rev. 1879.<br />

Lea.<br />

United States—Surgeon-general's office. 616.07 U 2 5<br />

Laboratory methods of the United States army; comp. by the<br />

Division of infectious diseases and laboratories. Ed.2, rev. 1919. Lea.<br />

(Medical war manual no.6.)


BOOKS ADDED—JULY 1920 333<br />

Engineering<br />

Boulnois, Henry Percy.<br />

625.7 B65<br />

Modern roads. 1919. Arnold.<br />

Construction and maintenance. Special reference to British conditions, but includes<br />

some comparison with American practice and specifications.<br />

Burghardt, Henry D.<br />

621.9 B89<br />

The lathe, bench work and work at the f<strong>org</strong>e. 1919. McGraw.<br />

(Machine tool operation, pt.i.)<br />

Very useful book for the beginner. Outlines the machinist's work, in general,<br />

and presents detailed, practical instruction on the rudiments of shop work within the<br />

field covered. Clearly written and well illustrated.<br />

Decker, Wilbur F.<br />

621.1 D36<br />

Story of the engine from lever to liberty motor. 1920. Scribner.<br />

Partly history and partly descriptive information regarding modern steam boilers,<br />

reciprocating engines, steam turbines, locomotives, and internal combustion engines.<br />

Information is very elementary and, in most cases, clearly stated.<br />

Dunbar, Howard W.<br />

621.92 D89<br />

Little known facts about grinding and grinding kinks; a series of<br />

brief articles treating of commonplace facts concerning grinding.<br />

[1919?]<br />

Published by the Norton Company, Worcester, Mass.<br />

The same<br />

r 621.92 D89<br />

Useful information regarding abrasives and practical grinding methods, reprinted<br />

from the company's house <strong>org</strong>an, "Grits and grinds."<br />

Haferkorn, Henry Ernest.<br />

r 016.621881 H13<br />

Screw threads; bibliography of available material on the systems<br />

and classification of screw threads, including tolerances, allowances<br />

and symbols of nomenclature; and on gages, methods of testing and<br />

specifications. 1918. ([United States—Engineers corps.] Professional<br />

memoirs, v.io, no.54, sup. no.2.)<br />

Prepared at the request of the United States screw thread commission.<br />

Hommon, Harry B.<br />

r 628.54 H75<br />

Purification of tannery wastes. 1919. (United States—Public<br />

health service. Public health bulletin no.ioo.)<br />

Being no.3 of "Studies on the treatment and disposal of industrial wastes," made<br />

under the supervision of E. B. Phelps.<br />

"Bibliography of tannery waste treatment," p.130-133.<br />

Mead, Daniel Webster.<br />

qr 627.8 M55<br />

Report on the dam and water power development at Austin, Texas.<br />

1917. Privately printed.<br />

"Bibliography," p.202—20$.<br />

Mexico—Departamento de minas.<br />

qr 622.05 M653<br />

Boletin minero [semimonthly], Jan. 1, Feb. 1, 1917. v.3, no.i, 3.<br />

1917.<br />

Ninde, William E.<br />

621.1 N26<br />

Design and construction of heat engines. 1920. McGraw.<br />

Contents: The heat engine.—Thermodynamics.—Friction and lubrication.—Power<br />

and thrust.—Mechanics.—Machine design.<br />

"References" at the end of some of the chapters.<br />

The same<br />

r 621.1 N36<br />

Comprehensive work of high value to the designer. Includes reciprocating engine,<br />

steam turbine, and internal-combustion engine.


334 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Paaswell, Ge<strong>org</strong>e.<br />

627.8 Pn<br />

Retaining walls; their design and construction. 1920. McGraw.<br />

Bibliographies at the end of some of the chapters.<br />

[Bibliography from the Report of the Special committee on soils, American<br />

Society of Civil Engineers; compiled by the Carnegie Library' of Pittsburgh], p.257-<br />

269.<br />

Text-book with unusual attention to construction plant and practical construction<br />

methods.<br />

Rochester (N. Y.) Bureau of Municipal Research. r 628.46 Rs7r<br />

Report on the problem of street cleaning in the city of Rochester,<br />

N. Y.; submitted to the mayor and to the commissioner of public works.<br />

1918.<br />

"The study upon which this report is based was made by John T. Child, assistant<br />

engineer, working under the supervision of James W. Routh, chief engineer. The<br />

report itself was written jointly by Mr. Routh and Mr. Child."<br />

United States—Mines bureau—Pittsburgh<br />

qr 016.622 U253<br />

experiment station.<br />

Library bulletin; semimonthly, July 1, 1916-date. 1916-date. Pittsburgh.<br />

Multigraph copy.<br />

None issued for Jan. 1, May 15, Sept. 1 and Sept. 15, 1918.<br />

Electrical Engineering<br />

Alabama Power Company.<br />

qr 621.341 A31<br />

Power development in Alabama; description of the system of the<br />

Alabama Power Company, including the water power development at<br />

Lock twelve on the Coosa river, with a brief resume of the future of<br />

power development in Alabama. 1918.<br />

Bown, C. Elmer.<br />

r 621.32 B66<br />

Report on electric rates in Pittsburgh, Pa., made to City council,<br />

June 12, 1916. 1916. Eureka Printing Co. Pittsburgh.<br />

Discusses the <strong>org</strong>anization and finances of the Duquesne Light Company.<br />

Braymer, Daniel Harvey.<br />

621.31 B71<br />

Armature winding and motor repair; practical information and<br />

data covering winding and reconnecting procedure for direct and alternating<br />

current machines. 1920. McGraw.<br />

Valuable, practical book compiled for the repair man. Includes adjustment, inspection,<br />

and testing. Has a chapter on repair-shop equipment.<br />

Drury, Alex G.<br />

r 621.3002 D84<br />

Electrical estimator's tables; a collection of tables and data on the<br />

time required to perform the various operations involved in outside and<br />

inside electrical construction, and analysis of certain complicated installations.<br />

1919. Privately printed.<br />

Tables, based on actual experience of electrical contractors, indicating time required<br />

for various items in installation work. Costs of labor and materials are not<br />

considered. Data is accompanied by blank spaces for recording the contractor's personal<br />

experience.<br />

Ferguson, Olin Jerome.<br />

Electric lighting. 1920. McGraw.<br />

Text-book covering principles and describing certain applications.<br />

621.32 F38


BOOKS ADDED—JULY 1920 335<br />

Starling, Sydney Ge<strong>org</strong>e. 537 s 79<br />

Electricity and magnetism for advanced students. [Ed.2.] 1918.<br />

Longmans.<br />

Contains bibliographical foot-notes.<br />

Requires calculus.<br />

Torices, F. & Curchod, Adr.<br />

r 621.31 T63<br />

Schemas et regies pratiques de bobinage des machines electriques.<br />

1919.<br />

Contains formulas and gives schemes for winding direct and alternating current<br />

machinery. Devotes a few pages to transformers.<br />

Agriculture<br />

American Agricultural Chemical Company, Boston— qr 630.6 A51<br />

Agricultural service bureau.<br />

Bulletin, no.1-9. I9i3-[i9?].<br />

Contents: Vetch and its culture.—Seeding to grass and clover.—Alfalfa and its<br />

culture.—Cranberry fertilization.—Winter wheat and its culture.—Top-dressing grassland<br />

and pastures.—Corn and its culture.—Important factors in potato production.<br />

Iowa—Agricultural experiment station, Ames.<br />

r 016.63 I25<br />

Complete list of publications. 1919.<br />

United States—Education bureau.<br />

r 635 U25I<br />

Lessons in gardening for southwestern region. 1919.<br />

Prepared for the United States School Garden Army.<br />

Domestic Economy<br />

Stockbridge, Mrs Bertha Edson (Lay).<br />

642.4 S86<br />

What to drink; the blue book of beverages; recipes and directions<br />

for making and serving non-alcoholic drinks for all occasions. 1920.<br />

Appleton.<br />

Ziemann, Hugo, & Gillette, Mrs F. L. (Camp).<br />

641 Z61<br />

White house cook book; a comprehensive cyclopedia of information<br />

for the home, containing cooking, toilet and household recipes,<br />

menus, dinner-giving, table etiquette, care of the sick, health suggestions,<br />

facts worth knowing, etc. Enl. ed. 1919. Saalfield Pub. Co.<br />

Business. Communication<br />

Frederick, Justus Ge<strong>org</strong>e.<br />

658.321 F89<br />

Modern salesmanagement; a practical handbook and guide. 1919.<br />

Appleton.<br />

Comprehensive in scope, dealing with numerous problems in <strong>org</strong>anization of sales<br />

forces and development of selling policies.<br />

Geijsbeek, John Bart, tr.<br />

qr 657 G27<br />

Ancient double-entry bookkeeping; Lucas Pacioli's treatise (A. D.<br />

1494—the earliest known writer on bookkeeping) reproduced and translated;<br />

with reproductions, notes and abstracts from Manzoni, Pietra,<br />

Mainardi, Ympyn, Stevin and Dafforne. 1914. Privately printed.<br />

Photographic reproductions of the original texts and English translations.<br />

"Partial bibliography, 1494 to 1636," p.5-6 ; "Historical references," p.7.


336 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Griffith, James Bray.<br />

657 G8gp<br />

Practical bookkeeping; a working handbook of elementary bookkeeping<br />

and approved modern methods of accounting, including single<br />

proprietorship, partnership, wholesale, commission, storage and brokerage<br />

accounts. [3 pts. in iv.] 1919. Amer. Technical Soc.<br />

An attempt to present principles concisely and simply, with enough examples to<br />

establish the principles clearly.<br />

Johnson, Charles.<br />

658.326 J35<br />

Guide to successful auctioneering; or, How to become an auctioneer;<br />

containing practical points on selling, advertising, displaying goods,<br />

description of goods, newspaper, poster, handbill and circular advertising,<br />

what to sell, when to sell, how to sell, useful hints, etc. 1903.<br />

Drake.<br />

Includes suggestions to canvassers.<br />

Osborn, Albert Sherman.<br />

r 652.4 02gi<br />

Instruments and illustrations in disputed document trials. [1917.]<br />

United States—Library of Congress.<br />

qr 016.6545 U25<br />

List of references on the cable systems of the world. 1919.<br />

Carbon copy.<br />

Chemical Technology<br />

r 665.705 G2122<br />

Gas and electric news; pub. monthly by Rochester Railway & Light<br />

Co., July 1917-date. v.5-date. 1917-date.<br />

Society of Glass Technology.<br />

r 666.105 S67<br />

Journal; comprising proceedings and reports, transactions and<br />

abstracts of papers from other journals; quarterly, May 1917-date.<br />

v.i-date. 1917-date.<br />

United States—Mines bureau.<br />

qr 662.2373 U25<br />

TNT as a blasting explosive, by C. E. Munroe and S. P. Howell.<br />

1919.<br />

Mimeograph copy.<br />

Fine Arts<br />

American Academy in Rome.<br />

qr n 0 j A51<br />

Annual report, 1917-18. [1918.]<br />

Beauchamp, Octave. q r 73 g g 34<br />

La porcelaine; etude sur la fabrication de la porcelaine, manufacture<br />

nationale de Sevres, manufacture royale de Saxe, manufacture Haviland<br />

& Co., Exposition centennale de la ceramique en 1900. [1901.]<br />

(Les grandes industries du monde. Ceramique.)<br />

Gorham Company, New York city.<br />

r 718 G67<br />

A few suggestions for honor rolls in bronze and mosaic.<br />

Reproductions of designs.<br />

Martini, Herbert E. cd.<br />

q r ?4J M43<br />

Applied art; a collection of designs showing the tendencies of<br />

American industrial art. v.i. 1919. Ferenz.<br />

Plates preceded by brief articles on magazine art, "The training of the textile designer,<br />

Art applied to advertising," and "American industrial art."


BOOKS ADDED—JULY 1920<br />

Waugh, Frank Albert. r ?IJ W 3 3<br />

Recreation uses on the national forests. 1918.<br />

Issued by the United States forest service<br />

The author writes as a professional landscape engineer. His plea is for a committee<br />

on forest utilities within the Forest service, which would administer recreation ZI and<br />

landscape protection in fair proportion with timber production, grazing, watershed protection,<br />

and other<br />

F<br />

utilities.<br />

Japanese Art<br />

337<br />

Bigitsukai [Japanese], no.1-16, 18-40, 42-56. [189-?] b 705 B47<br />

Title translated: "Ocean of fine art."<br />

No.17, 41, 57-65 wanting.<br />

Continued by "Shin-bigitsukai."<br />

Chiefly colored plates showing Japanese art designs.<br />

Katani, Heihichi, comp. b n 2 a K13<br />

Mon-zukushi [Japanese]. 1918?<br />

Title translated: "The crest book."<br />

Japanese coats of arms and trade marks.<br />

Shin-bigitsukai [Japanese]. 36 nos. in 7v. [19-?] b 705 S55<br />

Title translated: "New ocean of fine art."<br />

Continuation of "Bigitsukai."<br />

Chiefly colored plates showing Japanese art designs.<br />

Tabata, S. comp. qb 74S Tu<br />

Ayanishiki [Japanese]. 6v. 1914-19?<br />

Title translated : "Dancing costumes of the famous No-dancers."<br />

"The 'No' is a Japanese cult, and the costumes portrayed are [those]. ..worn at<br />

the Imperial ceremonies and later preserved. ..This set, to my knowledge, is the only<br />

complete work in existence in the United States." Letter of H. C. Perleberg, dated<br />

May 14, 1920.<br />

Tsuji, S. comp. b 745 T7g<br />

Sensho-ku-taikan [Japanese], iov. in 3. 1913?<br />

Title translated: "Great mirror of dyed fabric."<br />

Consists chiefly of colored plates illustrating the fundamental principles of Japanese<br />

textile design and decoration.<br />

Architecture<br />

Ehrsam, Fritz. qr 728.7 E38<br />

The Swiss chalet in America. [1916.] Privately printed.<br />

Shows how the chalet may be modified and adapted to the requirements of American<br />

life. Includes designs and plans.<br />

Indiana Limestone Quarrymen's Association. qr 728 I242<br />

Indiana limestone, the aristocrat of building materials; ten designs<br />

for houses of Indiana limestone; the best designs submitted in "A competition<br />

for a detached residence, faced with Indiana limestone, to cost<br />

about $12,000," conducted by the Architectural review. 1917.<br />

Reprint from the "Architectural review," v.5, no.9.<br />

Le Glay, Andre Joseph Ghislain. qb 726 L54<br />

Recherches sur l'figlise Metropolitaine de Cambrai. 1825.<br />

A historical study, with a description of the church and its chapels, its treasures,<br />

relics, and tombs; a chronological list of its archbishops and other dignitaries; and a biographical<br />

register of literary persons connected with it.


338 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

qr 728 W63<br />

White pine series of architectural monographs; bi-monthly, Aug. 1917-<br />

date. v.3, no.4-date. 1917-date.<br />

None published for Dec. 1919.<br />

Wolff, Jetta Sophia. 726 W83<br />

Story of the Paris churches. 1919. Brentano.<br />

Aims to give a concise history of each church rather than a mass of architectural<br />

detail. Concludes with a topographical guide for visitors, telling how to reach any of<br />

the churches by "metro" or train.<br />

Mechanical Drawing<br />

Bennett, Charles Alpheus. 744 B43<br />

Problems in mechanical drawing; drawings by F. D. Crawshaw.<br />

[1918.] Manual Arts Press.<br />

The same<br />

j 744 B43<br />

"Covers the ground of a first-year high school course. .. Intended for use under a<br />

trained teacher." Foreword.<br />

Griffith, Ira Samuel. 744 G89<br />

Projects for beginning woodwork and mechanical drawing. [i9 IQ -]<br />

Manual Arts Press.<br />

The same<br />

j 744 G89<br />

"The aim thruout has been to provide successful rather than unique projects. .. All<br />

of the projects for mechanical drawing here given are completely solved." Preface.<br />

Photography<br />

Lutz, Edwin Ge<strong>org</strong>e. 778.5 L98<br />

Animated cartoons; how they are made, their origin and development.<br />

1920. Scribner.<br />

Describes the development of motion pictures in general, the methods of drawing<br />

animated cartoons, the technique of operation, and the means of depicting movement in<br />

the human figure, in animals, and in inanimate objects. Ends with a chapter on "Animated<br />

educational films and the future."<br />

Tissandier, Gaston. 770.9 T52<br />

History and handbook of photography; tr. from the French; ed. by<br />

J. Thomson. 1877. Scovill Manufacturing Co.<br />

In three parts, the first giving a short history of photography; the second, describing<br />

its operations and processes; the third, discussing its applications.<br />

Music<br />

Scores<br />

Bach, Johann Sebastian.<br />

qM 786.4 Bi2e<br />

English suites; rev. and fingered by Karl Klindworth [for the pianoforte],<br />

1897. Church.<br />

Brahms, Johannes. qM 785.6 B68<br />

Concert, fiir das pianoforte, mit begleitung des orchesters, partitur.<br />

Op. 15. 1875. Rieter-Biedermann.


BOOKS ADDED—JULY 1920 339<br />

Indy, Vincent d'. qM 785.4 I24<br />

Wallenstein; trilogie d'apres le poeme dramatique de Schiller; partition<br />

d'orchestre. Op.12. 3 pts. in 2v. [1887.] Durand.<br />

pt.i. Le camp de Wallenstein.<br />

pt.2-3. Max et Thecla.— La mort de Wallenstein.<br />

Indy, Vincent d'.<br />

qM 786.4902 I24<br />

Wallenstein; trilogie d'apres le poeme dramatique de Schiller, piano<br />

a 4 mains. Op.12. 3 pts. in iv. 1909. Durand.<br />

Contents: Le camp dc Wallenstein.—Max et Thecla.—La murt de Wallenstein.<br />

Massenet, Jules fimileFrederic. qM 782.4 M45h<br />

[Herodiade.] Herodias; opera in four acts and seven tableaux by<br />

P. Milliet [and others], vocal score. Heugel.<br />

French and English words.<br />

Page, Nathaniel Clifford.<br />

qM 784.6 P14<br />

Lord Howe's masquerade (a Revolutionary legend); choral ballad<br />

for mixed voices with baritone solo; text by F. H. Martens. 1919.<br />

Ditson.<br />

Saint-Saens, Charles Camille.<br />

qM 785.6 S15P<br />

Premier concerto, pour piano, avec accompagnement d'orchestre<br />

[partition d'orchestre]. Op.17. Durand.<br />

Watts, Wintter.<br />

qM 784 W33<br />

Vignettes of Italy; a cycle of nine songs for high voice; text by<br />

Sara Teasdale. 1919. Ditson.<br />

Contents: Addio.—Naples.—Capri.—Night song at Amalfi.—Ruins of Paestum.—<br />

From a Roman hill.—Ponte Vecchio, Florence.—Villo Scrbelloni, Bellaggio.—Stresa.<br />

Books About Music<br />

Seashore, Carl Emil.<br />

780.1 S43<br />

Psychology of musical talent. 1919. Silver. (Beverley educational<br />

series.)<br />

An elementary presentation of the results of investigation of the measure of musical<br />

talent by actual tests of the sense of pitch, intensity, time, rhythm, timbre, consonance,<br />

and musical memory, as well as by motor tests.<br />

Thuren, Hjalmar.<br />

784.4 T43<br />

Folkesangen paa Fasro'erne; trykt og udgivet paa Carlsbergfondets<br />

bekostning. 1908. (F. F. publications; northern series, no.2.)<br />

Woods, Glenn H.<br />

787 W86<br />

Public school orchestras and bands. 1920. Ditson.<br />

"List of books suggested for study," p.195-196.<br />

Tells how to <strong>org</strong>anize instrumental instruction, how to prepare the teachers, secure<br />

official co-operation, procure, tune, and care for instruments, how to conduct and seat<br />

an orchestra or band, how to assemble a score and master transposition.<br />

Amusements<br />

Frost, Helen, & Wardlaw, C D.<br />

796.34 F96<br />

Basket ball and indoor baseball for women, with an introduction by<br />

T. D. Wood. 1920. Scribner.<br />

Description and explanation of each game, intended for both instructors and players.<br />

Illustrated with many diagrams and photographs of students of Teachers college, Columbia<br />

University.


CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Nieman, Herbert A.<br />

796-95 N33<br />

The crawl stroke. 1919. [Nieman.]<br />

Simple instructions in the "most natural of all strokes" by the former amateur<br />

champion swimmer of Ohio. Illustrated with diagrams of positions.<br />

Phelan, John Joseph.<br />

792.7 P48<br />

Motion pictures as a phase of commercialized amusement in Toledo.<br />

Ohio. 1919. Little Book Press. (Social survey series 3.)<br />

"A selected bibliography of moving pictures," p.216-219.<br />

A survey of the motion picture business, with an inquiry into the educational significance,<br />

moral and social effects of the movies. Includes also a section on non-commercialized<br />

amusements and ccmmunity work among the young.<br />

Literature<br />

Bates, Katharine Lee.<br />

814 B314<br />

Sigurd our golden collie, and other comrades of the road. 1919.<br />

Dutton.<br />

Sketches of interesting experiences with various animal and bird pets. Interspersed<br />

with poems.<br />

Kellner, Leon.<br />

810.9 K16<br />

American literature; tr. from the German by Julia Franklin, with a<br />

preface by Gustav Pollak. 1915. Doubleday. (The American books.)<br />

The author was (1915) professor of English philology and literature in the University<br />

of Czernowitz, Austria.<br />

His "estimates of the greater American writers and their works are, on the whole,<br />

those with which we are familiar. . .The peculiarities of the work are found chiefly in<br />

the attention bestowed on authors who, at home, are considered 'minor,' but who to the<br />

foreign observer are especially significant." Dial, 1915.<br />

Olson, Oscar Ludvig.<br />

r 839.6 O23<br />

Relation of the Hrolfs saga Kraka and the Bjarkarimur to Beowulf;<br />

a contribution to the history of saga development in England and the<br />

Scandinavian countries. 1916. Soc. for the Advancement of Scandinavian<br />

Study.<br />

"Bibliography and abbreviations," p.3-4.<br />

Thesis for Ph. D., University of Chicago.<br />

Park, John Edgar.<br />

814 P23<br />

The bad results of good habits, and other lapses. 1920. Houghton.<br />

Whimsical little essays on a variety of themes.<br />

Composition<br />

Foerster, Norman, & Steadman, J. M.<br />

808 F68<br />

Sentences and thinking; a practice book in sentence making. 1919.<br />

Houghton.<br />

"A textbook for the first term of Freshman English." Preface.<br />

Stevenson, Robert Louis.<br />

808 S84<br />

Learning to write; suggestions and counsel. 1920. Scribner.<br />

A systematic attempt to arrange in one volume Stevenson's theory of the art of writing<br />

and his prescribed canons of its technique.<br />

Humor. Satire<br />

Ade, Ge<strong>org</strong>e.<br />

Hand-made fables; illus. by J. T. McCutcheon.<br />

Appeared in the "Cosmopolitan."<br />

A collection of fables in slang.<br />

8l7 A22n<br />

1920. Doubleday.


BOOKS ADDED—JULY 1920 341<br />

Untermeyer, Louis.<br />

8l 7 U2 5<br />

Including Horace. 1919- Harcourt.<br />

"The present volume is an effort to do two things: first, to suggest, through the<br />

thin veil of parody, how certain other poets would have used Horatian subjects—and<br />

one famous theme in particular. Second, to present, in a loose set of paraphrases, the<br />

spirit rather than the letter of most of Horace's finest odes." Introduction.<br />

Poetry<br />

Adcock, Arthur St. John. 821.09 A22<br />

For remembrance; soldier poets who have fallen in the war. [1919.]<br />

Hodder.<br />

"An illuminating and most sympathetic essay on the soldier-poet and his reaction<br />

upon the war, illustrated by reference to a certain group, who, perhaps more than any<br />

others have earned the double title, because they died a soldier s death. Saturday review,<br />

1918.<br />

Ferguson, John, poet. 821 F 3 8<br />

Thyrea, and other sonnets. 1918. Melrose.<br />

8l1 G^5<br />

Guest, Edgar Albert.<br />

A heap o' livin'. 1916. Reilly.<br />

"Homespun poetry, full of health and vigor." Literary digest, 1916.<br />

Ordene de chevalerie. . 8 4* ° 28<br />

L'Ordene de chevalerie; an old French poem; text, with introduction<br />

and notes by R. T. House. 1918. [Banta.]<br />

"Bibliography," p.65-69.<br />

Thesis for Ph.D., University of Chicago.<br />

T-.1. T7


342 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Syracuse, N. Y.-Public library. ol68„ Sgg<br />

List of 87 poets, representing American verse from 1900 to 1910<br />

[1919.]<br />

Syracuse reprint of the library lists of the Poetry Society of America<br />

and :ttt^t:::r d ' toge,her w,th a " note ^^^nof ^h poet<br />

Van Dyke, Henry. g2I Tzgzva<br />

Studies in Tennyson. 1920. Scribner.<br />

Contents: The first flight—The palace of art.-Milton and Tennyson.-The Princess<br />

and Maud—In memoriam—Idylls of the king.-The dramatic triology—The B I<br />

e raDJe<br />

in Tennyson.—Fruit from an old tree.<br />

"List of biblical references and allusions," p.277-316<br />

A revision, with additions, of the author's "The poetry of Tennyson."<br />

Drama. Theatre<br />

Balderston, John Llovd. o r,<br />

TU I . \ r ° 22 • Bl 9<br />

The gen.us of the Marne; a play in three scenes, with an introduction<br />

by Ge<strong>org</strong>e Moore. 1919. Brown.<br />

The scene is Toff re's headquarters on the night of Sept. 4. ,914 The spirit of Nn<br />

poleon inspires the general with the strategy that wins the Battle of the .Marne!<br />

Chandler, Frank Wadleigh. „ ~ ,<br />

T,<br />

s<br />

842.09 C36<br />

The contemporary drama of France. 1920. Little. (Contemporary<br />

drama series.)<br />

"Bibliographical appendix," p.343-383<br />

Columbia University, New York—Teachers college 792 r C72<br />

Festival of the flag of stars, midyear. I9i 9; acting version used at<br />

the first production, Teachers college, Columbia University, Feb 2oth<br />

and 22d by the instructor and students in the course School and'community<br />

festivals. 1919. (Teachers college festival book, ,9,9.)<br />

Dargan, Mrs Olive (Tilford). g D<br />

Semiramis, and other plays. 1904. Brentano " ^<br />

Other plays: Carlotta.—The poet.<br />

Hare, Walter Ben.<br />

Costume monologues. 1919. Baker<br />

-wS;W\^V-feS"wH. d "A tW;nS r Li -- a-ounces her engagement.<br />

-The Lily of France -Mother rlZ A u " r P1,cebe — H " «rst club meeting.<br />

The human tonic.-A poor old maWTh 31 n" s "".- T " h "—\"'igone.-The coward-<br />

Uritty of the Hills.-Rag baby-Do w!th° h?' Wa ; tre T ss - Ha^ in the desert—Ann,<br />

—Springtime. *' " " h " ,e •»">'—Jimmie and the brand-new baby.<br />

Heydemann, Lillian P. (pseud. LiIy Carthew.) g T2 H„<br />

Uily Larthew's monologues. 1919 Baker "<br />

-Ndl~' ciiol-A^XtV^ " T""^ ""' ^°*-Au revoir-good-bye<br />

car.-An Assyrian'pedlt wl *-£° "J^T • M °" d *y-The critic on the street<br />

Mazic and the aeroplane -\Vhen the h, v - b^.ness man.-Having a manicure—<br />

day.-Two phases df a stage^career<br />

home—Off on a pienie.-Mamie-by-the-


BOOKS ADDED—JULY 1920 343<br />

Young Women's Christian Associations, United 792.2 Y41<br />

States—National board.<br />

Drama of Esther; written and given by the class in religious pedagogy<br />

at the National training school, March 1917. 1917.<br />

"Its aim is to make the characters of the story real and to suggest the value of using<br />

other Bible stories in a similar way." Foreword.<br />

Biography<br />

Booth, Gen. William. 92 B6333D<br />

Begbie, Harold. Life of General William Booth, the founder of<br />

the Salvation Army. 2v. 1920. Macmillan.<br />

The first volume begins with an account of social conditions in England at tlie<br />

time of Booth's birth and endeavors to interpret the character of the man both in his<br />

public and his private life through 18S1. It includes many interesting love letters.<br />

The second volume continues the narrative to his death in 1912.<br />

Brett, William Howard. qr 92 B7350<br />

Open shelf; memorial number, William Howard Brett, librarian of<br />

the Cleveland Public Library, Sept. 1, 1884-Aug. 24, 1918. [1918.]<br />

Brief sketch of Mr Brett's life and work, followed by resolutions, memorials, and<br />

appreciations.<br />

Huidekoper, Harm Jan.<br />

92 Hgnt<br />

Tiffany, Mrs Nina (Moore), & Tiffany, Francis. Harm Jan Huidekoper.<br />

1904. [Houghton.]<br />

Appendix: Holland Land Company.—Huidekoper genealogy.<br />

Mr Huidekoper was agent of the Holland Land Company and came to this country<br />

in 1796. He founded the Unitarian society and theological school at Meadville, Pa.<br />

"The sources of this memoir are mainly family letters and a brief autobiography,<br />

supplemented by the files of the 'Essayist' and the 'Western Messenger.' " Preface.<br />

James, Henry, 1843-1916. 92 J164JI<br />

Letters; selected and ed. by Percy Lubbock. 2v. 1920. Scribner.<br />

"I am brash enough to venture the prediction that the best book of Henry James's,<br />

the one with the widest appeal, the one with the most permanent interest, the one most<br />

easily read, is not to be found among those which he wrote for publication, but is this<br />

collection of his correspondence. What these letters bring before us vividly is a warmhearted<br />

James, devoted to his family and dowered with the gift of friendship." Brander<br />

Matthews, in New York Times, 1920.<br />

Priestley, Joseph. 92 P947P<br />

Peacock, David Henry. Joseph Priestley. 1919. Soc. for Promoting<br />

Christian Knowledge. (Pioneers of progress: men of science.)<br />

"Bibliography," p.63.<br />

Priestley was known in his own day as a heretic and regarded himself as a theologian.<br />

"He is mainly remembered now as a fertile experimenter in science, though that<br />

was his hobby, and this side of him Mr. Peacock treats with expert skill." Saturday review,<br />

1919.<br />

Roosevelt, Theodore. 92 R684ha<br />

Hagedorn, Hermann. Theodore Roosevelt; a biographical sketch.<br />

1919. Roosevelt Memorial Exhibition Committee, Columbia University.<br />

Shaw, Anna Howard. r 92 S534n<br />

National American Woman Suffrage Association. Anna Howard<br />

Shaw; a memorial. [i9 T 9-]<br />

Short sketches of Dr Shaw as humanitarian, as suffragist, and as patriot, followed<br />

by words of appreciation from various people and newspapers, and ending with memorable<br />

words taken from her writings and speeches.


344 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Sunday, William Ashley.<br />

92 8957b<br />

Brown, Elijah P. The real Billy Sunday; the life and work of<br />

William Ashley Sunday, the baseball evangelist. 1914- Revell.<br />

Contains also Sermons: The three groups, Under the sun, Wonderful, by W. A.<br />

Sunday.<br />

Mr Sunday says that this history of his life, written by a friend who has known<br />

him nearly all his Christian life, is the only one prepared with his sanction and permission.<br />

Collected Biography<br />

Bradford, Gamaliel, b. 1863.<br />

920.7 B68p<br />

Portraits of American women. 1919. Houghton.<br />

Contents: Abigail Adams.—Sarah Alden Ripley.—Mary Lyon.—Harriet Beecher<br />

Stowe.—Margaret Fuller Ossoli.—Louisa May Alcott.—Frances Elizabeth Willard.—<br />

Emily Dickinson.<br />

"Books most frequently cited," p.261—262.<br />

Continental Insurance Company.<br />

r 920 C76<br />

American opportunity; foremost Americans who, starting with few<br />

or no advantages, won success by their own brains and industry. 1919.<br />

Brief sketches, chronologically arranged, beginning with Benjamin Franklin and<br />

ending with John Willys, automobile manufacturer.<br />

Travel and Description<br />

Europe<br />

qr 914.15 C81<br />

Cork; its trade & commerce; official handbook of the Cork Incorporated<br />

Chamber of Commerce & Shipping, with classified trade indices in<br />

English, French & Spanish [ed. and comp. by D. J. Coakley]. ist issue.<br />

1919. Guy.<br />

Fraprie, Frank Roy.<br />

914-3 F88<br />

Little pilgrimages among Bavarian inns; an account of little journeys<br />

to the Bavarian highlands and to various quaint inns and hostelries<br />

in and out of the ancient towns, with reminiscences of student and<br />

artist life in Munich. 1906. Page.<br />

United States<br />

Morley, Christopher Darlington.<br />

917.4811 M89<br />

Travels in Philadelphia. 1920. McKay.<br />

"Who, but he [Morley], could find in the commonplace, sordid, and depressing<br />

streets of our city, subjects for a sheaf of dainty little essays, as delightful as they are<br />

unique?" A. Edward Newton, in Introduction.<br />

Newark, N. J.—Free public library.<br />

r 917.49 N261<br />

Newark's last 15 years, 1904-19; the story in outline. [1919.]<br />

Interesting facts about the city arranged alphabetically by subject.<br />

Steele, Thomas Sedgwick.<br />

917.41 S81<br />

Canoe and camera; a 200 mile tour through the Maine forests. 1882.<br />

Estes.<br />

A sketch of a canoe trip in Piscataquis county, along the east branch of the Penobscot<br />

river.


BOOKS ADDED—JULY 1920 345<br />

Other Countries<br />

Grenfell, Mrs Anna Elizabeth Caldwell (MacClanahan), 917.19 G875<br />

& Spalding, Katie.<br />

Le petit Nord; or, Annals of a Labrador harbour. 1920. Houghton.<br />

Letters giving an account of daily life and experiences in Newfoundland, by the<br />

wife of the noted Labrador doctor and the nurse who accompanied them. Le petit Nord<br />

is part of the island of Newfoundland, though often designated locally as Labrador.<br />

Koebel, William Henry.<br />

918.1 K36<br />

The great south land; the river Plate and southern Brazil of to-day.<br />

[1920.] Dodd.<br />

Attempts to show the reaction of South America to the world war. The second part<br />

of the book is devoted to a consideration of industrial and commercial questions.<br />

History<br />

Europe<br />

Bevan, Edwyn Robert.<br />

943 B46<br />

German social democracy during the war. [1918.] Allen.<br />

An account, based on printed utterances of participants, of the chief events in the<br />

history of the German Social Democrat party from the outbreak of the great war until<br />

the elevation of Count Hertling to the imperial chancellorship in November 1917.<br />

Cantacuzene, Julia (Grant), princess. 947 Ci7r<br />

Russian people; revolutionary recollections. 1920. Scribner.<br />

Appeared in the "Saturday evening post."<br />

A continuation of the author's "Revolutionary days," giving further tales of the<br />

varied and amazing currents of Russian developments.<br />

Jastrow, Morris. 949-6 J21<br />

The Eastern question and its solution. 1920. Lippincott.<br />

"This book is an outgrowth of two articles on Ts the Near-Eastern Question Capable<br />

of Solution?' which I contributed to the New York Sun of December 7th and 14th,<br />

1919." Preface.<br />

The author's plea is for America's co-operation in solving the Eastern question. He<br />

opposes the assuming of a mandate over any part of the Near East, and believes the creation<br />

of international commissions which aim to make the peoples of the smaller countries<br />

capable eventually of self-government is the only satisfactory solution.<br />

Palgrave, Sir Francis. 942 P18<br />

History of Normandy and of England, v.1-2. 1919. Cambridge<br />

University Press. (His Collected historical works, v.1-2.)<br />

"Memoir of Sir Francis Palgrave," v.i, pref. p. 11-56.<br />

"Authorities," v.2, p.499-506.<br />

Complete in 4V.<br />

The original edition ended with the accession of Henry I. This edition, edited by<br />

the author's son, Sir R. H. Inglis Palgrave, will, when complete, add the later years of<br />

the reign of Henry I and the reign of Stephen, heretofore unpublished.<br />

Spargo, John. 947 S73r<br />

Russia as an American problem. 1920. Harper.<br />

A challenge to America to interest itself in the problem of Russia's reconstruction.<br />

The author believes that the economic development of Russia means opportunity for the<br />

American business man and is politically wise in view of the danger of a Berlin-Tokio<br />

entente.<br />

Zimmer, Heinrich. 94°-i z & 2<br />

The Irish element in mediaeval culture; tr. by J. L. Edmands. 1891.<br />

Putnam.<br />

"It deals with known facts of ecclesiastical history, and gives a most graphic picture<br />

of the successive groups of Irish missionary monks, their labors in France, Italy,<br />

Switzerland and Germany, their strength and their weaknesses." Nation, 1S87.


346 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

United States<br />

Coolidge, Calvin.<br />

974-4 C78<br />

Have faith in Massachusetts; a collection of speeches and messages.<br />

1919. Houghton.<br />

Includes addresses and proclamations from 1914 through Nov. 11, 1919, by the Republican<br />

governor of Massachusetts.<br />

Paxson, Frederic Logan.<br />

g78 P32<br />

The last American frontier. 1918. Macmillan. (Stories from<br />

American history.)<br />

Bibliographical note, p.387-392.<br />

Describes the Indian frontier, the Santa Fe and Oregon trails, the Mormon pilgrimages,<br />

California and the forty-niners, the opening of the Union Pacific railroad,<br />

the Cheyenne and Sioux wars, and the last stand of Chief Joseph and Sitting Bull.<br />

Renaut, F. P.<br />

976.3 R33<br />

La question de la Louisiane, 1796-1806. [1918?]<br />

Published by the Societe de l'Histoire des Colonies Francaises.<br />

"Documents," p. 196—240.<br />

Extraits de la "Revue de I'histoire des colonies francaises," 2e, 3e et 4e trimestres<br />

1918.<br />

Requin, Edouard Jean.<br />

973.9132 R35<br />

America's race to victory, with an introduction by Gen. P. C. March.<br />

1919. Stokes.<br />

The author, a lieutenant colonel in the French army, came to this country in May<br />

1917 to study the military situation. In this book, he describes the problem that America<br />

faced and the way in which she solved it.<br />

qr 974.9 S69<br />

Somerset county historical quarterly, 1912-19. v.1-8. 1912-19.<br />

Published by Somerset County (N. J.) Historical Society.<br />

European War<br />

Braithwaite, William Stanley.<br />

940.911 B69<br />

The story of the great war. 1919. Stokes.<br />

For boys and girls. Gives a popular version of the events of the war in simple language.<br />

Illustrated with 12 colored plates.<br />

Brown, Carroll Neide, & Ion, T. P. tr. r 940.924 B;8<br />

Persecutions of the Greeks in Turkey since the beginning of the<br />

European war; tr. from official Greek documents. 191S. Oxford University<br />

Press, Amer. branch. (American-Hellenic Society. Publication<br />

no.3.)<br />

Bunau-Varilla, Philippe.<br />

940.911 B88<br />

The great adventure of Panama, wherein are exposed its relation to<br />

the great war and also the luminous traces of the German conspiracies<br />

against France and the United States. 1920. Doubleday.<br />

The former chief engineer of the French Panama Canal Company 'and instigator of<br />

Amerta<br />

aga ' nS ' C °'° mbia ' reveals G e r »<br />

in '»gue in "Central and South<br />

Gibbs, Philip. „ ,<br />

H<br />

'<br />

940.91 G36n<br />

Now it can be told. 1920. Harper.<br />

ha, tS°"T" S: t 0b f", ws and commanders.-The school of courage—The nature of a<br />

fields'cTf Add°„ dlSC ° nten '- Th e heart of a city-Psychology on the Sommc-The<br />

tields ot Aimageddun.—For what men died.<br />

Published in England under the title, "Realities of war "<br />

'The purpose- of this book is to get deeper into the truth of this war and of all


BOOKS ADDED—JULY 1920 347<br />

Gibbs, Philip—continued. 940.91 G36n<br />

war—not by a more detailed narrative of events, but rather as the truth was revealed to<br />

the minds of men, in many aspects, out of their experience; and by a plain statement of<br />

realities, however painful, to add something to the world's knowledge out of which men<br />

of good-will may try to shape some new system of relationship between one people and<br />

another, some new code of international morality." Preface.<br />

Graham, Stephen. 940.918 G77<br />

A private in the guards. 1919. Macmillan.<br />

"A record of [the author's] effort to preserve both his faith in the war and his<br />

Christian idealism... He finally emerges still confident that he fought in a good cause,<br />

still convinced that the spirit of the army is in a certain sense a spirit of holy sacrifice,<br />

but painfully conscious of the brutal and degrading effects of military life." New republic,<br />

1920.<br />

Hart, William Lee, comp. r 940.917 H31<br />

History of Base hospital number 53, Advance section, Service of<br />

supply, Langres, Haute-Marne, France. 1919. Base Printing Plant,<br />

29th Engineers, U. S. Army.<br />

Includes a roster of original members, officers, nurses, and enlisted personnel.<br />

Lindsey, Benjamin Barr, & O'Higgins, H. J. 940.922 L72<br />

The doughboy's religion, and other aspects of our day. 1920. Harper.<br />

Other aspects of our day: The Junker faith.—Horses' rights for women.—A league<br />

of understanding.<br />

Mr O'Higgins states that although the actual writing of the book was a work of<br />

collaboration, yet the message and the spirit of the utterance are Judge Lindsey's. He<br />

speaks as the advocate of a moral alliance among the nations in their efforts to combat<br />

those common social injustices and class miseries which were increased by the European<br />

war.<br />

Loreburn, Robert Threshire Reid, earl. 940.911 L86<br />

How the war came. 1920. Knopf.<br />

Appendix: Sir E. Grey's speech on 3rd August, 1914.<br />

A plea for "open covenants openly arrived at." Tries to show that though Germany<br />

should bear the immediate responsibility for precipitating the European war, the indirect<br />

but more fundamental cause was the secret negotiations in the foreign relations of all the<br />

countries concerned.<br />

Lovejoy, Mrs Esther (Clayson) Pohl. 940.917 L94<br />

The House of the Good Neighbor. 1919. Macmillan.<br />

An American doctor tells of her experiences in a social center in France during the<br />

great war. The official name of the house was the Residence Sociale.<br />

Maps—Germany. (1918.) r 912.43 M2<br />

The German blight; an exposure of German war aims. [1918.]<br />

National Review.<br />

Size, 30^ x 40^4 inches, folded in 4 0 cover; scale, 96 miles to 1 inch.<br />

Contains inset map "Germany's world aims."<br />

With an introductory pamphlet by Ge<strong>org</strong>e Philip.<br />

Mercier, Desire Felicien Frangois Joseph, cardinal. 940.924 M63<br />

Cardinal Mercier's own story; introduction by Fernand Mayence,<br />

prefatory letter by James, Cardinal Gibbons. 1920. Doran.<br />

Consists chiefly of his addresses, speeches, and pastorals, with the documents that<br />

passed between him and the German authorities during their occupation of Belgium.<br />

O'Shaughnessy, Mrs Edith Louise (Coues). 940.91 02gal<br />

Alsace in rust and gold. 1920. Harper.<br />

An account of the author's sojourn in Alsace with the French military mission during<br />

the 13 historic days preceding the armistice in the world war.


348 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Rageot, Gaston.<br />

r 940.928 R14<br />

La Frangaise dans la guerre. [1918.] (Petite bibliotheque de la<br />

guerre.)<br />

"Quelques ceuvres creees [sic] par l'activite feminine avant et pendant la guerre,"<br />

P-3I-32.<br />

An account of the work and influence of French women in winning the great war.<br />

Recouly, Raymond.<br />

940.913 R26f<br />

Foch, the winner of the war; tr. by M. C. Jones. 1920. Scribner.<br />

Written entirely from the military point of view.<br />

Wilson, Louis N.<br />

r 940.91 W76<br />

War collection at Clark University library. 1918. Clark University<br />

Press. (Clark University—Library. Publications, v.6, no.i.)<br />

Includes books, posters, and pictures arranged by country, and also medals.<br />

Yeats-Brown, Francis Charles Claypon.<br />

940.917 Y22<br />

Caught by the Turks. 1920. Macmillan.<br />

A narrative of the experiences of an English observer who, with his pilot, was captured<br />

near Bagdad and retained as a prisoner of war for nearly three years. His account<br />

of life in a Turkish prison camp and his adventurous attempts to escape make a<br />

tale stranger than fiction.<br />

Books for the Blind<br />

Revised Braille with Contractions<br />

Connolly, James Brendan.<br />

E C753t<br />

The trawler, and The commandeering of the "Lucy Foster." Howe<br />

Pub. Soc. for the Blind.<br />

French, Henry Willard.<br />

E F92.GI<br />

Lance of Kanana. 3 pts. in 3v. Howe Pub. Soc. for the Blind.<br />

Young People's Books<br />

Bennett, Charles Alpheus.<br />

j 744 B43<br />

Problems in mechanical drawing; drawings by F. D. Crawshaw.<br />

[1918.] Manual Arts Press.<br />

Griffith, Ira Samuel.<br />

j 744 G8g<br />

Projects for beginning woodwork and mechanical drawing. [1919.]<br />

Manual Arts Press.<br />

Lear, Edward.<br />

j 827 L45J<br />

The jumblies, and other nonsense verses, with drawings by L. L.<br />

Brooke. [1910?] Warne.<br />

Other nonsense verses: The owl and the pussycat.—The broom, the shovel, the<br />

poker and the tongs.—The duck and the kangaroo.—The cummerbund.—The dong<br />

with a luminous nose.—The new vestments.—Calico pic—The courtship of the Yonghy-<br />

Bonghy-B6.—Incidents in the life of my Uncle Arly.<br />

Wallace, Dillon.<br />

j \V175r<br />

The Ragged Inlet guards; a story of adventure in Labrador. Revell.<br />

The tunc is that of the European war. Four boys, whose fathers and older brothers<br />

are fighting "over seas," form themselves into a company of soldiers to guard Big Bowl<br />

harbor and Ragged Inlet. They have a real share in the great world struggle and finally<br />

capture a German wireless station.


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Remittances must be made in advance, payable to Carnegie Library of<br />

Pittsburgh. All publications not marked * may be had free at the<br />

Library, or will be sent postpaid for 5 cents each.<br />

•Classified Catalogue of the Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh.<br />

FIRST SERIES, 1895-1902. 1907. vol. 1-3. 3,890 pp. $12.00.<br />

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349


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What a Public Library Finds to Do; by Elisa May Willard. 1917. 18 pp.<br />

Reference Lists<br />

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Braddock's Expedition. 11 pp. (Monthly Bulletin, Nov. 1906.)<br />

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Expeditions of General Forbes against Fort Duquesne. 1908. 20 pp.<br />

Expeditions of General Bouquet to the Ohio Country, 1763 and 1764.<br />

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•Pennsylvania; a Reading List for the Use of Schools, with Special<br />

Reference to Indian Warfare and the Local History of Pittsburgh,<br />

1911. 83 pp. 20 cents; postpaid, 25 cents.<br />

Pittsburgh in 1816. 1916. 75 pp.<br />

Washington's Visits to Pittsburgh and the Ohio Country. 15 pp.<br />

(Monthly Bulletin, Feb. 1908.)<br />

The Whiskey Insurrection. 9 pp. (Monthly Bulletin, July 1906.)<br />

Biography<br />

Famous Royal Women; a Reading List for Girls. 1908. 11 pp.<br />

Lives and Letters; a Selected and Annotated List. 1910. 36pp.<br />

*Men of Science and Industry; a Guide to the Biographies of Scientists<br />

Engineers, Inventors and Physicians, in the Carnegie Library of<br />

Pittsburgh. 1915. 189pp. 20 cents; postpaid, 30 cents.<br />

Sociology<br />

Housing. 1912. 45 pp.<br />

Immigration. 1918. 12 pp. -


PUBLICATIONS OF THE LIBRARY 351<br />

Publications of Interest to Engineers<br />

Air-Brakes. 1915. 55 pp.<br />

Air Conditioning. 1914. 58 pp.<br />

Brick Manufacture and Bricklaying. 26 pp. (Monthly Bulletin, Jan.<br />

1912.)<br />

By-Product Coking. 1915. 40 pp.<br />

Case-Hardening. 1918. 10 pp.<br />

Electric Driving in Rolling-Mills and Foundries. 11 pp. (Monthly<br />

Bulletin, Nov. 1907.)<br />

Engineering Ethics. 1917. 17 pp.<br />

Floods and Flood Protection. 48 pp. (Monthly Bulletin, July 1908.)<br />

Floods and Flood Protection. Supplement. 1911. 19 pp.<br />

The Gyroscope. 1917. 23 pp.<br />

•Index to Proceedings of the Engineers' Society of Western Pennsylvania,<br />

Volumes 1 to 20, 1880-1904; Compiled by Harrison W.<br />

Craver. 1906. 144 pp. $1.00 postpaid.<br />

•Index to the Classified Catalogue of the Technology Department. 2d<br />

edition. 1916. 63 pp. 10 cents.<br />

Lampblack. 1919. 8 pp.<br />

List of Technical Indexes and Bibliographies Appearing Serially. 1910.<br />

17 PP-<br />

Market Prices Appearing Currently in Technical and Trade Journals.<br />

1918. 6 pp.<br />

•Men of Science and Industry; a Guide to the Biographies of Scientists,<br />

Engineers, Inventors and Physicians, in the Carnegie Library of<br />

Pittsburgh. 1915. 189pp. 20 cents; postpaid, 30 cents.<br />

Metal Corrosion and Protection. 2d edition, revised and enlarged.<br />

58 pp. (Monthly Bulletin, July 1909.)<br />

Mica. 12 pp. (Monthly Bulletin, Oct. 1908.)<br />

Refuse and Garbage Disposal. 1909. 39 pp.<br />

Road Dust Preventives. 1916. 39 pp.<br />

•Sand; Its Occurrence, Properties and Uses. 1918. 72 PP- 15 cents.<br />

postpaid.<br />

Scientific and Technical Reference Books. 19 PP- (Monthly Bulletin,<br />

Nov. 1916.)<br />

•Sewage Disposal and Treatment. 1910. 96 pp. 15 cents, postpaid.<br />

Smoke Prevention. 18 pp. (Monthly Bulletin, May 1907.)<br />

Sodium Nitrate Industry of Chile. 7 pp. (Monthly Bulletin, March<br />

1908.)<br />

Steam Turbines. 21 pp. (Monthly Bulletin, Nov. 1904.)<br />

•Technical Book Review Index, v.i-date, March 1917-date. 50 cents<br />

a year, postpaid.<br />

No. 1-3, March, April, May, published in the Monthly Bulletin of those months,<br />

5 cents each, postpaid.<br />

v.i, no.4-v.3, no.4 (July 1917-December 1919), issued separately, quarterly, 15<br />

cents each, postpaid.<br />

Trees and Forestry. 1917. 18 pp.


352 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Library Work with Children<br />

•Catalogue of Books, Annotated and Arranged, and Provided by the<br />

Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh for the Use of the First Eight<br />

Grades in the Pittsburgh Schools. 1907. 331 pp. 35 cents;<br />

postpaid, 50 cents.<br />

•Annotated Catalogue of Books Used in the Home Libraries and<br />

Reading Clubs. 1905. no pp. 20 cents; postpaid, 25 cents.<br />

Patriotism Through Literature; by Elva S. Smith. 1919. 17 pp.<br />

(Monthly Bulletin, June 1919.)<br />

Story-Telling<br />

Stories from the Ballads of Robin Hood; Outlines for Story-Telling.<br />

1914. 38 pp.<br />

Stories from the Norse; Outlines for Story-Telling. 1914. 22 pp.<br />

•Stories to Tell to Children. 2d edition. 1918. 72 pp. 25 cents.<br />

Reading Lists<br />

Famous Royal Women; a Reading List for Girls. 1908. II pp.<br />

Favorite Books of Well-known People When They Were Boys and<br />

Girls. 2d reprint. 1918. 12 pp.<br />

"Foreign Lands Where Wonders Are." 1911. 14 pp.<br />

•Pennsylvania; a Reading List for the Use of Schools, with Special<br />

Reference to Indian Warfare and the Local History of Pittsburgh.<br />

1911. 83 pp. 20 cents; postpaid, 25 cents.<br />

luly 12, 1920.


CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

MONTHLY BULLETIN<br />

VOL. 25 OCTOBER 1920 NO. 8<br />

SOUTH SIDE BRANCH<br />

CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

PITTSBURGH<br />

CARNEGIE LIBRARY<br />

1920


Board of Trustees<br />

S. H. CHURCH, President<br />

ANDREW W. MELLON, Vice-President<br />

J. D. HAILMAN, Secretary<br />

JAMES H. REED, Treasurer<br />

E. V. BABCOCK DAVID B. OLIVER<br />

W. W. BLACKBURN H. K. PORTER<br />

JOHN H. DAILEY<br />

W. H. ROBERTSON<br />

W. Y. ENGLISH CHARLES L. TAYLOR<br />

ROBERT GARLAND<br />

J.J- TURNER<br />

JOHN H. HENDERSON<br />

H. D. WILLIAMS<br />

JOHN S. HERRON<br />

DANIEL WINTERS<br />

J. J. TURNER, Chairman<br />

Library Committee<br />

E. V. BABCOCK J. D. HAILMAN<br />

ROBERT GARLAND DANIEL WINTERS<br />

Director<br />

JOHN H. LEETE<br />

Central Library, Schenley Park<br />

Branch Libraries<br />

Lawrenceville Branch, 279 Fisk Street<br />

West End Branch, Wabash and Neptune Streets<br />

Wylie Avenue Branch, Wylie Avenue and Green Street<br />

Mount Washington Branch, 315 Grandview Avenue<br />

Hazelwood Branch, 4748 Monongahela Street<br />

East Liberty Branch, Station Street and Larimer Avenue<br />

South Side Branch, Carson and Twenty-second Streets<br />

Homewood Branch, Hamilton and Lang Avenues


Contents<br />

Page<br />

The Pilgrims - 357<br />

The Origin of the Term "Indian<br />

Summer" - 359<br />

New Publications of the Library<br />

- - - - - - 361<br />

South Side Branch - - - 361<br />

New Periodicals - - - 363<br />

Twenty-fifth Anniversary Celebration<br />

- - - - - - 363<br />

Books Added, July 1 to<br />

October 1, 1920.<br />

Aerial Navigation - - - 389<br />

Agriculture - - - - - ~tgy<br />

Americanization and Immigration<br />

- - - - - - 375<br />

Architecture - - - - - 402<br />

Banking. Finance - - - 379<br />

Biography - 408<br />

Blind, Books for the - - 416<br />

Business. Communication - 398<br />

Capital. Labor. Wages - 377<br />

Chemical Technology - - 400<br />

Chemistry - - - - - 390<br />

Commerce - - - - - - 385<br />

Domestic Economy - - 398<br />

Drama. Theatre - - - - 406<br />

Economics - - - - - 375<br />

Education - - - - - - 383<br />

Engineering - - - - - 395<br />

Ethics - - - - - - - 370<br />

European War - 4M<br />

Fiction - - - - - - - 364<br />

Fine Arts - - - - - 401<br />

Forestry - - - - - - 398<br />

French Fiction - - - -<br />

General Works - - -<br />

Geology - - - - - -<br />

Heraldry. Flags - - -<br />

History - - - - - -<br />

Humor. Satire -<br />

Insurance - - - - -<br />

Jews and Judaism -<br />

Language - - - - -<br />

Law - - - - - -<br />

Libraries - - - - - -<br />

Literature - - - - -<br />

Maps - - - - - - -<br />

Medicine, Physiology, Hy<br />

giene - - - - -<br />

Military Science - - -<br />

Music - - - - - -<br />

Philosophy - - - - -<br />

Physics . - - - -<br />

Poetry - - - - - -<br />

Politics and Government -<br />

Railroads - - - - -<br />

Recreation -<br />

Religion - - - - - -<br />

Science -<br />

Sociology - - - - -<br />

Spanish Fiction - - -<br />

Taxation - - - - -<br />

Travel and Description<br />

Useful Arts - - - - -<br />

Women - - - - -<br />

Young People's Books -<br />

Page<br />

36-<br />

- 368<br />

390<br />

- 410<br />

412<br />

- 408<br />

382<br />

• 372<br />

386<br />

381<br />

368<br />

404<br />

410<br />

392<br />

382<br />

403<br />

368<br />

388<br />

405<br />

374<br />

385<br />

4i >4<br />

371<br />

3§7<br />

372<br />

367<br />

380<br />

4U<br />

391<br />

386<br />

421


Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh<br />

Monthly Bulletin<br />

Published monthly, except in August and September, by the Carnegie Library of<br />

Pittsburgh, Forbes Street and Bellefield Avenue, Schenley Park, Pittsburgh, Pa. President,<br />

S. H. Church, Carnegie Library, Forbes Street and Bellefield Avenue; Secretary,<br />

J. D. Hailman; Treasurer, James H. Reed, 1027 Carnegie Building; Director, John H.<br />

Leete, Carnegie Library, Forbes Street and Bellefield Avenue.<br />

Subscription 50 cents a year.<br />

Vol. 25 October 1920 No. 8<br />

The Pilgrims<br />

The Importance of the Pilgrim Migration<br />

From an address by Theodore Roosevelt.<br />

The coming hither of the Pilgrims three centuries ago shaped the<br />

destinies of this Continent, and therefore profoundly affected the destiny<br />

of the whole world.<br />

The Distinction Between Pilgrims and Puritans<br />

The Pilgrims, who settled at Plymouth, and the Puritans,<br />

who later settled at Salem and Boston, are often erroneously<br />

considered as one and the same. There was, on the contrary, a<br />

clearly recognized difference in their religious beliefs which<br />

kept them separate and distinct political bodies during the early<br />

years of their settlement. The distinction is brought out in the<br />

following paragraph.<br />

From an address by Benjamin Scott Chamberlain of London.<br />

The actual difference between the Pilgrims and the Puritans was<br />

that the Pilgrims were Separatists and sought the New World in order<br />

to have freedom to worship God according to the dictates of their consciences,<br />

while the Puritans desired no separation from the church [the<br />

Church of England] itself, only from the abuses of the church, and<br />

sought only to reform it.<br />

.15 7


358 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

The Pilgrims' Reasons for Leaving England<br />

From the Bradford Manuscript.<br />

After these things, they could not long continue in any peaceable<br />

condition; but were hunted and persecuted on every side: so as their<br />

former afflictions were but as flea-bitings in comparison of these which<br />

now came upon them. For some were taken and clapt up in prison.<br />

Others had their houses beset and watched, night and day; and hardly<br />

escaped their hands: and the most were fain to fly and leave their<br />

houses and habitations, and the means of their livelihood. Yet these,<br />

and many other sharper things which afterwards befell them, were no<br />

other than they looked for: and therefore were [they] the better prepared<br />

to bear them by the assistance of GOD'S grace and SPIRIT.<br />

Yet seeing themselves thus molested; and that there was no hope<br />

of their continuance there [as a Church] : by a joint consent, they resolved<br />

to go into the Low Countries, where they heard was Freedom of<br />

Religion for all men; as also how sundry, from London and other parts<br />

of the land [of England], had been exiled and persecuted for the same<br />

Cause, and were gone thither, and lived at Amsterdam and in other<br />

places of the land [of Holland].<br />

The Pilgrims' Reasons for Leaving Holland<br />

From John A. Goodwin's "The Pilgrim Republic."<br />

By 1617it was found that few with their constant and hard labor<br />

could earn more than a fairly comfortable living; provision for old age<br />

and reverses was impossible, and the children were deprived of proper<br />

education, many of the young being obliged to work prematurely, to<br />

the hindrance of their physical growth,—a lot which most of them<br />

cheerfully met for their parents' sake, but which to their elders was a<br />

source of much grief. So hard was this life that many later comers<br />

returned to England, choosing the risk of imprisonment there to the<br />

constant toil which in Holland would only earn a bare support during a<br />

man's best years. Hence the congregation fell away one half from its<br />

largest size.<br />

The young, too, were naturally acquiring a home-feeling for Holland;<br />

some entered her army or went to sea in her ships, and others had<br />

found the daughters of the land fair to look upon. Soon they would<br />

become Dutch in tastes and habits, and the third generation would be<br />

likely not only to lose the English language and character, but to allow<br />

the precious fire to die out on the Pilgrim altar. In the Netherlands,<br />

as111 other Continental countries, Sunday was made a day of recreation<br />

and jollity; and the Pilgrim lads (the younger portion of whom had<br />

never known any other public practice) were naturally growing into<br />

the ways of the country. There was, too, much license among the<br />

Dutch youth, which was contagious, and had already made some moral<br />

wrecks. The welfare of the children especially demanded a removal;<br />

and did not the Lord's service require them to go where they might do


THE ORIGIN OF THE TERM "INDIAN SUMMER" 359<br />

something towards extending the light of the gospel in "remote parts<br />

of the world," says Bradford,—"yea, though they should be but even<br />

as stepping-stones to others, for the performing of so great a work"...<br />

The dread of the Spaniards was among the reasons for leaving Leyden<br />

and the Netherlands. For more than thirty years had the sturdy<br />

Dutchmen warred most nobly against the Spanish tyrants, and had so<br />

far sustained themselves that a twelve-years' truce had been declared<br />

in 1609, at about the time our Pilgrims came to Leyden, where the<br />

memories of its terrible siege were still fresh, and of which its University<br />

was and is a grand memorial. The truce was about to close, and<br />

vast preparations were being made for a renewal of the most tragic<br />

conflict of European history. . .<br />

The emigrants, however, absorbed by the things which were before,<br />

cannot have left Leyden without emotion. That still was the home of<br />

the greater part of the congregation; within her walls many of them<br />

had passed from youth to adult life; there not a few had married; there<br />

had most of the children been born, and many of the worn-out exiles<br />

been buried. In their memories Leyden must always be cherished, and<br />

her peace be remembered in their prayers. Bradford never wrote a<br />

finer sentence than this, which ends his story of the departure:—<br />

"So they left that goodly and pleasant city which had been their<br />

resting-place near twelve years; but they knew they were PILGRIMS,<br />

and looked not much on those things, but lifted up their eyes to the<br />

heavens, their dearest country, and quieted their spirits."<br />

The Origin of the Term "Indian Summer"<br />

From Joseph Doddridge's "Notes on the Settlement and Indian Wars of the Western<br />

Parts of Virginia and Pennsylvania," probably first published in 1824.<br />

As connected with the history of the Indian wars of the western<br />

country it may not be amiss to give an explanation of the term Indian<br />

summer. This expression, like many others, has continued in general<br />

use notwithstanding its original import has been f<strong>org</strong>otten. A backwoodsman<br />

seldom hears this expression without feeling a chill of<br />

horror, because it brings to his mind the painful recollection of its<br />

original application. Such is the force of the faculty of association in<br />

human nature.<br />

The reader must here be reminded that, during the long continued<br />

Indian wars sustained by the first settlers of the western country, they<br />

enjoyed no peace excepting in the winter season, when, owing to the<br />

severity of the weather, the Indians were unable to make their excursions<br />

into the settlements. The onset of winter was therefore hailed<br />

as a jubilee by the early inhabitants of the country who throughout the


360 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

spring, and the early part of the fall, had been cooped up in their l<br />

uncomfortable forts, and subjected to all the distresses of the Indian<br />

war. At the approach of winter, therefore, all the farmers, excepting<br />

the owner of the fort, removed to their cabins on their farms, with the<br />

joyful feelings of a tenant of a prison on recovering his release from<br />

confinement. All was bustle and hilarity, in preparing for winter, by<br />

gathering in the corn, digging potatoes, fattening hogs, and repairing<br />

the cabins. To our forefathers, the gloomy months of winter were<br />

more pleasant than the zephyrs of spring and the flowers of May.<br />

It however sometimes happened that after the apparent onset of<br />

winter, the weather became warm, the smoky time commenced and<br />

lasted for a considerable number of days. This was the Indian summer,<br />

because it afforded the Indians another opportunity of visiting the<br />

settlements with their destructive warfare. The melting of the snow<br />

saddened every countenance and the general warmth of the sun chilled<br />

every heart with horror. The apprehension of another visit from the<br />

Indians, and of being driven back to the detested fort, was painful in<br />

the highest degree and the distressing apprehension was frequently<br />

realized.<br />

Toward the latter part of February we commonly had a fine spell<br />

of open warm weather, during which the snow melted away. This was<br />

denominated the Pawwawing days, from the supposition that the Indians<br />

were then holding their war councils, for planning off their spring<br />

campaigns into the settlements. Sad experience taught us that in this<br />

conjecture, we were not often mistaken.<br />

From John F. Watson's "Annals of Philadelphia and Pennsylvania."<br />

This was a short season of very fine mild weather, which was<br />

formerly much more manifest than of later years. It was expected to<br />

occur in the last days of November. It was a bland and genial time, in<br />

which the birds, the insects, and the plants, felt a new creation, and<br />

sported a short-lived summer, ere they shrunk finally from the rigour<br />

of the winter's blast. The sky, in the mean time, was always thinly<br />

veiled in a murky haze—intercepting the direct rays of the sun, yet<br />

passing enough of light and heat to prevent sensations of gloom or<br />

chill.<br />

The aged have given it as their tradition, that the Indians, long<br />

aware of such an annual return of pleasant days, were accustomed to<br />

say "they always had a second summer of nine days just before the<br />

winter set in." From this cause,it was said, the white inhabitants, in<br />

early times, calledit the "Indian summer." It was the favourite time,it<br />

was said, of the Indian harvest, when they looked to gather in their<br />

corn.


LIBRARY NEWS AND NOTICES 361<br />

New Publications of the Library<br />

Annual Reports<br />

The twenty-fourth "Annual Reports"' of the Library, consisting<br />

of 105 pages, was issued in July. This report is an<br />

effort to give a bird's-eye view of the life and problems of the<br />

Library and was prepared, not for the technical librarian, but<br />

for the person less intimately acquainted with the details of<br />

library administration. It is hoped, however, that it includes<br />

sufficient statistical data to satisfy the library expert. This<br />

publication will be sent free on request.<br />

Carnegie Institute and Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh<br />

The handbook of the Institute and Library, a preliminary<br />

edition of which was issued in the summer of 1918 when the<br />

National Education Association met in Pittsburgh, was issued<br />

in July in a revised and illustrated edition under the title "Carnegie<br />

Institute and Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh." It consists<br />

of seventy-two pages in which are described the buildings<br />

and the work of the Institute and the Library. The price of<br />

this publication is thirty cents postpaid.<br />

The Pilgrims<br />

A brief list of selected material for use in connection with<br />

the Pilgrim Tercentenary Celebration was issued in September.<br />

It will be sent postpaid on receipt of five cents, or may be had<br />

free at the Library.<br />

South Side Branch<br />

Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh<br />

The South Side Branch Library, located at Twenty-second<br />

and Carson Streets, was formally opened on the thirtieth of<br />

January 1909.<br />

It is in the center of an industrial district in<br />

which there are steel and iron mills and glass factories.<br />

This branch does much work with children of both grade<br />

school and high school age—lends them books, helps them find


362 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

what they need in the reference work assigned in the schools,<br />

has story-telling hours to acquaint them with the famous stories<br />

in literature, and conducts clubs of various kinds. Lending<br />

books and giving help with reference questions, the greater<br />

part of which are on technical subjects, is the principal work<br />

with adults. In addition, this library serves as a center and<br />

clearing house for many of the activities of the district.<br />

There are, as in most industrial sections, many foreigners,<br />

and for them this branch has books in Polish, Lithuanian, German,<br />

Russian, Hungarian, Swedish, French, Yiddish, and<br />

Italian. It will soon have some in Slovakian.<br />

The character of the district and the spirit of the work<br />

which this branch is trying to do, are aptly shown in the following<br />

verses by Miss Mary D. Lindsay.<br />

South Side and the Library<br />

With pillars of smoke that cloud the day<br />

And pillars of flame by night.<br />

With the thud of mighty bellows and f<strong>org</strong>e<br />

And roar of the coal in its red hot g<strong>org</strong>e,<br />

The people we serve, pursue their lives,<br />

Bees in the giant factory hives.<br />

They've come from over the seven seas.<br />

Out of a hundred lands,<br />

Come with traditions and native ways,<br />

Stories of far off heroes and days,<br />

Differing customs and language and jokes,<br />

Living together a town—of folks.<br />

And each has brought his hopes and fears,<br />

His vision and great desire,<br />

Sometimes tarnished and growing dim,<br />

Sometimes burning a fire in him,<br />

Humdrum living and seething thought,<br />

Strange philosophies life has taught.<br />

And we, as is meet, must give to each<br />

The fuel to fan his flame,<br />

And knowing them all, make each one see<br />

The gifts he can bring that in some degree<br />

Will help all the others to understand<br />

Themselves, each other, and life's demand.


LIBRARY NEWS AND NOTICES<br />

33<br />

New Periodicals<br />

The following periodicals have recently been added to the<br />

list of those regularly received in the Periodical Room;<br />

American Mineralogist. Lancaster.<br />

American Railroad Association—Signal Division. Advance Notice<br />

New York.<br />

Diagonal. New Haven.<br />

Freeman. New York.<br />

Giornale di Chimica Industriale ed Applicata. Milan.<br />

Helvetica Chimica Acta. Geneva.<br />

Jewish Tribune. Paris.<br />

Journal de Chimie Physique. Paris.<br />

League of Nations Official Journal. London.<br />

Market Reporter. Washington.<br />

Messenger. Meadville, Pa.<br />

Monthly Bulletin of Statistics. London.<br />

National Inland Waterways. Pittsburgh.<br />

Pencil Points. New York.<br />

Radio Review. London.<br />

Southwestern Political Science Quarterly. Austin, Texas.<br />

Technical Review. London.<br />

L'Usine. Paris.<br />

Twenty-fifth Anniversary Celebration<br />

The Library is making plans for the celebration of the<br />

twenty-fifth anniversary of its opening on November 5, 1895.<br />

One of the features of the celebration will be an "open night" on<br />

November the fifth, at which time the departments usually not<br />

open to the public—such as the Printing and Binding, Catalogue,<br />

and Order Departments—will be open for inspection.<br />

There will likewise be special exhibitions in every department.<br />

Everyone is invited to come on that evening to see what use is<br />

being made of the money which the city spends to maintain the<br />

Library.


Books Added to the Library<br />

July 1 to October 1, 1920<br />

An r or b prefixed to the call number indicates that the book must be<br />

called for and used iu the Reference or the Technology Room; j that it<br />

especially suitable for children; and q that it is quarto size or larger<br />

Fiction<br />

Capes, Bernard. Ci8isk<br />

The skeleton key, with introduction by G. K. Chesterton. Doran.<br />

A baffling tale of an elaborate murder mystery involving a pretty girl, a mock<br />

marriage, a happy love affair, and much perjury.<br />

Chekhov, Anton Pavlovich. C4i8bi<br />

The bishop, and other stories; from the Russian by Constance Garnett.<br />

Macmillan. (Tales, v.7.)<br />

Other stories: The letter.—Easter eve.—A nightmare.—The murder.—Uprooted.—<br />

The steppe.<br />

Conrad, Joseph. C755re<br />

The rescue; a romance of the shallows. Doubleday.<br />

A colorful tale of the Malay archipelago and its surrounding waters, in which an<br />

English adventurer finds himself torn between two duties—that to the native prince who<br />

had saved his life, and that to his fellow countrymen in their stranded yacht. Begun<br />

over 20 years ago and only recently completed.<br />

Curtis, Ge<strong>org</strong>e William. r Cg34t<br />

Trumps; a novel; illustrated by Augustus Hoppin. Harper.<br />

A series of satirical sketches of social and political life in New York.<br />

Dodge, Henry Irving. D669S<br />

Skinner makes it fashionable. Harper.<br />

Appeared in the "Saturday evening post," v.192, Jan. 10, 1920.<br />

An amusing tale of how the high cost of living was reduced and thrift made fashionable<br />

in the town of Meadeville.<br />

Ervine, St. John Greer. E788f<br />

The foolish lovers. 1920. Macmillan.<br />

The story of a young Irishman wholly self-willed and determined to have his own<br />

way in everything, including his romance.<br />

Ferber, Edna. F371I1<br />

Half portions. Doubleday.<br />

Contents: The maternal feminine.—April 25th, as usual.—Old lady Mandle.—<br />

You've got to be selfish.—Long distance.—Un morso doo pang.—One hundred percent.<br />

—Farmer in the dell.—The dancing girls.<br />

Intensely human stories of every-day people.<br />

3'n


BOOKS ADDED—OCTOBER 1920 365<br />

Gale, Zona. Gi45mi<br />

Miss Lulu Bett. Appleton.<br />

A story of middle Western life centering about a spinster who longs for sympathy<br />

and an escape from a cheerless life of drudgery in her sister's household.<br />

Goss, Charles Frederic.<br />

G6g8r<br />

The redemption of David Corson. Bowen-Merrill.<br />

Love story of a Quaker boy, strong and fine but undisciplined, and a beautiful<br />

gipsy girl.<br />

Gregory, Jackson.<br />

G8672I<br />

Ladyfingers. Scribner.<br />

i\n adventure tale of the San Francisco underworld.<br />

Haggard, Sir Henry Rider.<br />

Hi4ial<br />

Allan Quatermain; an account of his further adventures and discoveries<br />

in company with Sir Henry Curtis, Commander John Good<br />

and one Umslopogaas. Longmans.<br />

In some sort a sequel to the author's "King Solomon's mines." It recounts surprising<br />

adventures on a subterranean river which leads to the city of the Zu-Vendi<br />

people.<br />

Hewlett, Maurice Henry.<br />

H4gglg<br />

The light heart. Holt.<br />

A tragic tale of Thormod, the poet, drawn from the Icelandic sagas.<br />

Hewlett, Maurice Henry.<br />

H4ggou<br />

The outlaw. Dodd.<br />

The story of Gisli, the outlaw, and the magic sword, Grayflanks, adapted from one<br />

of the early sagas of Iceland.<br />

Hichens, Robert Smythe.<br />

H5222S<br />

Snake-bite* and other stories. Doran.<br />

Other stories: The lost faith.—The Hindu.—The lighted candles.—The nomad.—<br />

The two fears.<br />

Jacobsen, Jens Peter.<br />

Ji342n<br />

Niels Lyhne; tr. from the Danish by H. A. Larsen. American-<br />

Scandinavian foundation. (Scandinavian classics.)<br />

A temperamental autobiography, picturing the states of soul of a Hamlet-like<br />

dreamer.<br />

Johnston, William Andrew.<br />

J37im<br />

Mystery in the Ritsmore. Little.<br />

A detective story in which a bride discovers the dead body of a beautiful woman in<br />

the closet of her bedroom at a hotel.<br />

Kelland, Clarence Budington.<br />

Ki6se<br />

Efficiency Edgar. Harper.<br />

A humorous story of a man who tries to apply efficiency methods to his courtship.<br />

to the management of his home, and to the training of his chdd.<br />

Kelly, Thomas Howard.<br />

K1722W<br />

What outfit, Buddy? Harper.<br />

The story of a fighting Yank and his experiences with the American expeditionary<br />

forces.<br />

Korolenko, Vladimir.<br />

K 3 86bi<br />

Birds of heaven, and other stories; tr. from the Russian by C. A.<br />

Manning. Duffield. • ,, , -n. -n „f<br />

Other stories: Isn't it terrible?-"Necessity."-On the Volga.-The village of<br />

G ° d 'short stories, four of which depict Russian character. "Necessity" is a mystical<br />

Eastern tale that attempts to reconcile necessity and free will.


366 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Kyne, Peter Bernard. K448k<br />

Kindred of the dust. Cosmopolitan Book Corporation.<br />

"Story of the great Northwest dealing with a man's belief in the woman he loves."<br />

Publishers' weekly, 1920.<br />

Kyne, Peter Bernard. K448W<br />

Webster—man's man. Grosset.<br />

A soldier-of-fortune novel, in which the hero is a mining engineer. The action—<br />

and there is plenty of it—takes place in a Central American republic which is on the<br />

verge of revolution.<br />

Luehrmann, Adele. Lg7St<br />

The triple mystery. Dodd.<br />

A detective story concerned with three mysterious deaths and two romances.<br />

Macfarlan, Alexander. Mi572i<br />

The inscrutable lovers; a tragic comedy. Dodd.<br />

The romance of an Irish girl, daughter of an idealistic patriot, and a Scotchman,<br />

the son of a hard-headed practical business man. The scene is laid in Ireland and Scotland<br />

during the European war.<br />

Maugham, William Somerset. M488e<br />

The explorer [a novel]. Doran.<br />

A young Scotchman, bent on empire-building in Africa, takes with him the brother<br />

of the girl he loves. His efforts to make a man of the boy fail, but the expedition is<br />

successful and the explorer finds romance in England.<br />

Montague, Margaret Prescott. M846e<br />

England to America, with an introduction by John Drinkwater.<br />

Doubleday.<br />

Appeared in "Atlantic monthly," v.124, Sept. 1919.<br />

Poignant little story of the brave, unselfish tribute paid to an American aviator by<br />

an English family that had given its all in the great war.<br />

Montgomery, Lucy Maud. M864f<br />

Further chronicles of Avonlea. Page.<br />

Contents: Aunt Cynthia's Persian cat.—The materializing of Cecil.—Her father's<br />

daughter.—Jane's baby.—The dream-child.—The brother who failed.—The return of<br />

Hester.—The little brown book of Miss Emily.—Sara's way.—The son of his mother.—<br />

The education of Betty.—In her selfless mood.—The conscience case of David Bell.—<br />

Only a common fellow.-—Tannis of the Flats.<br />

Short stories of people and events in Avonlea, the home of the heroine of Green<br />

Gables.<br />

Morris, Harrison Smith. Mgi6h<br />

Hannah Bye. Penn Pub. Co.<br />

The story of a rural Quaker community into which a depraved city man brings tragedy.<br />

Myers, Anna Balmer. Mgg3p<br />

Patchwork; a story of "the plain people." Jacobs.<br />

Written in dia­<br />

A tale of life and love in a quaint Pennsylvania Dutch community.<br />

lect.<br />

Oldmeadow, Ernest James. O2312C<br />

Coggin [a novel]. Century.<br />

An English story centering about Harry Coggin, the son of the rag-and-bone man,<br />

who wins a scholarship formerly considered the property of an upper class family.


BOOKS ADDED—OCTOBER 1920 367<br />

Paine, Ralph Delahaye. Pi64sh<br />

Ships across the sea; stories of the American navy in the great war.<br />

Houghton.<br />

Contents: The orphan and the battle-wagon.—Ten fathoms down.—Too scared to<br />

run.—The quiet life.—On a lee shore.—The net result.—The last shot.—The silent<br />

service.—The red sector.<br />

Adventure tales of life on, beneath, and above the ocean, and in the naval secret<br />

service.<br />

Rinehart, Mrs Mary E. (Roberts).<br />

R472aff<br />

Affinities, and other stories. Doran.<br />

Other stories: The family friend.—Clara's little escapade.—The borrowed house.—<br />

Sauce for the gander.<br />

Appeared in the "Saturday evening post."<br />

Humorous short stories about men, women, and love.<br />

Schauffler, Robert Haven.<br />

S3i3f<br />

Fiddler's luck; the gay adventures of a musical amateur. Houghton.<br />

The happy romance of a musician in th? American expeditionary force.<br />

Train, Arthur Cheney.<br />

T684t<br />

Tutt and Mr Tutt. Scribner.<br />

Appeared in the "Saturday evening post," v.192, Jan. 3-April 17, 1920.<br />

Short stories about the members of a New York law firm, who defend the weak<br />

and the guilty and who, in spite ot their shrewdness and ingenious methods, are altogether<br />

human.<br />

Ward, Arthur Sarsfield, (pseud. Sax Rohmer).<br />

W2i32g<br />

The golden scorpion. McBride.<br />

A detective story involving a band of dangerous Oriental criminals whose symbol is<br />

a gold scorpion.<br />

White, Stewart Edward.<br />

W6362k<br />

The killer [and other stories]. Doubleday.<br />

Other stories: The road agent.—The tide.—Climbing for goats.—Moisture, a trace.<br />

—The ranch.<br />

Short stories of adventure in the Southwest.<br />

Williamson, Charles Norris, & Williamson, Mrs A. M. W75ise<br />

(Livingston).<br />

The second latchkey. Doubleday.<br />

A mystery, adventure, and love story of an English girl and an American millionaire.<br />

French Fiction<br />

Voltaire, Francois Marie Arouet de. 8 43 v 37<br />

Candide; ou, l'Optimisme; edition critique avec une introduction et<br />

un commentaire par Andre Morize. (Societe des Textes Francais<br />

Modernes.<br />

[Publications].)<br />

Spanish Fiction<br />

Cervantes Saavedra, Miguel de. r 86 3 C^<br />

El ingenioso hidalgo Don Qvixote de la Mancha. 1605.<br />

Segvnda parte del Ingenioso cavallero Don Qvixote de la<br />

* r 863 C3312<br />

S m i l e reprint of'the fer edition' of' Cuesta by the Hispanic Society of America.


368 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

General Works<br />

qr oio B6314<br />

The Book-worm; ed. and illustrated by J. P. Berjeau [monthly], 1866-<br />

70. v.l-5 in 3v. 1866-71.<br />

v.4-5. 1869-70 title reads "The Bookworm; a literary and bibliographical review."<br />

Continuation of "Le Bibliomane," 1861 and "Le Bibliophile illustre," 1861-65.<br />

No more published.<br />

qr 071 F87<br />

Frank Leslie's illustrated newspaper, Sept. 26, 1863-Dec. 1878. v.17-47.<br />

1863-78.<br />

Many pages mutilated.<br />

Bound with v.17, J 863, are a few numbers from v.9-16.<br />

v.18-20, 34, 43 incomplete.<br />

Libraries<br />

Eastman, William Reed. r 022 E185<br />

The library building. 1918. A. L. A. Pub. Board.<br />

Preprint of "Manual of library economy," chapter 10.<br />

A brief treatment of the object, location, economy, and plans, with a bibliography.<br />

[Los Angeles, Municipal League.] r 027.4 L8g2<br />

Social survey report on library facilities in Los Angeles. 1915. Los<br />

Angeles Public Library.<br />

Reprinted from the "Municipal League bulletin." March 191 5.<br />

"It was the purpose of this investigation to present as clearly as possible the conditions<br />

under which public library service is rendered. . .having regard to the laws affecting<br />

library administration, to the housing and equipment of the various libraries and<br />

reading rooms, to the kind and quality of book supply, and to the kind and quality of<br />

service rendered."<br />

Mortreuil, Theodore. 027.5 P23m<br />

La Bibliotheque Nationale; son origine et ses accroissements jusqu'a<br />

nos jours; notice historique. 1878.<br />

In a sense a new edition of the "Essai historique sur la Bibliotheque du roi," published<br />

in 1782 by Le Prince.<br />

Rathbone, Josephine Adams. r 025.8 R21<br />

Shelf department. 1918. A. L. A. Pub. Board.<br />

Preprint of "Manual of library economy," chapter 20.<br />

"Considers the following topics: the shelf-list, care of books on the shelves, booksupports,<br />

labels, dummies and the inventory."<br />

Philosophy<br />

Blanchard, Phyllis. 136.7 B53<br />

The adolescent girl; a study from the psycho-analytic viewpoint,<br />

with a preface by G. S. Hall. 1920. Moffat.<br />

"Bibliography" at the end of each chapter.<br />

A study parallel to G. Stanley Hall's "Adolescence:" with summaries of the main<br />

theories of Fichte, Schelling, Bergson, Freud, Adler, Jung, and other psychoanalysts.<br />

Bode, Boyd Henry. jfo B58<br />

An outline of logic. 1910. Holt.<br />

"The aim of this volume is, among other things, to give a concrete discussion of<br />

ambiguity, to simplify the study of causal connections, and to treat with greater detail<br />

than is usually done the type of inference called circumstantial evidence, the nature of<br />

proof, and the postulates of reasoning." Preface.<br />

The author was (1910) professor of philosophy in the University of Illinois.


Clodd, Edward. I2& C61<br />

BOOKS ADDED—OCTOBER 1920 369<br />

Animism, the seed of religion. 1918. Constable & Co. (Religions<br />

ancient and modern.)<br />

Bibliographical foot-notes.<br />

"Selected works bearing on primitive religion," p.ioo.<br />

Discusses the prehuman elements in religion, animal and human psychology, naturalism,<br />

animism or conception of spirit everywhere, and various forms of primitive'worship,<br />

such as that of trees, animals, stones, water, and ancestors.<br />

Cunningham, Holly Estil. 102 Cg2<br />

An introduction to philosophy. 1920. Badger.<br />

Bibliography at end of each chapter.<br />

"This text attempts to furnish a method, the genetico-inductive, not only in theory,<br />

but in the actual handling of the subject matter of the book itself; and to show that the<br />

problems of philosophy are not something far removed 'from the crowd's ignoble strife,'<br />

but that they grow out of the conditions of the actual life of the people." Preface.<br />

Feuerbach, Ludwig Andreas. lgo F43<br />

Geschichte der neuern philosophie von Bacon von Verulam bis<br />

Benedict Spinoza. 1844.<br />

Contents: Einleitung.—Franz Bacon von Verulam.—Thomas Hobbes.—Peter Gassendi.—Jacob<br />

Bohm.—Cartesius.—Arnold Geulinx.—Malebranche.—Spinoza.<br />

Gilmore, Ge<strong>org</strong>e William. 128 G42<br />

Animism; or, Thought currents of primitive peoples. 1919. Jones.<br />

"Literature to which reference is made in this volume," p.231-241.<br />

The author's object is to "show the general logicality of primitive man's mental<br />

processes, once the basis from which he starts is granted."<br />

Gulick, Luther Halsey. 136.74 Gg6<br />

A philosophy of play. 1920. Scribner.<br />

The book falls into three parts—a study of the elements in play that represent a<br />

survival of race experience; a consideration of the play of animals, of normal and subnormal<br />

children, and of adults; and an examination of play in relation to the life of the individual<br />

and to that of the community. Condensed from New York Evening post, 1920.<br />

Mulford, Prentice. 131 Mgs<br />

Your forces, and how to use them, v.1-2. 1898-99. Needham.<br />

(White cross library.)<br />

"A series of essays. .. showing how results may be obtained in all business and art,<br />

through the force of thought and silent power of mind."<br />

Seth, James. 192 S4gs<br />

English philosophers and schools of philosophy. 1912. Dent.<br />

(Channels of English literature.)<br />

Contains bibliographical foot-notes.<br />

Aims to trace the development of English philosophy through a study of its more<br />

important representatives in their relation to one another and to the general movement<br />

of philosophical thought in England. Considers English philosophy as a form of English<br />

literature.<br />

Smith, Mrs Hester Travers. J 34 S64<br />

Voices from the void; six years' experience in automatic communications,<br />

with introduction by Sir W. F. Barrett. 1919- Dutton.<br />

"Experimental study of automatism. . .of great interest and value to the student<br />

of abnormal psychology." Sir W. F. Barrett, in Introduction.


CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Taylor, Henry Osborn.<br />

180 T25<br />

Prophets, poets and philosophers of the ancient world. 1919. Macmillan.<br />

Contents: Chaldaea and Egypt.—China; duty and detachment.—The Indian annihilation<br />

of individuality.—Zarathushtra—The prophets of Israel.—The heroic adjustment<br />

in Greek poetry.—Greek philosophers.—Intermediaries.—Jesus.—Paul.—Augustine.<br />

—-The arrows are beyond thee.<br />

First published under the title "Deliverance."<br />

Troward, Thomas. 131 T77C<br />

Creative process in the individual. 1910. Stead. (Edinburgh lecture<br />

series.)<br />

"I have endeavoured to set before the reader the conception of a sequence of creative<br />

action commencing with the formation of the globe and culminating in a vista of infinite<br />

possibilities attainable by everyone who follows up the right line for their unfoldment."<br />

Foreword.<br />

Turner, J. E. 149 T86<br />

Examination of William James's philosophy; a critical essay for the<br />

general reader. 1919. Blackwell.<br />

Contents: Introductory: The philosophical position as James found it.—Pragmatism.—James's<br />

applications of pragmatism.—Pluralism and empiricism : Preliminary.—<br />

Pluralism and empiricism: James's own position.—James and Bergson.—Radical empiricism.—Religion<br />

and the subconscious,<br />

Ethics<br />

Chesterton, Gilbert Keith. 173 C427<br />

The superstition of divorce. 1920. Lane.<br />

Reprinted in part from the "New witness."<br />

Five articles written at the crisis of a press controversy on divorce, with an added<br />

conclusion to the effect that men expect the impossible from life and need to realize their<br />

natural limitations.<br />

Dunn, Arthur William, & Harris, H. M. 172.1 D92<br />

Citizenship in school and out; the first six years of school life. 1919.<br />

Heath.<br />

"Bibliography of children's literature," p.141-144.<br />

After a discussion of the opportunity of the elementary school in a democracy, its<br />

daily program and centers of interest, the authors outline a course in citizenship for<br />

each of the first six grades. Long lists of material from history and literature, as well<br />

as "Teachers' aids," in the form of brief bibliographies, are included.<br />

Parlette,.Ralph Albert. 170 P24<br />

The university of hard knocks, the school that completes our education.<br />

1914. Parlette-Padget.<br />

A practical lecture, as given before many audiences, on character building and success<br />

in life.<br />

Phelps, Ge<strong>org</strong>e Harrison. !74 P48<br />

Go! 1919. Reilly.<br />

Little stories, vibrant with action, designed to inspire success in salesmen.<br />

Sewall, Frank.<br />

1j l S51<br />

The new ethics; an essay on the moral law of use. 1881. Putnam.<br />

An exposition of mutual service as the moral law of the universe.<br />

Walcott, Gregory Dexter.<br />

I7o W155<br />

Tsing Hua lectures on ethics. 1919. Badger.<br />

Bibliographical foot-notes.<br />

The author is (1919) professor of philosophy and psychology, Hamline University,<br />

St. Paul, Minn. These lectures were delivered before the students of the High school<br />

of Tsing Hua College. Peking, China, during the fall of 1917.


BOOKS ADDED-OCTOBER 1920<br />

Religion<br />

Clarke, James Freeman.<br />

The hour which sermons Cometh, preached and now in is; Indiana sermons nr^rW ;„<br />

place chapel, Boston. 1868. Spencer.<br />

371<br />

r^LJ}<br />

Disciples"'" m ° S t l y dU " ng thC C ° U r S e ° f ' he CiV1 ' W " M d P- ach -l «» the Church of the<br />

Eliot, Charles William. „ _<br />

~, , 280 E47<br />

The road to unity among the Christian churches. 1920. Beacon<br />

Press.<br />

The first lecture of a series to be delivered under the Arthur Emmons Pearson<br />

foundation, the object of which is to promote "the advancement of mutuaTunderstand<br />

mg and helpfulness between the people of all denominations and creeds "DrEHot<br />

points out the factors that have led to division in the past and considers those that are<br />

encouraging unification at present-laymen's leagues, the Religious Education Associa<br />

tion, and church federations. " ua<br />

Evans, John Henry. r 2gg Eg4<br />

One hundred years of Mormonism; a history of the Church of Jesus<br />

Christ of Latter-day Saints from 1805 to 1905. 1909. Deseret S. S.<br />

Union.<br />

Hankey, Donald William Alers. 230 H23C<br />

The cross. 1919. Dutton.<br />

A little essay on the cross as the epitome of Christ's teaching.<br />

Montague, Margaret Prescott. 20I M84<br />

Twenty minutes of reality; an experience, with some illuminating<br />

letters concerning it. 1917. Dutton.<br />

Describes an experience during convalescence in which, with suddenly cleared vision,<br />

the author seemed to feel for the first time "how wildly beautiful and joyous...is<br />

the whole of life."<br />

r 291 M99<br />

Mythology of all races; L. H. Gray, editor, G. F. Moore, consulting<br />

editor, v.l, 3, 6, 9-10, 12. 1916-18. Marshall Jones Co.<br />

v.i. Greek and Roman, by W. S. Fox.<br />

v.3. Celtic, by J. A. Macculloch.—Slavic, by Jan Machal [with a chapter on<br />

Baltic mythology, by L. H. Gray].<br />

v.6. Indian, by A. B. Keith.—Iranian, by A. J. Carnoy.<br />

v.9. Oceanic, by R. B. Dixon.<br />

v.io. North American, by H. B. Alexander.<br />

v. 12. Egyptian, by W. M. Muller.—Indo-Chinese, by Sir J. G. Scott.<br />

"Bibliography" at the end of each volume.<br />

Swedenb<strong>org</strong>, Emanuel. 289.4 S97S<br />

Swedenb<strong>org</strong>, with a compend of his teachings from [his] writings.<br />

1881. Swedenb<strong>org</strong> Pub. Assoc. (Swedenb<strong>org</strong> library, v.12.)<br />

Brief sketch of the author's life, labors, and character, followed by a compend of<br />

his theological writings.<br />

Thompson, Charles Lemuel. 266 T379<br />

The soul of America; the contribution of Presbyterian home missions.<br />

1919. Revell.<br />

"An attempt to outline the missionary adventure in two respects. First, to trace<br />

home missions as an <strong>org</strong>anization from the time when the germ of it was in a small<br />

Committee. . .to this latter day of enlarged tasks and increased opportunity. In the<br />

second place, to show the development of the work of home missions." Foreword.


372 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Walsh, J. Johnston.<br />

266 W188<br />

A memorial of the Futtehgurh mission and her martyred missionaries,<br />

with some remarks on the mutiny in India. 1859. Wilson.<br />

Walter, Howard Arnold. 297 Wzg<br />

Ahmadiya movement. 1918. Y. M. C. A. Press. (Religious life of<br />

India.)<br />

"Ahmadiya bibliography," p.41.<br />

A study of one of the most significant yet little known modern movements among<br />

Muslims and its relation to the general development in India of Muslim thought and<br />

life. Condensed from Preface.<br />

Willey, John Heston. 237 W73<br />

Between two worlds; the new day and the old questions. 1919.<br />

Y. M. C. A. Press.<br />

A discussion, in the light of recently awakened interest in spiritual problems, of<br />

"This world and the other;" "The end of the world;" "The second coming of Christ;"<br />

"After death—what?"; and "The great adventure."<br />

Jews and Judaism<br />

American Jewish Committee. 296 A51W<br />

War record of American Jews; first report of the Office of war<br />

records, American Jewish Committee, Jan.I, 1919. 1919.<br />

The same<br />

r 296 A5123W<br />

Cohen, Solomon Solis. r 207 C66<br />

Jewish Theological Seminary, past and future; address delivered at<br />

the 25th annual commencement, New York, June 2, 1918. 1919. Jewish<br />

Theological Seminary of America.<br />

Wolf, Lucien. qr 296 W836<br />

Notes on the diplomatic history of the Jewish question, with texts<br />

of protocols, treaty stipulations and other public acts and official documents.<br />

1919. Spottiswoode.<br />

Published by the Jewish Historical Society of England.<br />

"Designed to help the Peace Conference in securing full toleration to the Jews in<br />

all countries. . .The Roumanian Jewish question is treated at some length, as well as the<br />

question of Palestine." Spectator, 1919.<br />

Sociology<br />

Buck, Solon Justus. 363 B85ag<br />

Agrarian crusade; a chronicle of the farmer in politics. 1920. Yale<br />

University Press. (Chronicles of America series, v.45.)<br />

Contents: The inception of the Grange.—The rising spirit of unrest.—The Granger<br />

movement at flood tide.—Curbing the railroads.—The collapse of the Granger movement.<br />

—The Greenback interlude,—The plight of the farmer.—The Farmers' Alliance.—The<br />

People's party launched.—The Populist bombshell of 1892.—The silver issue.—The battle<br />

of the standards.—The leaven of radicalism.<br />

"Bibliographical note," p.203— 206.<br />

Butler, Nicholas Murray. 304 B97<br />

Is America worth saving? addresses on national problems and party<br />

policies. 1920. Scribner.<br />

"These addresses have a common theme and a single purpose. That theme is an exposition<br />

and interpretation of the fundamental principles upon which the American<br />

government and American civil society are built. That purpose is to make these principles<br />

more familiar to a generation that is quite apt to overlook them." Introduction.


BOOKS ADDED—OCTOBER 1920 373<br />

Butterfield, Kenyon Leech. 309.1 B98<br />

The farmer and the new day. 1919. Macmillan.<br />

An attempt to state the larger problems that the farmer must face during reconstruction<br />

and to suggest a solution of the rural problem. "Tlie distinctive feature of<br />

the plan proposed lies in its desire to fund all the diverse lines of human endeavor,<br />

economic, educational, religious, recreational, etc. under one comprehensive community<br />

scheme of <strong>org</strong>anization." Journal of political economy, 1020.<br />

Evarts, William Maxwell. 308 E952<br />

Arguments and speeches; ed., with an introduction, by Sherman<br />

Evarts. 3v. 1919. Macmillan.<br />

"This substantial collection of. . .public utterances [edited by the author's son] not<br />

only provides a record of his career, but an important document for the social and political<br />

events of his day and for the history of American oratory." Times tLondon 1, literary<br />

supplement, 1920.<br />

Galbraith, Anna Mary. 392 G14<br />

The family and the new democracy; a study in social hygiene. 1920.<br />

Saunders.<br />

"References," p.375~378.<br />

The author considers tlie three factors that threaten the family to-day—divorce.<br />

prostitution, and free love—and suggests remedies that will insure the greatest amount<br />

of social happiness and the best possible progeny. Condensed from Boek review digest,<br />

1920.<br />

Josephson, Aksel Gustav Salomon. qr 016.3 J44<br />

Bibliographical notes on some books about reconstruction. 1919.<br />

(Northwestern University, Evanston, 111.—Law school. Elbert H.<br />

Gary library of law. Bulletin no.2.)<br />

"The purpose of these notes is to call attention to a number of books and pamphlets<br />

which have appeared since the outbreak of the War and which discuss the problems of<br />

the coming peace and point forward to the new era."<br />

Maryland—State and municipal research bureau. r 309.1 M436<br />

Study of social statistics in the city of Baltimore for the years 1916<br />

17. 1919. (Report 110.16.)<br />

A systematic and scientific study of the causes of poverty, by the compilation, tabulation,<br />

and examination of existing data in the records of nine charitable <strong>org</strong>anizations.<br />

Involves a total of 8,663 cases.<br />

r 364 M45<br />

Massachusetts—Defectives, criminals and misdemeanants, Special collision<br />

relative to the control, custody and treatment of.<br />

Report, Feb. 1919. I9I9- (House, no.1403.)<br />

Massachusetts Hospital School, Canton. r 362.7 M 4 55<br />

Annual report of the trustees (nth), for the year ending Nov. 30,<br />

1918. 1919. (Public document no.82.)<br />

Mecklin, John Moffatt. 304 M55<br />

Introduction to social ethics; the social conscience in a democracy.<br />

1920. Harcourt.<br />

^Z^ll't .°o vt o^ieTof the social order by considering the Hston<br />

cal aldVsyct.ogical aspects of the problem. He believes that^the:H*; o demo acy<br />

tionTthlsVtr^bod;^ ^ '-<br />

together successfully in society.


374 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Neilson, Francis.<br />

3°4 N21<br />

The old freedom. 1919. Huebsch.<br />

Contents: The crisis: labour and capital.—The old freedom: the land-free man.—<br />

The rise of the ruling class; the loss of equal rights.—The <strong>org</strong>anization of the political<br />

means: restrictive legislation and enclosure of land by force.—Great Britain and labour.<br />

—Democracies of the past.—Ge<strong>org</strong>es Sorel and syndicalism.—"The man versus the<br />

state" and American Spencerians.—Karl Marx and socialism.—Fabianism versus state<br />

socialism.—Municipalization and nationalization.—Definitions.—The way to freedom.<br />

"Bibliography," p. 173.<br />

Reuter, Edward Byron. 326 R36<br />

The mulatto in the United States, including a study of the role of<br />

mixed-blood races throughout the world. 1918. Badger.<br />

Contains bibliographical foot-notes.<br />

Thesis for Ph.D., University of Chicago.<br />

United States—Children's bureau. r 362.7 U25CO<br />

Conference series, no.l. 1919. (Bureau publication no.60.)<br />

For contents see Contents book kept at the reference desk.<br />

Politics and Government<br />

Carnegie Endowment for International Peace— r 327.73 C21<br />

Division of intercourse and education.<br />

American foreign policy; based upon statements of presidents and<br />

secretaries of state of the United States and of publicists of the American<br />

republics, with an introduction by N. M. Butler. 1920. (Publication<br />

no.17.)<br />

Corbin, Pierre. 327.44 C81<br />

Histoire de la politique exterieure de la France, v.i. [1912.]<br />

v.i. Les origines et la periode anglaise (jusqu'en 1483).<br />

"Bibliographie" at the end of each article.<br />

Fidel, Camille. 325.3 F45<br />

La paix coloniale frangaise; introduction de Joseph Chailley, preface<br />

de Maurice Barres. 1918. (Petite bibliotheque de la Ligue des patriotes.)<br />

Discusses France and her colonial empire, the lot of the German colonies and of<br />

Turkey in Asia, the question of Morocco, and the need of a new French colonial policy.<br />

New Jersey—Commission for the survey of municipal 352.1 N261<br />

financing.<br />

Analysis of the laws affecting municipal and county finances and<br />

taxation; written by A. N. Pierson, author of the laws. 1918.<br />

Aims to set forth in simple words the operation of the laws.<br />

Pillsbury, Walter Bowers. 321.041 P59<br />

Psychology of nationality and internationalism. 1919. Appleton.<br />

Examines all aspects of the problem as raised by the Balkan and world wars, and<br />

concludes that national differences are not so marked that they cannot be overcome<br />

and that through the spread of education and intercommunication the possibilities ot a<br />

common understanding and of common ideals are continually increasing. Condensed<br />

from Book review digest, 1919.<br />

r 328.74 W19<br />

Walton's Vermont register, business directory, almanac and state year<br />

book. 1920-date. 1919-date. Tuttle.


BOOKS ADDED—OCTOBER 1920 375<br />

Americanization and Immigration<br />

Capek, Thomas. 325 73 Cl?g<br />

The Cechs (Bohemians) in America; a study of their national, cultural,<br />

political, social, economic and religious life. 1920. Houghton.<br />

Bibliography, p.281-284.<br />

The author describes the immigrations from the 17th century to the present day tells<br />

how his people are distributed in this country, and shows that they become industrious<br />

democratic, and loyal citizens.<br />

Davis, Philip, & Schwartz, Bertha, cd. 325.73 D32<br />

Immigration and Americanization; selected readings. 1920. Ginn.<br />

"Bibliography," p.749-765.<br />

The same<br />

r 325.73 D32<br />

Selections arranged chronologically and "particularly designed to meet the needs of<br />

high schools, colleges, universities, and chautauquas, which have been frequently at a<br />

loss in recommending to the student, investigator, official, or general public a handbook<br />

on these tw r in topics." Preface.<br />

Orth, Samuel Peter. 325.73 O28<br />

Our foreigners; a chronicle of Americans in the making. 1920.<br />

Yale University Press. (Chronicles of America series, v.35.)<br />

Contents: Opening the door.—The American stock.—The negro.—Utopias in<br />

America.—The Irish invasion.—The Teutonic tide.—The call of the land.—The city<br />

builders.—The Oriental.—Racial infiltration.—The guarded door.<br />

"Bibliographical note," p.235-230.<br />

Economics<br />

Bond, Beverley Waugh. 333 B62<br />

The quit-rent system in the American colonies, with an introduction<br />

by C. M. Andrews. 1919. Yale University Press. (Yale historical<br />

publications; miscellany.)<br />

"Bibliography," p.461-477.<br />

"This careful study of the aristocratic, feudal features of our colonial land system<br />

illustrates anew the truth that here in America as elsewhere free institutions are the result<br />

of gradual evolution. Professor Bond also throws fresh light on the origins of the<br />

revolution by showing that irritation over the quit-rents was another one of the causes<br />

of discontent that led to the revolt." American economic review, 1919.<br />

Includes a discussion of royal quit-rents in Canada and the West Indies.<br />

Brown, Harry Gunnison. 330.1 B78<br />

Theory of earned and unearned incomes; a study of the economic<br />

laws of distribution, with some of their applications to social policy.<br />

1918. Missouri Book Co.<br />

Written for several classes of readers—for socialists of the Marxian school, for<br />

single taxers, and for economists—with the purpose of discovering those things in the<br />

theory of income distribution the knowledge of which may help towards the fairest possible<br />

economic <strong>org</strong>anization of society. Condensed from Preface and Introduction.<br />

Cincinnati, Chamber of Commerce and Merchants' r 338.4 C48<br />

Exchange—Survey committee.<br />

Garment making industries. 1917- (Its Industrial survey of Cincinnati.<br />

Vocational section. [Reports, no.2.])<br />

This report was prepared by Cleo Murtland.<br />

A study to determine the extent of the need for trained workers, the extent to<br />

which instruction may be given in schools and what elements may be taught there with<br />

the educational qualifications desirable; and to secure the co-operat.on ot the public<br />

schools, the manufacturers, and the employees.


376 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Japan—Special finance and economic commission to the r 330.9 J18<br />

United States, 1917-18.<br />

Imperial Japanese government's special finance and economic commission<br />

to the United States, headed by Baron Tanetaro Megata, Sept.<br />

1917-April 1918. [1918? Tokyo Printing Co.]<br />

An account of their journey from Honolulu to Boston, with a record of the many<br />

courtesies received in America and of the addresses of leading business men and financiers,<br />

endorsing co-operation between America and Japan.<br />

Lambert, Henri. 337 L18<br />

Pax economica; freedom of international exchange the sole method<br />

for the permanent and universal abolition of war, with a statement of<br />

the cause and the solution of the European crisis and a sketch of the<br />

only possible conclusive settlement of the problem confronting the<br />

world. 1917. Rankin.<br />

Powers, Harry Huntington. 330-9 P87<br />

The American era. 1920. Macmillan.<br />

Considering the present as preeminently the opportunity of America, the author deals<br />

with the passing of Europe, the supremacy of the Anglo-Saxon race, and economic conditions<br />

and problems in the United States to-day. He ends with a plea for a larger democracy<br />

and for a more loyal and intelligent citizen body to fit us for world leadership.<br />

Slater, Gilbert, ed. r 330.9 S63<br />

Some South Indian villages. 1918. Oxford University Press.<br />

(Madras University. Economic studies, v.l.)<br />

A series of economic surveys of village life made by students of Madras University,<br />

with comments by the editor, their professor. The result shows that village poverty<br />

is not due to harshness in assessing land revenue, and the editor suggests as the needed<br />

remedy, a more generous expenditure on the Agriculture department, on means of travel<br />

and transportation, on sanitation, and on practical education. Condensed from Spectator,<br />

1920.<br />

Thompson, Merle Raymond. 338.8 T38<br />

Trust dissolution. 1919. Badger.<br />

"Bibliography." p.305-3°°-<br />

"The aim of this book is. . .to present a brief survey of the efforts made to enforce<br />

the trust policy of the federal government, and of the results obtained from its enforcement.<br />

. . [also] a concrete, separate, and concise study of the chief monopolistic combinations<br />

which the Government has [dissolved] or is now trying to dissolve under the terms<br />

of the trust laws." Preface.<br />

Thum, William. 336.2 T42<br />

The coming land policy; the antithesis of the single tax policy. 1920<br />

Thum.<br />

Supplement to his "Untaxing the consumer."<br />

The author outlines step by step from 1920 to 1950 a plan for the solution of our<br />

land problem. The most important step is the creation of a national land problem commission,<br />

and the object of his scheme is to place the public "in actual ownership and<br />

operation of all water power, all mines of ordinary mineral products, all oil wells and<br />

all large forest resources."<br />

United States—Federal trade commission. r 338.8 U252<br />

Food investigation; report on the meat-packing industry, pt.1-4, 6.<br />

1918-20.


BOOKS ADDED—OCTOBER 1920 377<br />

United States—Fuel administration—Oil division. r 338.2 U255<br />

Prices of petroleum and its products during the war, by J. E. Pogue,<br />

assisted by Isador Lubin; an investigation made in cooperation with<br />

the Price section, Bureau of planning and statistics, War industries<br />

board. 1919.<br />

Gives a brief account of the price factors peculiar to petroleum, the commercial history<br />

of the industry, and the price record of its various products. Illustrated with<br />

numerous charts.<br />

United States—Judiciary committee. (Senate.) r 335 U25<br />

Bolshevik propaganda; hearings before a subcommittee of the committee<br />

on the judiciary, United States senate, 65th congress, 3d session<br />

and thereafter, pursuant to S. res. 439 and 469, Feb. n-March 10, 1919.<br />

1919. (65th cong. 3d. sess. Senate.)<br />

Washington (state)—Labor bureau. r 338.9 W27<br />

Labor laws of the state of Washington; comp. by C. H. Younger.<br />

1919.<br />

Weeks, Estella T. r 330.9 W42<br />

Reconstruction programs; a comparative study of their content and<br />

of the viewpoints of the issuing <strong>org</strong>anizations, with introduction by<br />

H. N. Shenton. 1919. Womans Press.<br />

"Bibliography," p.72-95.<br />

Prepared for the Research section, Industrial committee, War work council of the<br />

National board, Young Women's Christian Associations.<br />

"These programs offer more and more conclusive evidence that the world is facing<br />

not merely- a period of readjustment to the old ideals and practices in industry but a<br />

new standard of civilization, 'a new recognition of the men and women workers upon<br />

whom rests the future of society.' " Preface.<br />

Capital. Labor. Wages<br />

Comstock, William Phillips, comp. qr 331.83 C73<br />

The housing book; containing photographic reproductions, with<br />

floor plans of workingmen's homes, one and two family houses of<br />

frame, brick, stucco and concrete construction, also four, six and nine<br />

family apartments; showing single houses, groups and developments<br />

that have been built in various parts of the United States, from the designs<br />

of many prominent architects. 191°- Comstock.<br />

England—Reconstruction, Ministry of.<br />

qr 331-8 E6443<br />

Interim report of the Committee on adult education; industrial and<br />

social conditions in relation to adult education. 1918. ([Parliament.<br />

Papers by Command] Cd. 9107.)<br />

Gompers, Samuel. 33 1 - 59<br />

Labor and the common welfare; comp. and ed. by Hayes Robbms.<br />

1919. Dutton. (Labor movements and labor problems in America.)<br />

Extracts from the author's speeches and writings grouped by subjects—the philosophy<br />

of trade unionism, labor and the community, labor and the law, labor s stand on<br />

public issues, the political policy of <strong>org</strong>anized labor, labor's place in modern progress.<br />

<strong>org</strong>anized labor's challenge to socialism and revolution, labor in the war for democracy<br />

and liberty.


378 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Irene Kaufmann Settlement, Pittsburgh.<br />

r 331.85 I28S<br />

Synopsis of social studies (no.1-7, 1916-17) of the neighborhood of<br />

the Irene Kaufmann Settlement, made under the supervision of S. A.<br />

Teller, resident director. [1917. Pittsburgh.]<br />

The studies deal with the relation of the settlement to the city; the membership of<br />

the settlement; social and negative forces, diseases, death rate, and poverty of the<br />

neighborhood ; and with the settlement's nursing service.<br />

Lattimore, Eleanor Larrabee, & Trent, R. S. 331-4 L36<br />

Legal recognition of industrial women. 1919.<br />

Issued by the Industrial committee, War work council of the National board,<br />

Young Women's Christian Associations.<br />

The same<br />

r 331.4 L36<br />

A simple and brief discussion of the problems of women's labor and of the various<br />

legal remedies devised to meet these problems, giving some idea of what the laws should<br />

contain and of what would be their desired effect.<br />

Lescohier, Don Divance. 331.8 L63<br />

The labor market. 1919. Macmillan. (Social science text-books.)<br />

"Bibliographical note," p.311-324," References," p.325-334.<br />

With the purpose of showing a need for national machinery to control the problem<br />

of employment in the United States, the author treats of conditions of supply and demand<br />

of labor, occupational idleness, the reduction of labor turnover, and the development<br />

of public employment systems, including British and Canadian. Useful to officials<br />

of employment offices, university students and teachers, legislators, and the general<br />

public.<br />

Lewis, Harry J. 331-84 L67<br />

Thrift. 1920. Privately printed. Pittsburgh.<br />

A little essay on the economic conditions that confront this country to-day. emphasizing<br />

the importance of saving and of self-denial in order to pay for the waste of the late<br />

war and restore our finances to a sound basis resting on real values.<br />

Massachusetts—Minimum wage commission. r 331.2 M4552<br />

Annual report (6th), for the year ending Nov. 30, 1918. 1919. (Public<br />

document 110.102.)<br />

New York (state)—Labor department. r 331.82 N261<br />

Plan for shop safety, sanitation and health <strong>org</strong>anization; prepared<br />

by the Bureau of statistics and information. [1919.] (Special bulletin<br />

110.91.)<br />

The same. (In its Special bulletin no.91.) r 331 N2612 no.91<br />

Issued under the direction of the Industrial commission.<br />

"The plan presented herewith aims to aid manufacturers in forming a shop safety<br />

<strong>org</strong>anization and in understanding its functions. It confines itself chiefly to the machinery<br />

of plant accident prevention work rather than its psychological side." Introduction.<br />

Orth, Samuel Peter. 331.87 O28<br />

Armies of labor; a chronicle of the <strong>org</strong>anized wage-earners. 1919.<br />

Yale University Press. (Chronicles of America series, v.40.)<br />

Contents: The background.—Formative years.—Transition years.—Amalgamation.<br />

—federation.—The trade union.—The railway brotherhoods.—Issues and warfare—The<br />

new terrorism: the I. W. W.—Labor and politics.<br />

"Bibliographical note," p.261-263.<br />

Pennsylvania Federation of Labor. r 33I P 3 gg2<br />

Proceedings of the annual convention (17th), at Pittsburgh, May<br />

I4th-i7th, 1918. [1918.]


BOOKS ADDED—OCTOBER 1920 37g<br />

Philadelphia, Bureau of Municipal Research. r 331.83 P 49<br />

Workingmen's standard of living in Philadelphia; a report.' 1919.<br />

Macmillan.<br />

_ A definite statement, in terms of actual goods and services, of what constitutes a<br />

fair standard of living, as based on data collected from 260 families averaging five<br />

b s<br />

persons each.<br />

United States—Employment service. r 33I g TJ 25I<br />

Labor conditions in Porto Rico; report by Joseph Marcus, special<br />

agent, U. S. employment service. 1919.<br />

The result of a two months study of economic and labor conditions in various parts<br />

of the island, with the purpose of determining whether Porto Rico needs an employment<br />

office and how it could be of assistance to the people.<br />

Whitaker, Charles Harris. 331.83 W62J<br />

The joke about housing. 1920. Marshall Jones Co.<br />

"A solution of the housing problem in the United States," bv Milo Hastings and<br />

"A solution of the housing problem in the United States," by R. A. Pope, form appendixes<br />

C and D.<br />

A discussion of the problem as a social and industrial matter, and also as a land<br />

question. As a solution, the author offers the program published bv the Cities committee<br />

of the Sociological society, London.<br />

Banking.<br />

Finance<br />

Atwood, Albert William. 332.6 A88<br />

Putnam's investment handbook; a stimulus and a guide to financial<br />

independence. 1919. Putnam.<br />

"List of financial publications useful to investors," p 349-350; "List of reference<br />

works from which information in regard to securities may be obtained," p.351.<br />

Aims to explain in a practical way how to invest money saved. It defines tlie different<br />

forms of investments from savings bank deposits, life insurance policies, building<br />

and loan associations, to the more risky kinds.<br />

"A thoroughly good book. It is sane, broadminded, and yet presents sound investment<br />

wisdom in a very readable and interesting fashion." American economic review,<br />

1920.<br />

Brady, John Edson. r 332.1 B68<br />

Bank deposits, trust deposits, alternate deposits, joint deposits; a<br />

full statement of the general principles of law governing these forms<br />

of deposits; digests of all cases involving such deposits which have<br />

been decided by the courts of the different states; complete text of the<br />

statutes regulating these deposits, which have been enacted in 27 states.<br />

1911. Banking Law Journal Co.<br />

Garver, Frederic Benjamin. r 336.748 G19<br />

Subvention in the state finances of Pennsylvania.<br />

"Bibliography," p.253-258.<br />

Thesis for Ph.D., University of Chicago.<br />

1919. Banta.<br />

Godfrey, Carlos Emmor. r 332.11 G55<br />

Mechanics bank, 1834-1919. Trenton in New Jersey; a history. 1919.<br />

Privately printed.<br />

A historv of the bank and incidentally of the town. Includes sketches of the<br />

present officers and directors, a chronological list of officers, and brief biographies of<br />

past directors.


380 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Moody, John. 336.7 M8 7<br />

Masters of capital; a chronicle of Wall street. 1919. Yale University<br />

Press. (Chronicles of America series, v.41.)<br />

Contents: The rise of the house of M<strong>org</strong>an.—M<strong>org</strong>an and the railroads.—The ironmasters.—<br />

Standard oil and Wall street.—The steel trust merger.—Harriman and Hill.—<br />

The apex of "high finance."—The panic of 1907 and after.—Wall street and the world<br />

war.—Appendix.<br />

"Bibliographical note," p.221-223.<br />

Owen, Robert Latham. 332-45 O34<br />

Foreign exchange. 1919. Century.<br />

"The principles of foreign exchange are discussed only to the extent necessary to<br />

explain the difficulties encountered through the recent depreciation of the dollar in<br />

terms of the currencies of Spain and the several Scandinavian countries. . .The author<br />

...recommends the establishment of a Federal Reserve Foreign Bank equipped with<br />

the powers necessary to maintain the dollar at its normal gold par and to provide American<br />

trade with the necessar\ r foreign credits." American economic review, 1919.<br />

Taxation<br />

Craigen, Ge<strong>org</strong>e John. 336.2 C86<br />

Practical methods for appraising lands, buildings and improvements.<br />

1911. Privately printed.<br />

Includes rules and tables for estimating the value of irregular parcels of land and<br />

of buildings in course of construction, together with a detailed description of the operation<br />

of the system in use in the Department of taxes and assessments of the citv of New<br />

York.<br />

Gray, James Mcllvaine. r 336.2 G81<br />

Limitations of the taxing power, including limitations upon public<br />

indebtedness; a treatise upon the constitutional law governing taxation<br />

and the incurrence of public debt in the United States, in the several<br />

states, and in the territories. 1906. Bancroft.<br />

Bibliographical foot-notes.<br />

Guaranty Trust Company of New York. r 336.24 G95<br />

Federal taxes on income and profits; imposed by the revenue act of<br />

1918. 1920.<br />

"Text of revenue act of 191S," p.139-186.<br />

"A summary of important rulings of the Treasury Department relating to income<br />

and excess profits taxes." Does not cover withholding of tax and information at the<br />

source, the use of ownership certificates, or war profits taxes.<br />

Holmes, Ge<strong>org</strong>e Edwin. r 336.24 H73<br />

Federal income tax, war-profits and excess-profits taxes, including<br />

stamp taxes, capital stock tax, tax on employment of child labor. 1920.<br />

Bobbs.<br />

McGlynn, Edward. r 336.2 M16<br />

Cross of a new crusade; address delivered at Academy of Music,<br />

N. Y., March 29, 1887; Statement of Dr McGlynn to Mgr. Satolli, Dec.<br />

1892; Letter of Henry Ge<strong>org</strong>e; Last letter of Dr McGlynn, Jan. 1900.<br />

1916. Dr McGlynn Monument Assoc.<br />

Deals with labor and social problems, with special reference to single tax.<br />

Montgomery, Robert Hiester. r 336.24 M86e<br />

Excess profits tax procedure. 1920. Ronald Press Co.<br />

To be used in connection with the author's "Income tax procedure." The laws and<br />

regulations bearing on a given point are quoted verbatim, followed by explanations,<br />

criticisms, and suggestions.


BOOKS ADDED—OCTOBER 1920<br />

3S1<br />

Powell, Henry Montefiore.<br />

r 336.24 P87t<br />

Taxation of corporations and personal income in New York. igig.<br />

Boardman.<br />

Supplement. 1920.<br />

The Supplement contains a commentary on all important matters affecting corporation<br />

and personal income tax since July i, 1919. It includes the new rules and regulations<br />

of the state comptroller governing the administration of the new personal income<br />

tax law, with full explanations.<br />

Powell, Henry Montefiore, & Silver, J. J.<br />

r 336.24 P87<br />

New York franchise tax on manufacturing and mercantile corporations<br />

(state income tax). 1918. William Boyd Press.<br />

Contains a commentary on the substantive law, with concrete examples for guidance<br />

in preparing reports and in computing the tax; the amended act of 1918; and a<br />

complete set of forms including the practice in certiorari.<br />

Snelling, Walter Edward.<br />

r 336.24 S67<br />

Excess profits (including excess mineral rights) duty and levies<br />

under the munitions of war acts, incorporating the provisions of the income<br />

tax acts made applicable by statute and by regulations, also the<br />

regulations of the commissioners of inland revenue and of the minister<br />

of munitions. [1917.] Pitman.<br />

Thum, William.<br />

336.2 T42U<br />

Untaxing the consumer (interwoven problems). 1918. Grant Press.<br />

"Its first two chapters treat the land question in its relation to taxes—especially<br />

Single Tax—and likewise in relation to prices of commodities. . .The remaining chapters<br />

show how we can eliminate the always troublesome tax problem from the last great<br />

natural resource still remaining in possession of the public." Introduction.<br />

Whitworth, John Ford.<br />

r 336.2 W65<br />

Taxation of foreign and domestic corporations, joint stock associations<br />

and limited partnerships in Pennsylvania, for state purposes, including<br />

taxation of various corporate investments for local purposes.<br />

1901. Welsh.<br />

Law<br />

Gahagen, William Rogers.<br />

347-2 G13<br />

How to conduct the real estate, insurance and general brokerage<br />

business; a brief treatise on those methods and virtues entering into<br />

real estate transactions, which experienced brokers have found conducive<br />

to the greatest success; with chapters on real estate and personal<br />

property, estates, landlord and tenant, real estate titles and rights<br />

of property holders. 1919- Realty Book Co.<br />

T-. r, • • 342.7 H2gv<br />

Harrison, Benjamin. ., " ' ., •<br />

Vida constitucional de los Estados Unidos; traduccion de Tor.bio<br />

Esquivel Obregon. 1919. Doubleday. (Biblioteca interamencana.)<br />

A translation of "This country of ours."<br />

National Association for the Advancement of<br />

r 343-2 N15<br />

Colored People. „<br />

The fight against lynching; anti-lynching work for the year l 9 l»-<br />

1919.<br />

Reprinted from its ninth Annual report.


382 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Ohio State Bar Association.<br />

r 347.06 O18<br />

Proceedings of the annual session (38th) held at Cedar Point, Ohio,<br />

July 10, 11 and 12, 1917 and special meeting held at Cincinnati, Dec. 20<br />

and 21, 1916; constitution, by-laws, proceedings, list of officers, members,<br />

etc. 1917.<br />

Train, Arthur Cheney. 343 X68c<br />

Courts, criminals and the Camorra.<br />

1912. Scribner.<br />

Essays written in popular style by the former district attorney for New York<br />

county. The most interesting part of the book deals with the activities of Italian secret<br />

societies in this country and gives an account of the Camorra trials at Viterbo.<br />

United States—Alien property custodian.<br />

r 341. 3 U2532<br />

Alien property custodian report; a detailed report of all proceedings<br />

had by him under the Trading with the enemy act during the calendar<br />

year 1918 and to the close of business on Feb. 15, 1919. 1919.<br />

Keir, Sir John Lindesay.<br />

Military Science<br />

A "soldier's-eye-view" of our armies. 1919. Murray.<br />

355^ K16<br />

A plea for the <strong>org</strong>anization of a real national army for England, with a discussion<br />

troo^oTAfrL 3 '" 1 '' the territ °" aIs ' the India " «»d Dominio/forces, and the native<br />

United States—Education and special training, qr 355.07 U2532S<br />

Committee on (War department).<br />

Committee on education and special training; a review of its work<br />

during 1918, by the advisory board. [1919.]<br />

V t reP ,° T } °- the f ormation and<br />

, work of the Students' Army Training Corps and the<br />

Vocational training detachments. The appendixes include lists of the eol egiate and<br />

vocational institutions that co-operated, arranged by states.<br />

collegiate and<br />

United States—Military commission to Europe, 1855-56. qr 355 U25 33r<br />

Report on the art of war in Europe in 1854, 1855 and 1856 by<br />

Richard Delafield, from his notes and observations made as a member<br />

of a Military commission to the theater of war in Europe " under the<br />

orders of Jefferson Davis, secretary of war. i860. (36th cong ist<br />

sess. Senate. Ex. doc. no.59.)<br />

Insurance<br />

Riegel, Robert. „ „<br />

T,. , r 368 R44<br />

Fire underwriters associations in the United States. 1916. Chronicle<br />

Co.<br />

"Bibliography," p.70-72.<br />

Thesis for Ph.D., University of Pennsylvania.<br />

Teachers Insurance and Annuity Association of America. r 368 T26<br />

Handbook of life insurance and annuity policies for teachers 1919<br />

ing thr" arious m k, U n r ri nC „ e f an r an ' 1Uitie J i *?' C ° lle * e tCacherS ' ^ * me *od S of obtaining<br />

the various kinds of policies, and gives tables showing premiums.


BOOKS ADDED—OCTOBER 1920 383<br />

Education<br />

Athearn, Walter Scott.<br />

370.1 A86<br />

National system of education. 1920. Doran. (Merrick lectures.)<br />

Contents: Present tendencies in American education.—The evolution of a national<br />

system of public schools.—Problems in the administration of a national system of education.—A<br />

national system of religious education.<br />

"Bibliography," p.123-129.<br />

The author is (1920) Director of the Department of religious education and social<br />

service, Boston University.<br />

Barton, Ge<strong>org</strong>e Edward. 371.91 B28<br />

Teaching the sick; a manual of occupational therapy and re-education.<br />

1919. Saunders.<br />

The book is in two parts—"The larger problem," which deals with the philosophy<br />

and psychology of re-education; and, "Teaching the sick," which describes subjects to<br />

be taught.<br />

Council of Church Boards of Education.<br />

r 378.7 C83<br />

Statistical survey of Illinois colleges, by B. W. Brown, under the<br />

direction of R. W. Cooper. [1917.]<br />

"An effort to measure quantitatively some of the relationships which obtain between<br />

the American college, the general educational system, and the church."<br />

Cubberley, Ellwood Patterson. r 379.794 C91<br />

Report of a survey of the <strong>org</strong>anization, scope and finances of the<br />

public school system of Oakland, California. 1915. (Oakland, Cal.<br />

Board of education bulletin, no.8. June 1915)<br />

Edmunds, Charles K. 379-51 E29<br />

Modern education in China. 1919. (United States—Education<br />

bureau. Bulletin, 1919, no.44.)<br />

The same. (In United States—Education bureau. Bulletin, 1919, no.<br />

44.) r 370 U25 1919, no.44<br />

Discusses the present status of government education, educational needs as affected<br />

by internal conditions and the international situation, the causes of backwardness, and<br />

the system of Christian education established by the mission schools.<br />

Elyot, Sir Thomas.<br />

370-9 E57<br />

Boke named The governour [with an introduction by Foster Watson].<br />

[1907.] Dent. (Everyman's library.)<br />

"Published works of Sir Thomas Elyot," pref. p.26.<br />

A reprint of the first book on the subject of education that was written and printed<br />

in the English language (1531).<br />

France—Ministere de I'instruction publique et<br />

r 379.44 F86<br />

des beaux-arts.<br />

Plan d'etudes et programmes de l'enseignement secondaire des gargons:<br />

1°, divisions enfantine, preparatoire et elementaire; 2°, premier<br />

cycle secondaire; 3°. deuxieme cycle secondaire. 1920.<br />

General Education Board. r 379-751 G29<br />

Public education in Delaware; a report to the Public school commission<br />

of Delaware, with an appendix containing the new school code.<br />

191 A survey of the public schools of the state, not including those of Wilmington.


384 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Gray, Clarence Truman. 37 2 -4 G3i<br />

Types of reading ability as exhibited through tests and laboratory<br />

experiments. 1917. University of Chicago Press. (Supplementary<br />

educational monographs, v.i, no.5.)<br />

"Bibliography," p.168-171.<br />

Thesis for Ph.D., University of Chicago.<br />

Gray, William Scott. r 372.4 G81<br />

Studies of elementary-school reading through standardized tests.<br />

1917. University of Chicago Press.<br />

"Descriptive bibliography of reading investigations," p.26-31.<br />

Thesis for Ph.D., University of Chicago.<br />

Presents the results of an investigation made to determine the achievement of boys<br />

and girls in oral and silent reading.<br />

qr 378.7 H3342<br />

Harvard register; a monthly periodical devoted to the interests of<br />

higher education, 1880; ed. and pub. by Moses King. v.1-2 in iv. 1880.<br />

Haussmann, Carl Frederick. r 370.9 H35<br />

Kunze's Seminarium and the Society for the Propagation of Christianity<br />

and Useful Knowledge among the Germans in America. 1917.<br />

Americana Germanica Press. (Americana Germanica; monographs,<br />

no.27.)<br />

'"Bibliography," p.139-141.<br />

Thesis for Ph.D., University of Pennsylvania.<br />

McDowell, Floyd M. 379-m M14<br />

The junior college. 1919. (United States—Education bureau.<br />

Bulletin, 1919, no.35.)<br />

"Bibliography," p.136-139.<br />

The same. (In United States—Education bureau. Bulletin, 1919,<br />

no.35.)<br />

r 370 U25 1919, no.35<br />

An investigation of the origin and early development of the junior college idea, the<br />

present status and various types of such institutions throughout the country, together<br />

with a summary of progress in the accrediting of the junior college.<br />

Mackie, Ransom A. 379-17 M18<br />

Education during adolescence; based partly on G. S. Hall's psychology<br />

of adolescence, with an introduction by G. S. Hall. 1920.<br />

Dutton.<br />

"Some of G. S. Flail's writings," p.189-192; "Bibliography of books and articles<br />

by other authorities," p.193-218.<br />

A study of curricula in the six-year high schools of this country, with a plan for<br />

the "socialized recitation" and emphasis on vocational as against classical education.<br />

Miller, Edward Alanson. r 379.14 M69<br />

History of educational legislation in Ohio from 1803 to 1850. [1918.<br />

Privately printed.]<br />

"Bibliography," p.266-271.<br />

Thesis for Ph.D., University of Chicago.<br />

Reprinted from "Ohio archaeological and historical quarterly." v.27, no. 1-2, Jan.<br />

and April, 1918.<br />

New York (state)—Education department. r 379.747 N26i2r<br />

Report of the survey of the Binghamton school system. 1919. University<br />

of the State of New York.<br />

An analysis carried on during the school year 1917-18. Considers <strong>org</strong>anization and<br />

administration, the school plant, supervision, teaching staff, course of study, tests<br />

measuring achievement, and finances.


BOOKS ADDED—OCTOBER 1920 385<br />

Studensky, Paul. „„ 0<br />

T u . 37i-i7 S93<br />

leachers pensions systems in the United States; a critical and<br />

descriptive study. 1920. Appleton. (Institute for Government Research.<br />

Studies in administration.)<br />

Prepared under the direction of F. A. Cleveland.<br />

"Bibliography," p.441-454.<br />

Part I discusses the evolution of teachers' pensions and gives an analysis of the<br />

general problem of providing retirement allowances. Part II deals with the ! I I<br />

the United States and describes in detail the more important systems now in exTstence<br />

Commerce<br />

Henius, Frank. „ TT<br />

A T> r- z r<br />

382 H44<br />

A B C of foreign trade. 1920. Bobbs.<br />

Simple directions to exporters and importers.<br />

Hulbert, Archer Butler. 0, „<br />

o ,L c • 1 J 386 H91<br />

Paths of inland commerce; a chronicle of trail, road and waterway<br />

1920. Yale University Press. (Chronicles of America series, v.21.)<br />

Contents: The mar. who caught the vision [Ge<strong>org</strong>e Washington].-The Red man's<br />

tra,l.-The mastery of the rivers.-A nation on wheels.-The flaflioat age-The passing<br />

show of ,8oo.-The birth of the steamboat.-The conquest of the Alleghanies -The<br />

dawn of the iron age.-The pathway of the lakes.-The steamboat and the West<br />

Bibliographical note," p.197-201.<br />

" '<br />

National Foreign Trade Convention (6th), Chicago, 1919. r 382 N1556<br />

Official report of the convention held at Chicago, April 24-26 1019<br />

1919.<br />

The convention assembled to consider and attempt to solve the problems that confront<br />

American overseas commerce as a result of the European war. Its general theme<br />

was that foreign trade is essential to American industry.<br />

Railroads<br />

American Academy of Political and Social Science. 385 Asir<br />

Railroad problem; a discussion of current railway issues. 1919.<br />

v.86, Nov. 1919, of the "Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social<br />

Science."<br />

The same. 1919. (In American Academy of Political and Social<br />

Science. Annals, v.86.) r 306 A51 v.86<br />

Deals with government operation of railroads, current proposals for regulation,<br />

unification of terminals, and railway efficiency and labor.<br />

Chamber of Commerce of the United States of America.<br />

Organization of war transportation control. [191S.J<br />

qr 385 C35<br />

Prepared by the Railroad committee.<br />

Gives the personnel and function of each division, section, and committee, ana includes<br />

a chart showing the <strong>org</strong>anization of the central and regional administration of<br />

the railroads under government control.<br />

Davis, Walter Wesley.<br />

385 D32<br />

The railroad problem, a suggestion; a proposed plan for an undivided<br />

administration of the railroads; for promoting competition in<br />

railroad service; and for stimulating local initiative in railroad development.<br />

[Prehminar}' edition.] 1919. Putnam.


386 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Moody, John. 385 M87<br />

Railroad builders; a chronicle of the welding of the states. 1919.<br />

Yale University Press. (Chronicles of America series, v.38.)<br />

Contents: A century of railroad building.—The Commodore and the New York<br />

Central.—The great Pennsylvania system.—The Erie railroad.—Crossing the Appalachian<br />

range.—Linking the oceans.—Penetrating the Pacific Northwest.—Building along the<br />

Santa Fe trail.—The growth of the Hill lines.—The railroad system of the South.—The<br />

life work of Edward H. Harriman.—The American railroad problem.<br />

"Bibliographical note," p.243-246,<br />

National Transportation Conference, Washington, D. C. r 385 N155<br />

Program of railroad legislation, with statements by H. A. Wheeler<br />

and [others]; submitted to the Committee on interstate and foreign<br />

commerce of the United States House of representatives, July 23-25,<br />

1919. 1919.<br />

Contents: The conference plan for remedial railroad legislation; statement by H. A.<br />

Wheeler.—Program of railroad legislation adopted by the National Transportation Conference.—Compulsory<br />

Federal incorporation for consolidated railroad systems; statement<br />

by A. W. Smith.—Re-establishment of railroad credit; statement by P. M. Warburg.—The<br />

conference rule of rate making; statement by W. W. Salmon.—A Federal<br />

transportation board, its powers and duties; statement by E. R. Johnson.<br />

Pennsylvania Railroad Co.<br />

qr 385 P411<br />

Classification of freight, rates, and rules and regulations for conducting<br />

the freight traffic, June ist, 1873. 1873. Helfenstein.<br />

United States—Library of Congress.<br />

r 385 U244<br />

Government control of railways in Great Britain; memoranda submitted<br />

to the Committee on interstate commerce, United States Senate,<br />

65th congress, 2d session, relative to the government control of railways<br />

in Great Britain in its financial aspects and in relation to railway<br />

employees; prepared in the Legislative reference division, Library of<br />

Congress. 1918.<br />

Women<br />

Ostrogorski, Moisei Iakovlevich.<br />

396.3 O29<br />

La femme au point de vue du droit public; etude d'histoire et de<br />

legislation comparee. 1892. Rousseau.<br />

Bibliographical foot-notes.<br />

Discusses the political rights of women in various countries, from sovereignty to the<br />

most humble civic functions.<br />

Rose, Clephane.<br />

r 3g6 R71<br />

European slavery; or, Scenes from married life. [1881.] Elliot.<br />

A plea for political representation of women and for opening new occupations to<br />

them as a means of improving marriage conditions and laws.<br />

Language<br />

Andronis, Nicholas C.<br />

428.2 A57<br />

Fundamentals of the English language for non-English-speaking<br />

people, including a guide to pronunciation with special drill and practice<br />

in reading, the most important principles of English grammar,<br />

words and dialogues covering almost every phase of life, the history<br />

and government of the United States with questions and answers on


BOOKS ADDED-OCTOBER 1920 38 7<br />

Andronis, Nicholas C.—continued. . 2 g 2 A„<br />

the requirements for admission to American citizenship, the simplified<br />

pronunciation of all words used in the book, and their translation'into<br />

several languages. 1915. Rein.<br />

Camerlynck-Guernier, Mme, & Camerlynck, G. H. 448 C15<br />

France (ire annee de frangais). 1919.<br />

Methode directe de francais, avec notation phonetique.<br />

"Adapted apparently to grammar-school rather than high-school pupils...The text<br />

describes the life of a brother and sister in a French family, and takes the student<br />

through the ordinary events of the school year. . .The best feature of this book is its use<br />

of the International Phonetic Alphabet." Nation, 1919.<br />

Harkavy, Alexander.<br />

492.5 H27h<br />

Harkavy's English-Jewish pocket dictionary, containing 25,000<br />

words. 1900. Hebrew Pub. Co.<br />

Title-page in Yiddish and English.<br />

Harkavy, Alexander.<br />

4C.2.5 H27ha<br />

Harkavy's manual dictionary of the English language, giving the<br />

exact meaning of every word in Jewish, with the pronunciation of every<br />

word in Hebrew characters. 1894. Hebrew Pub. Co.<br />

Title-page in Yiddish and English.<br />

La Guardia, Richard Dodge.<br />

428.2 Lisn<br />

New English system for new American citizens; a beginner's textbook<br />

for the teaching of elementary English to coming and new<br />

American citizens: Beginner's book. 1919. Privately printed.<br />

The same [Ladies' edition]. 1919. Privately printed. . . .428.2 Li5n2<br />

La Guardia, Richard Dodge.<br />

428.2 L15<br />

New English system for new American citizens; a text-book for the<br />

teaching of English and citizenship to coming and new American citizens.<br />

[2 pts. in 2v.] 1919. Industrial and city-wide extension department,<br />

Y. M. C. A., Trenton, N. J.<br />

Science<br />

Dawson, Sir John William.<br />

r 571 D33<br />

Fossil men and their modern representatives; an attempt to illustrate<br />

the characters and condition of pre-historic men in Europe, by<br />

those of the American races. Ed.2. 1883. Hodder.<br />

Fabre, Jean Henri.<br />

595-76 Fug<br />

The glow-worm and other beetles; tr. by Alexander Teixeira de<br />

Mattos. 1919. Dodd.<br />

Frank I. Solar Hand Craft Syndicate.<br />

598.2 F87<br />

Bird houses. Book 1. [1920?] (Hand craft blue print series.)<br />

The same<br />

j 598.2 F87<br />

Lackowitz, Wilhelm, biologist.<br />

r 590.4 L12<br />

Das buch der tierwelt; schilderungen aus dem gesamten tierleben in<br />

lebensbildern und charakterzeichnungen, sowie hochinteressante jagdgeschichten<br />

und wilde szenen in alien zonen. Ed.65, rev. & enl. 1905-


388 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

McEwen, Ge<strong>org</strong>e Francis. 551-47 M15<br />

Ocean temperatures, their relation to solar radiation and oceanic<br />

circulation; quantitative comparisons of certain empirical results with<br />

those deduced by principles and methods of mathematical physics.<br />

[I9I8-]<br />

"Literature cited," p.419-421.<br />

Contribution from the Scripps institution for biological research.<br />

Reprinted from a volume of Miscellaneous studies in agriculture and biology in the<br />

Semicentennial publications of the University of California, 1868-1918.<br />

Thomas, Robert Gibbes. 517 T37<br />

Applied calculus; principles and applications, essentials for students<br />

and engineers. 1919. Van Nostrand.<br />

United States—Coast and geodetic survey. r 526.4 U25r<br />

Report on the connection of the arcs of primary triangulation along<br />

the ninety-eighth meridian in the United States and in Mexico and on<br />

triangulation in southern Texas, by William Bowie. 1919- (Special<br />

publication no.54.)<br />

Youngken, Heber Wilkinson. 581.63 Y41<br />

Pharmaceutical botany. Ed.2, rev. & enl. 1918. Blakiston.<br />

Contents: Fundamental considerations.—Life history of the male fern.—Life history<br />

of a gymnosperm (Pinus strobus).—Life history of an angiosperm.—Vegetable<br />

cytology.—Plant tissues.—Plant <strong>org</strong>ans and <strong>org</strong>anisms.—Taxonomy.<br />

"Bibliography," p.356.<br />

Plant tissues and plant <strong>org</strong>ans are treated at considerable length; taxonomy is<br />

treated more briefly.<br />

Physics<br />

Crowther, James Arnold. 539 C8gi<br />

Ions, electrons and ionizing radiations. 1919. Longmans.<br />

"References." p.272.<br />

"Is not a popular exposition of the 'new Physics' nor is it a compendious synopsis of<br />

the whole subject. . .Is intended solely as a text-book from which students who have been<br />

grounded in the more elementary portions of Physics might obtain a systematic knowledge<br />

of its latest developments." Preface.<br />

Contains a little of the material in the author's "Molecular physics," but is fuller,<br />

more technical, and pays greater attention to apparatus and technique.<br />

Crowther, James Arnold. 530 C89<br />

Manual of physics. 1919. Frowde. (Oxford medical publications.)<br />

Prepared primarily for British first year medical students in an attempt to produce<br />

a text-book which shall be "satisfactory from a scientific point of view without being<br />

too elaborate, and elementary without being childish." Preface.<br />

Crowther, James Arnold. 539 C89<br />

Molecular physics. Ed.2. 1919. Churchill. (Text-books of chemical<br />

research and engineering.)<br />

"Bibliography," p.186-187.<br />

Author is demonstrator in physics at the Cavendish Laboratory, Cambridge, and<br />

thus closely in touch with the work of Sir J. J. Thomson. Though well up to date regarding<br />

recent developments, the book is characterized by temperate presentation.<br />

"The author is eager to discriminate between the known and the conjectural. He is<br />

as careful to distinguish where the solid grounds of experiment end, as he is to indicate<br />

the pleasant fields in which precarious speculation may harmlessly disport itself, or the<br />

still more dangerous quagmires ready to engulf the indiscreet efforts of undisciplined<br />

imagination." Engineering, 1919.


BOOKS ADDED—OCTOBER 1920 389<br />

Harrow/Benjamin. 531.18 H31<br />

hrom Newton to Einstein; changing conceptions of the universe<br />

1920. Van Nostrand.<br />

Contents: Newton.—The ether and its consequences—Einstein<br />

"References" at the end of each chapter.<br />

Houstoun, Robert Alexander. 5 0 Hg<br />

Elements of physics. 1919. Longmans.<br />

Beginners' text, with problems.<br />

Lorentz, Hendrik Antoon. c 3I lg Lgg<br />

Einstein theory of relativity; a concise statement. 1920. Brentano.<br />

Popular explanation by a renowned physicist.<br />

Slosson, Edwin Emery. 531.18 S63<br />

Easy lessons in Einstein; a discussion of the more intelligible<br />

features of the theory of relativity, with an article by Albert Einstein<br />

and a bibliography. 1920. Harcourt.<br />

Bibliography, p.115-122.<br />

Thc samc r 531.18 S63<br />

Aerial Navigation<br />

"Avion," pseud. 533.652 A95W<br />

The way to fly; an introduction to flight for beginners. 1919. Lippincott.<br />

The author's first statement is that "Flying cannot be learnt from books;" nevertheless,<br />

the present work—which is better than many others of its kind—is of value as<br />

a preliminary to practical instruction. Discusses qualifications of aviators, training<br />

routine, and methods of handling the aeroplane.<br />

Bairstow, Leonard. 533-6 B16<br />

Applied aerodynamics. 1920. Longmans.<br />

Contents: General description of standard forms of aircraft.—The principles of<br />

flight.—General description of methods of measurement in aerodynamics and the principles<br />

underlying the use of instruments and special apparatus.—Design data from the<br />

aerodynamics laboratories.—Aerial manoeuvres and the equation of motion.—Airscrews.<br />

—Fluid motion.—Dynamical similarity and scale effects.—The prediction and analysis of<br />

aeroplane performance.—The stability of the motions of aircraft.<br />

The same<br />

r 533.6 B16<br />

As expert adviser on aerodynamics to the Air ministry, the author is in touch with<br />

much authoritative official information, and his book is of high technical value, embodying<br />

results of much research work.<br />

Camm, Sydney. 533-652 C15<br />

Aeroplane construction; a handbook on the various methods and details<br />

of construction employed in the building of aeroplanes. 1919<br />

Lockwood.<br />

Non-technical work on structural details, by a practical designer.<br />

Curtiss Aeroplane and Motor Corporation, Buffalo. q 533- 6 52 C93<br />

The flight across the Atlantic; issued by the Department of education,<br />

Curtiss Aeroplane and Motor Corporation. 1919.<br />

The same<br />


390 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Watts, Henry C.<br />

533.6014 W33<br />

Design of screw propellers, with special reference to their adaptation<br />

for aircraft. 1920. Longmans.<br />

"Works of M. Stephanie Drzewiecki on the subject of screw propellers," p.334-335.<br />

The same<br />

r 533.6014 W33<br />

Not severely technical but concerned with practical design. The author has been in<br />

charge of technical work on propellers for aircraft, for both the British admiralty and<br />

the Air ministry.<br />

[Wright, Orville, & Wright, Wilbur.]<br />

qr 533.652 W93<br />

Early history of the airplane. [1919?] Dayton-Wright Airplane Co.<br />

Contents: The Wright brothers' aeroplane.—How we made the first flight.—Some<br />

aeronautical experiments.<br />

Chemistry<br />

Caspari, William Augustus.<br />

India-rubber laboratory practice. 1914. Macmillan.<br />

547-78533 C25<br />

Lincoln, Azariah Thomas.<br />

54I-I L71<br />

Textbook of physical chemistry. 1918. Heath.<br />

Bibliography, pref. p.5-6.<br />

Clearly written text-book for beginners. Uses only elementary mathematics.<br />

Rudisiile, A.<br />

r 543.7 R83<br />

Die untersuchungsmethoden des eisens und stahls. 1910.<br />

Contains bibliographical foot-notes.<br />

Silverman, Alexander.<br />

r 540.7 S58<br />

Survey of high-school chemistry in Pennsylvania. [1918.]<br />

Reprinted from "Science," v.71, no.1234, Aug. 23, 1918, p.179-182.<br />

Smith, Alexander, b. 1865.<br />

540 S642i<br />

Intermediate text book of chemistry. 1919. Century.<br />

The author's text-books are unsurpassed for clear, logical instruction in chemistry.<br />

This one is adapted to the use of technical school or college students who will not<br />

specialize in chemistry and do not require an elaborate course.<br />

Witthaus, Rudolph August.<br />

r 540 W82g<br />

General medical chemistry, for the use of practitioners of medicine.<br />

1881. Wood. (Wood's library of standard medical authors.)<br />

Geology<br />

Karajian, Hagop A.<br />

r 555.6 K13<br />

Mineral resources of Armenia and Anatolia. 1920. Armen Technical<br />

Book Co.<br />

Contents: Structure and geology.—Non-metallic minerals.—Metallic minerals.<br />

"Bibliography," p.[151-25.<br />

National Research Council.<br />

551.4 N155<br />

Military geology and topography; a presentation of certain phases<br />

of geology, geography and topography for military purposes; prepared<br />

and issued under the auspices of the Division of geology and geography,<br />

National Research Council; ed. [by] H. E. Gregory. 1918. Yale<br />

University Press.<br />

"References" at the end of many of the chapters.


BOOKS ADDED—OCTOBER 1920<br />

39I<br />

Sommer, Johann Gottfried. r 55I . g 6<br />

Gemalde der physischen welt, oder unterhaltende darstellung d.<br />

er<br />

himmels- und erdkunde, nach den besten quellen und mit bestandige<br />

riicksicht auf die neuesten entdeckungen bearbeitet. v.2. 1821.<br />

v.2. Physikalische beschreibung der festen oberflache des erdkorpers.<br />

Wheeler, Harold Leslie, comp.<br />

qr 016.55346 W61<br />

Bibliography of the occurrence, geology and mining of manganese,<br />

with some references on its metallurgy and uses. [1919.] Economic<br />

Geology Pub. Co.<br />

Reprinted from "Economic geology," v.14, no.3, May 1919.<br />

Useful Arts<br />

Berry Brothers, Inc.<br />

r og8. 3 B45<br />

Natural woods & how to finish them. [Rev. & enl. ed.] 1920.<br />

[California Redwood Association, San Francisco.]<br />

California redwood homes.<br />

California Redwood Association, San Francisco.<br />

California redwood on the farm. 1917.<br />

California Redwood Association, San Francisco.<br />

How to finish California redwood. 1917.<br />

r 691.1 C13<br />

674 C13<br />

698.3 C13<br />

Chamberlain, John, & Quilter, J. H.<br />

677.661 C35<br />

Knitted fabrics. [1919-] Pitman. (Pitman's common commodities<br />

and industries.)<br />

Illustrated manual, giving general information on materials, stitches, and machines.<br />

Dye, Frederick.<br />

696.12 D98<br />

Hot-water supply; a practical treatise upon the fitting of hot-water<br />

apparatus for domestic and general purposes; divided into student's and<br />

practical sections, and including information on shower-baths, gas<br />

boilers, boiler explosions, etc. Ed.6. 1919. Spon.<br />

Gives considerable attention to principles and is illustrated with good diagrammatic<br />

sketches rather than with commercial apparatus. Will, therefore, be very useful in<br />

America though based on British practice.<br />

Eglene, Leon.<br />

r 675 E36<br />

La chimie du cuir; a l'usage de tous les industriels du cuir, avec une<br />

preface de G. Jossier. 1919.<br />

"Index bibliographique," p. 134.<br />

King, Alfred Grant.<br />

697.3 K26<br />

Progressive furnace heating; a practical manual of designing, estimating<br />

and installing modern systems for heating and ventilating buildings<br />

with warm air; supplemented by a complete treatise on the construction<br />

and patterns of furnace fittings, by William Neubecker. 1914.<br />

Sheet Metal Publication Co.<br />

Mainly a compilation from "Sheet metal."<br />

Mees, Charles Edward Kenneth.<br />

607 M56<br />

Organization of industrial scientific research. 1920. McGraw.<br />

"Bibliography," p.156-167.<br />

The same<br />

r 607 M56<br />

Confined to consideration of laboratory research, with which subject it deals quite<br />

fully.


392 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

National Society for Vocational Education. 607 N15<br />

Lessons of the war; The states and the Smith-Hughes act and<br />

[Women in industry]; addresses delivered at the 12th annual convention,<br />

St. Louis, Feb. 20-22, 1919. 1919- (Bulletin no.28.)<br />

The same. (In its Bulletin no.28)<br />

r 607 N155 no.28<br />

Snow, William Gage. 696 S67<br />

Pipe fitting charts for steam & hot water, also galvanized iron<br />

piping for fan and indirect systems; appendix relating to piping, containing<br />

reprints of articles from the "Metal worker" and other publications.<br />

1912. Williams.<br />

Contains reprints or condensations of papers on piping, but is made up mainly of<br />

diagrammatic sketches and perspective drawings accompanied by brief text, illustrating<br />

details of pipe fitting practice.<br />

Worden, Edward Chauncey.<br />

r 679 W8g<br />

Technology of cellulose esters; a theoretical and practical treatise<br />

on the origin, history, chemistry, manufacture, technical application and<br />

analysis of the products of acylation and alkylation of normal and modified<br />

cellulose. v.S. IQ16. Van Nostrand.<br />

v.S. Carbohydrate carboxylates.<br />

Bibliographical foot-notes.<br />

Medicine, Physiology, Hygiene<br />

American Medical Association. r 618.9 A51<br />

Transactions of the Section on diseases of children at the annual<br />

session (54th), 1903. 1903.<br />

"Review of the current pediatric literature of 1902-1903." p.228-245.<br />

Bainbridge, Francis Arthur.<br />

Physiology of muscular exercise. 1919. Longmans.<br />

on physiology.)<br />

613.7 B16<br />

(Monographs<br />

"Bibliography." p.203-214.<br />

An attempt to present the subject "in such a way as to promote a closer connection<br />

between the investigator in the laboratory and those directly concerned with the<br />

health and well-being of the community." Author's preface.<br />

Brainard, Annie Maria.<br />

610.7 B68<br />

Organization of public health nursing. 1919. Macmillan. (Series<br />

of public health nursing handbooks.)<br />

"Miss Brainard, after a long experience in the public health nursing world in a<br />

city notable for its <strong>org</strong>anized health effort, is in a position to state clearly not only the<br />

general principles underlying all forms of systematized <strong>org</strong>anization, but is also able<br />

to place at the disposal of those unused to such w r ork valuable suggestions regarding<br />

simple matters of detail on which depend success or failure." Introduction.<br />

Broadbent, Sir William Henry, & Broadbent, J. F. H. r 616.1 B75<br />

Heart disease, with special reference to prognosis and treatment.<br />

Ed.3. 1900. Wood.<br />

Chapman, Mrs Rose Woodallen.<br />

612.6 C36<br />

How shall I tell my child? with a foreword by Edward Bok. 1912.<br />

Revell.


BOOKS ADDED—OCTOBER 1920 393<br />

r 618 C97<br />

Cyclopaedia of obstetrics and gynecology [ed. by E. H. Grandin]. I2v.<br />

1887. Wood.<br />

v.i-4. A practical treatise on obstetrics, by A. Charpentier.<br />

v.5. Gynecological diagnosis, general gynecological therapeusis, by R. Chrobak.—<br />

Electricity in gynecology and obstetrics, by E. PI. Grandin'.<br />

v.6-7. A hand-book of general and operative gynecology, by A. Hegar and R. Kaitenbach.<br />

v.S. Diseases of the ovaries, by R. Olshausen.<br />

v.9. Diseases of the female mammary glands, by Th. Billroth.—New growths of<br />

the uterus, by A. Gusserow.<br />

v.io. Diseases of the female urethra and bladder, by F. Winckel.—Diseases of the<br />

vagina, by A. Breisky.<br />

v. 11. Sterility, by P. Muller.—The menopause, by E. Borner.<br />

v.12. Diseases of the tubes, ligaments, pelvic peritoneum and pelvic cellular tissue;<br />

extra-uterine pregnancy, by L. Bandl.— Diseases of the external female genitals, lacerations<br />

of the perineum, by P. Zweifel.<br />

Erichsen, John Eric.<br />

r 617 E74S<br />

Science and art of surgery; being a treatise on surgical injuries,<br />

diseases and operations; rev. by the author from the seventh and enlarged<br />

English edition. 2v. 1878. Lea.<br />

Ewing, James. r 616.992 E97<br />

Neoplastic diseases; a text-book on tumors. 1919. Saunders.<br />

"Bibliography," p.963-1006.<br />

Fothergill, John Milner.<br />

r 616.3 F82<br />

Indigestion, biliousness and gout in its protean aspects, pt.i. 1881.<br />

Wood.<br />

pt.i. Indigestion and biliousness.<br />

Fox, William Tilbury, & Fox, T. C.<br />

r 616.5 F85<br />

Epitome of skin diseases, with formulae, for students and practitioners;<br />

second American edition, enlarged and revised by the authors.<br />

1879. Lea.<br />

French, Herbert, cd.<br />

r 616.07 F92<br />

Index of differential diagnosis of main symptoms; by various writers.<br />

1913. Wood.<br />

Hall, Winfield Scott.<br />

612.6 H17I<br />

Life's beginnings; for boys of ten to fourteen years. 1918., Association<br />

Press. (Sex education series, no.2.)<br />

r<br />

Harbert, Samuel C.<br />

6l 7-6 H24<br />

Practical treatise on the operations of surgical and mechanical dentistry.<br />

1847. Barrett.<br />

r<br />

Hartshome, Henry.<br />

6l ° H 33<br />

Conspectus of the medical sciences; comprising manuals of anatomy,<br />

physiology, chemistry, materia medica, practice of medicine, surgery<br />

and obstetrics, for the use of students. Ed.2, rev. & enl. 1874. Lea.<br />

Harvey, Lucile Stimson.<br />

Food facts for the home-maker. 1920. Houghton.<br />

6l 3- 2<br />

H33<br />

"Bibliographv," p.295-299. . . , ,<br />

By the town" dietitian of Brookline, Mass. Contains many recipes, but is intended<br />

to be primarily a study of food values rather than a cook-book.


CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Head, Joseph.<br />

Everyday mouth hygiene. 1920. Saunders.<br />

617.6 H38<br />

Brief primer advocating the use of dental floss and devoted mainly to detailed explanation<br />

of its use.<br />

Howard, Hector Haldbrook. r 616.962 H84<br />

Control of hookworm disease by the intensive method. 1919. (Rockefeller<br />

foundation—International health board. Publication no.8.)<br />

John Crerar Library, Chicago. r 016.61462 J35<br />

List of books, pamphlets and articles on cremation, including the<br />

Cremation Association of America collection. 1918.<br />

Keating, John Marie, ed. qr 618.9 K15<br />

Cyclopaedia of the diseases of children; medical and surgical; the<br />

articles written especially for the work by American, British and<br />

Canadian authors. 4v. 1890. Lippincott.<br />

Contains bibliographical foot-notes.<br />

Kellogg, John Harvey.<br />

r 615.853 K16<br />

Rational hydrotherapy; a manual of the physiological and therapeutic<br />

effects of hydriatic procedures and the technique of their application in<br />

the treatment of disease. Ed.2. 1903. Davis.<br />

"Bibliography," p.1135-1146.<br />

Mackenzie, Sir James, b. 1853.<br />

610 M18<br />

Future of medicine. 1919. Frowde. (Oxford medical publications.)<br />

The author's argument is, briefly, that "so far, the greatest endeavours have been<br />

spent in elucidating the later stages of disease, and progress demands that the predisposing<br />

and early stages should be investigated with equal thoroughness and energy."<br />

Devoted in part to experiences of the author. Deals also with medical education,<br />

medical research, and diagnosis.<br />

Mock, Harry Edgar. 613.6 M76<br />

Industrial medicine and surgery. 1919. Saunders.<br />

Contents: Industrial health service.—Prevention.—Industrial medicine.—Industrial<br />

surgery.—Compensation; insurance; medicolegal phases.—Reconstruction.<br />

"Bibliography," p.801-824.<br />

An exhaustive work.<br />

National Safety Council. r 614.8 N1552<br />

Principles and practice of safety; a handbook for technical schools<br />

and universities. 1919.<br />

Contains bibliographies.<br />

Reed, Charles Alfred Lee, ed. r ^% R 2 8<br />

Text-book of gynecology. 1901. Appleton.<br />

Reynolds, Sir John Russell, ed.<br />

r 616 R37<br />

System of medicine, with numerous additions and illustrations by<br />

Henry Hartshorne. 3v. 1880. Lea.<br />

General diseases and diseases of the nervous system.<br />

v.2.<br />

Diseases of the respiratory and circulatory systems.<br />

v.3-<br />

Diseases of the digestive, blood-glandular, urinary, reproductive and<br />

neous systems. -terns.<br />

"List of chief authors referred to in each article," at the end of each volume.


BOOKS ADDED—OCTOBER 1920 395<br />

Sayre, Lewis Albert. r 617.3 S27<br />

Lectures on orthopedic surgery and diseases of the joints, delivered<br />

at Bellevue hospital medical college during the winter session of 1874-<br />

1875. 1879. Appleton.<br />

Spiers, Henry H. r 616.246 S75<br />

Tuberculosis or consumption. [Ed.4.] 1903. Privately printed.<br />

Starling, Ernest Henry. *<br />

613.2 S79<br />

Oliver-Sharpey lectures on the feeding of nations; a study in applied<br />

physiology, given at the Royal College of Physicians, London, June 3<br />

and 5, 1919. 1919. Longmans.<br />

Moderately technical consideration of food requirements and the composition, provision,<br />

and distribution of food.<br />

Stiles, Percy Goldthwait. 612.8 S85<br />

The nervous system and its conservation. Ed.2, rev. 1917. Saunders.<br />

Sutton, Rhoades Stansbury. r 617.55 S96<br />

Personal experiences in pelvic and abdominal surgery. 1901. Calumet<br />

Pub. Co. [Pittsburgh.]<br />

Taylor, John Madison. r 615.8 T25<br />

Reconstructive therapeutics, using to best advantage selfregulative<br />

energies, or body defenses, of the patient in order to limit or overcome<br />

the disease and its effects. 1917. A. R. Elliott Pub. Co.<br />

Reprinted from the "New York medical journal" for June 9, 1917.<br />

Thewlis, Malford Wilcox.<br />

615.54 T35<br />

Geriatrics; a treatise on senile conditions, diseases of advanced life,<br />

and care of the aged, with introductions by A. Jacobi and I. L. Nascher.<br />

1919. Mosby.<br />

"Bibliography," p.237-242.<br />

"The plan followed in this work is to make a clinical presentation of cases, not a<br />

textbook presentation of diseases. It is really a series of monographs." Preface.<br />

United States—Military aeronautics division.<br />

Air service medical manual, [pt.i.] 1918.<br />

r 613.64 U25<br />

Van Gehuchten, Arthur.<br />

r 611.8 V18<br />

Anatomie du systeme nerveux de l'homme; lecons professees a l'Universite<br />

de Louvain. Ed.3. 2w. 1900.<br />

"Litterature," at the end of each chapter.<br />

Engineering<br />

Allen, Arthur Watts.<br />

622 '7 A 4 2<br />

Handbook of ore dressing; equipment and practice. 1920. McGraw.<br />

"Bibliography," p.231-233. .... , ,<br />

Recognizing the varying interpretations of the term "ore dressing, the author has<br />

here considered it as "that branch of metallurgy covering the reduction or other mechanical<br />

handling of the ore whereby one or more products are obtained in a condition to be<br />

treated for the isolation of their valuable contents by amalgamation, concentration, wetchemical,<br />

smelting, or other processes of recovery." Within the l.m.ts of this definition<br />

the subject is treated concisely, but adequately.


396 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Allen, Richard Gilbert.<br />

621.318 A42<br />

Principles & practice of electrical testing as applied to apparatus,<br />

circuits and machines. 1919. Longmans .<br />

British book. Comprehensive and fairly technical.<br />

American Mine Safety Association.<br />

r 622.8 A51<br />

Annual transactions (ist); constitution and by-laws, standard<br />

methods and list of members, Jan. 1914. [1914.] Pittsburgh.<br />

With this is bound its Annual meeting, and joint field meet of the United States<br />

bureau of mines and the American Mine Safety Association, Pittsburgh, Pa., Sept. 22-<br />

24, 1913-<br />

Beck, Ernest G.<br />

624.2 B36<br />

Structural steelwork, relating principally to the construction of<br />

steel-framed buildings. 1920. Longmans.<br />

Confined mainly to design of mill buildings, but contains some material of value<br />

to those interested in steel structures in general.<br />

Bowles, Oliver.<br />

622.351 B66<br />

Technology of marble quarrying. 1916. (United States—Mines<br />

bureau. Bulletin 106.)<br />

The same. (In United States—Mines bureau. Bulletin<br />

106.) r 622.009 U25 no.106<br />

Concise and instructive manual. Deals with properties of marble and with methods<br />

of prospecting, production, and shipment.<br />

Fellows Gear Shaper Co. Springfield, Vt.<br />

r 621.8323 F34<br />

Helical gear; design, application and production; a treatise covering<br />

the application of helical or twisted teeth to gears operating on parallel<br />

axes, together with data on design, application and production. 1919.<br />

Gerhard, William Paul.<br />

628.6 G3ir<br />

Recent practice in the sanitary drainage of buildings, with memoranda<br />

011 the cost of plumbing work. Ed.2, rev. & enl. 1890. Van<br />

Nostrand. (Van Nostrand's science series.)<br />

Gerhard, William Paul.<br />

q 628.6 G3isa<br />

Sanitary engineering of buildings, v.l. 1899. Comstock.<br />

v.2 was never published. The subject matter has been embodied in "Modern baths<br />

and bath houses," "Sanitation of public buildings," and "Water supply, sewerage and<br />

plumbing of modern city buildings."<br />

Deals mainly with drainage and plumbing in dwellings, but touches briefly on sanitation<br />

of factories and certain types of public buildings.<br />

Hubbard, Prevost.<br />

625.7 H87<br />

Highway inspectors' handbook. 1919. Wiley.<br />

First work devoted to the subject and affords the most detailed treatment available<br />

(1919). Includes laboratory tests of materials; also, field inspection of contractors' plant.<br />

materials, and construction details, considering various kinds of roads and pavements.<br />

Illinois—Mines and minerals department.<br />

r 622.3302 I22<br />

Directory of Illinois coal operators of shipping mines, 1918. [1917.]<br />

Massot, P.<br />

qr 621.713 M46<br />

La taille des metaux, d'apres les experiences de F. W. Taylor, et la<br />

forme rationnelle des outils. 1919.<br />

"Index bibliographique," p.103.<br />

National Automobile Chamber of Commerce.<br />

qr 629.1 N15<br />

Facts and figures of the automobile industry [annually], 1919-date.<br />

[i9i9]-date.


BOOKS ADDED—OCTOBER 1920 397<br />

Potter, Andrey Abraham, & Calderwood, J. P.<br />

621.1 P8se<br />

Elements of steam and gas power engineering. 1920. McGraw.<br />

Text-book, practical and descriptive in character. Intended for engineering students<br />

prior to study of thermodynamics.<br />

Ripley, Charles M.<br />

621.309 R48<br />

Romance of a great factory, with an introduction by C. P. Steinmetz.<br />

1919. Privately printed.<br />

Entertaining sketches of activities at the Schenectady works of the General Electric<br />

Company.<br />

Siegerist, Max.<br />

r 621.9 S57<br />

Die moderne vorkalkulation in maschinenfabriken; handbuch zur<br />

berechnung der bearbeitungszeiten an werkzeugmaschinen auf grund<br />

der laufzeitberechnung nach modernen durchschnittswerten; fiir den gebrauch<br />

in der praxis und an technischen lehranstalten; unter mitarbeit<br />

von F. Bork. 1915.<br />

Agriculture<br />

Buller, Arthur Henry Reginald. 633.11 B87<br />

Essays on wheat, including the discovery and introduction of marquis<br />

wheat, the early history of wheat-growing in Manitoba, wheat in<br />

western Canada, the origin of red bobs and kitchener, and the wild<br />

wheat of Palestine. 1919. Macmillan.<br />

Frederiksen, Johan Ditlev. 637 F89<br />

Story of milk. 1919. Macmillan.<br />

Contents: Production, composition and characteristics of milk.—Milk supply and<br />

creamery products.—Cheese.—Milk as a food.—Milk cookery.<br />

"Bibliography," p.187-188.<br />

Lochhead, William.<br />

6 32-6 L75<br />

Class book of economic entomology, with special reference to the<br />

economic insects of the northern United States and Canada. 1919-<br />

Blakiston.<br />

Contents: The structure, growth and economics of insects.—The identification of<br />

insects injurious to farm, garden and orchard crops, etc.—Classification and description<br />

of common insects.—The control of injurious insects.<br />

"Bibliography," p.407-408.<br />

_<br />

Though intended particularly for the class room, its value is not confined thereto.<br />

Is comprehensive, including systematic treatment, identification of injurious insects according<br />

to the field of their operations, and use of insecticides.<br />

Moore, Ransom Asa, & Halligan, C. P.<br />

630 M87<br />

Plant production; agronomy, horticulture [ed. by K. L. Hatch].<br />

1919. Amer. Book Co.<br />

The attempt to cover both agronomy and horticulture necessitates very brief treatment<br />

of topics, but the material included is remarkably concise and instructive, and the<br />

essentials are well presented.<br />

National Society for Vocational Education.<br />

630.7 N15<br />

Agricultural education; supervision, two current problems, relations<br />

to agricultural extension; addresses delivered at the 12th annual convention<br />

St. Louis, Feb. 20-22, 1919. 1919. (Bulletin no.31.)<br />

r<br />

The same. (In its Bulletin no.31.)<br />

6 °7 Ni55 no.31


398 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Roberts, Morris H.<br />

637 R53<br />

Feeding and management of dairy cattle for official production, with<br />

an introduction by A. J. Lotka. 1920. Longmans.<br />

Practical book based on experience on an Eastern dairy farm. Includes not only<br />

breeding and feeding of cattle, but has chapters on dairy practice and on fitting cattle<br />

for exhibition.<br />

Texas—Agriculture, Department of.<br />

r 630.6 T32gb<br />

Bulletin; new series, no.1-5, 7-9, 13, 16-22, 24-26. 1908-17.<br />

No. 1-2, title reads "Circular."<br />

United States—Agriculture, Department of.<br />

r 630.6 U25d<br />

Department circular, no.l-date. 1919-date.<br />

This series supersedes the various separate series formerly issued by the different<br />

branches of the department.<br />

Forestry<br />

Virginia—State forester.<br />

Administrative report, 1916/17-date. [i9i8]-date.<br />

Issued biennially'.<br />

r 634.9 V34ad<br />

Domestic Economy<br />

Frederick, Mrs Christine.<br />

640 F8gh<br />

Household engineering; scientific management in the home; a correspondence<br />

course on the application of the principles of efficiency<br />

engineering and scientific management to the every day tasks of housekeeping.<br />

1920.<br />

"Bibliography," p.517-519.<br />

Published by the American School of Home Economics.<br />

Kleber, Mrs L. Oscar, comp.<br />

641 K31<br />

Suffrage cook book. 1915. Pittsburgh.<br />

Published by the Equal Franchise Federation of Western Pennsylvania.<br />

Lincoln, Mrs Mary Johnson (Bailey).<br />

641 L71W<br />

What to have for luncheon. 1904. Dodge.<br />

New York (city), Metropolitan Life Insurance Company.<br />

Metropolitan Life cook book. 1918.<br />

641 N2612<br />

Rivers, Frank.<br />

q 641.72 R52<br />

The hotel butcher, garde manger and carver; suggestions for the<br />

buying, handling, sale and service of meats, poultry and fish for hotels,<br />

restaurants, clubs and institutions; the book supplemented with gleanings<br />

from the pages of the Hotel monthly. 1916. Hotel Monthly Press.<br />

The same<br />

qr 641.72 R52<br />

Business. Communication<br />

Brandt, Otho William.<br />

656.54 B69<br />

Explanation of train rules, train orders, special instructions, and<br />

rules governing the use of block signals and interlocking plants. 1919.<br />

Privately printed.<br />

Based on instructions on certain Western roads. For firemen, brakemen, engineers,<br />

conductors, operators, and train dispatchers.


BOOKS ADDED—OCTOBER 1920 399<br />

Bucher, Elmer Eustice.<br />

6 54 x B g 4w<br />

Wireless experimenter's manual, incorporating How to conduct a<br />

radio club; describes parliamentary procedure in the formation of a<br />

radio club, the design of wireless transmitting and receiving apparatus,<br />

long distance receiving sets, vacuum tube amplifiers, radio telegraph<br />

and telephone sets, the tuning and calibration of transmitters and receivers,<br />

general radio measurements and many other features. Rev. ed.<br />

1920. Wireless Press.<br />

Bureau of Railway Economics, Washington, D. C. qr 016.656129 B89I<br />

List of references on the relation of British railways to the European<br />

war, Dec. 12, 1917. [1917?]<br />

Mimeograph copy.<br />

Hagen, Hugo J. von.<br />

g 52 4 Hl3g<br />

Graphology; how to read character from handwriting; a text-book<br />

of graphology for experts, students and laymen. 1919. Ross.<br />

Study of handwriting, with brief consideration of the historical development of<br />

writing.<br />

Huff, Charles H. r 656.9 H89<br />

Mississippi waterway system as a war transportation factor; a series<br />

of twelve articles. 1918. St. Louis Star.<br />

Reprinted from the "St. Louis star."<br />

Lauer, Henri, & Brown, H. L.<br />

654.1 L366<br />

Radio engineering principles. 1920. McGraw.<br />

The same<br />

r 654.1 L36<br />

A text-book setting forth principles and giving some attention to application in<br />

practical work. Covers development during the world war but avoids description of<br />

specific apparatus.<br />

McCord, James Newton.<br />

651.5 M14<br />

Textbook of filing. 1920. Appleton.<br />

Considers various methods of filing and the application of these methods in certain<br />

industries. The author is Director of the New York School of Filing.<br />

Merrick, Dwight V.<br />

658.7 M63<br />

Time studies as a basis for rate setting, with a foreword by C. G.<br />

Barth. 1919. Engineering Magazine Co.<br />

Contents: Principles, methods and implements of time study.—Studies applied to<br />

line of machine tools.—Appendices.<br />

Includes results of detailed investigations.<br />

National City Company, New York city.<br />

Cuba and the Cuba railroad. 1919.<br />

r 656.67291 N15<br />

National City Company, New York city.<br />

r 656.673 N15<br />

The Illinois Central Railroad Company; a graphic study of this<br />

standard trunk line. 1919.<br />

National Society for Vocational Education. 650.7 N15<br />

Commercial education; Federal aid, recent developments, retail<br />

selling education; addresses delivered at the 12th annual convention,<br />

St. Louis, Feb. 20-22, 1919. 1919. (Bulletin 110.29.)<br />

The same. (In its Bulletin no.29.)<br />

r 607 N155 no.29


400 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Ramsay, Robert E.<br />

659.132 R18<br />

Effective house <strong>org</strong>ans; the principles and practice of editing and<br />

publishing successful house <strong>org</strong>ans. 1920. Appleton.<br />

"Bibliography and acknowdedgements," P-357-358.<br />

Gives an enormous amount of information in regard to house <strong>org</strong>ans, considering<br />

the various problems of their production and discussing the nature and effectiveness of<br />

a large number of existing publications.<br />

r 656.8 U25P<br />

United States coast pilot; Philippine islands, pt.i. 1919. Govt. Print.<br />

Off. (United States—Coast and geodetic survey. Serial 110.104.)<br />

pt.i. Luzon, Mindoro and Visayas.<br />

Chemical Technology<br />

Calvert, Albert Frederick. 664.4 C14<br />

Salt and the salt industry. [1919.] Pitman. (Pitman's common<br />

commodities and industries.)<br />

Concerned mainly with the industry at Cheshire, England.<br />

Carre, Pierre. r 660 C22<br />

Precis de chimie industrielle. 1918.<br />

Contents: Eau, glace, air liquide.—Combustibles, four electrique.—La grande industrie<br />

chimique.—La metallurgie.—Platre, chaux, ciments.—Verrerie, ceramique.—La<br />

petite industrie chimique.—Couleurs, peintures et vernis, encres.—La distillation du<br />

bois et du goudron de houille.—Les matieres colorantes, teinture et impression.—Les<br />

produits pbarmaceutiques.—Les huiles essentielles et les produits synthetiques employes<br />

en parfumerie.—Poudres et_explosifs.—La photographie et les produits photographiques.<br />

—Les hydrates de carbone.—Les produits de fermentation de hydrates de carbone.—<br />

Corps gras, savors, bougies, glycerine.—Les matieres textiles, la soie artificielle, les<br />

matieres plastiques.—Cuirs et peaux.—Le caoutchouc et la gutta-percha.—Colles et gelatine,<br />

Dickeroff, S. C. qr 669.1 D55<br />

Development of iron ore into iron and steel. 1919. [Penton Pub.<br />

Co.]<br />

Blue-print chart; size, 26yi x 44 inches, folded in quarto cover.<br />

Shows sequence and relation of processes from ore to finished product.<br />

Dykema, William P. 665.54 D99<br />

Recent developments in the absorption process for recovering gasoline<br />

from natural gas. 1919. (United States—Mines bureau. Bulletin<br />

176.)<br />

The same. (In United States—Mines bureau. Bulletin<br />

I 7o.)<br />

r 622.009 U25 no.176<br />

Faber, Henry Burnell. r 662.11 Fn<br />

Military pyrotechnics, with an historical introduction by Marvin<br />

Dana. 3v. 1919. Govt. Print. Off.<br />

v.i. The history and development of military pyrotechnics.<br />

v.2. The manufacture of military pyrotechnics.<br />

v.3. A study of the chemicals used in the manufacture of military pyrotechnics.<br />

Useful contribution to the scanty literature of pyrotechnics. The first two volumes<br />

are in popular descriptive style.<br />

Gerhard, William Paul. 665.7 G31<br />

Gas-lighting and gas-fitting; a pocket book for gas companies, gas<br />

engineers and gas fitters, for manufacturers of gas fixtures and dealers


BOOKS ADDED—OCTOBER 1920 401<br />

Gerhard, William Paul—continued.<br />

665.7 G31<br />

in gas appliances, for gas consumers, architects and builders, health<br />

officers and sanitary inspectors. Ed.4. IOI 3- Van Nostrand. (Van<br />

Nostrand's science series.)<br />

Lorenz, Richard. r 660.9 L87<br />

Die entwicklung der deutschen chemischen industrie; acht vortrage<br />

gehalten auf dem dritten hochschulkurs zu Bukarest im friihjahr 1918.<br />

1919. (Naturwissenschaftliche vortrage im felde gehalten, v.i.)<br />

Binder's title reads "Chemische industrie im kriege."<br />

Brief, popular lectures dealing in part with Germany's chemical industries during<br />

the world war.<br />

National Federation of Iron and Steel Manufacturers. r 669.1 N15<br />

Statistical report, 1915-18. [i9l6]-i9.<br />

Subtitle varies.<br />

Reports for 1915-17 were published by the Iron. Steel and Allied Trades Federation.<br />

Wallace & Tiernan Co. New York. qr 663.633 W17<br />

Chlorine control apparatus for water and sewage purification. 1919-<br />

Trade literature discussing operation of apparatus for application of liquid chlorine.<br />

Williams, Robert Seaton. 669.042 W74<br />

Principles of metallography. 1920. McGraw. (International chemical<br />

series.)<br />

Bibliography, p.139-142.<br />

Brief course in general metallography, with considerable attention to applications.<br />

A text-book for beginners.<br />

Fine Arts<br />

Bennett, Charles Alpheus. 744 B43g<br />

Grammar grade problems in mechanical drawing. Ed.5. i°i9-<br />

Manual Arts Press.<br />

The same<br />

j 744 B43g<br />

[Curcin, Milan, ed.] V 73S M64C<br />

Ivan Mestrovic; a monograph. 1919. Williams.<br />

Contents: To introduce Ivan Mestrovic, by Sir John Lavery.—The story of an<br />

artist, by M. Curcin.—Chords, by Count Ivo Vojnovic— Mestrovic, by James Bone.—<br />

What is Mestrovic's place in art and who is to judge of it, by Bogdan Popovic— Mestrovic<br />

in England, by E. H. R. Collings.—Mestrovic and the Jugoslav idea, by R. W.<br />

Seton Watson.—List of artist's works.—List of exhibitions.—Notes. .<br />

"Bibliography;" comp. by E. FT. R. Collings, p.68-72.<br />

Holme, C. Geoffrey, ed. -


CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Louisville, Ky.—Park commissioners, Board of.<br />

r 711 L92<br />

Year book, for the fiscal year ending Aug. 31st, 1918. [i9 T 9-]<br />

Louvre, Paris.<br />

r 708.4 L93<br />

Catalogue de la collection Arconati Visconti. 1917.<br />

Contents: Peintures et dessins, par Paul Leprieur.—Sculptures, par Andre Michel.<br />

—Meubles et bois sculptes; Ceramique, par Gaston Migeou.—Ivoires, emaux champleves,<br />

bronzes et cuivres, fers et armes, argentene, par J. J. Marquet de Yasselot.<br />

Contains numerous bibliographies.<br />

"Donation Raoul Duseigneur: peinture, sculpture, objets d'art," p.i 10-115.<br />

Morice, Charles.<br />

qr 759.4 G23m<br />

Paul Gauguin. 1919.<br />

An account of the man, the aspects of his thought, and his life in various phases,<br />

attempting to make the reader understand the artist's personality through his work.<br />

Shelton, Louise.<br />

qr 710 S54<br />

Beautiful gardens in America. 1916. Scribner.<br />

"Camera views, some in color, of notable private gardens in many parts of our<br />

broad land make up the bulk of [this book]." Dial, 1915.<br />

Excludes formal gardens adorned with marble and stone constructions. Is designed<br />

to present the cultured American's love of beauty expressed though plant life.<br />

Villiers, Frederic.<br />

r 741 V33<br />

Days of glory; the sketch book of a veteran correspondent at the<br />

front, with an introduction by Philip Gibbs. 1920. Doran.<br />

Consists of 50 full-page plates showing scenes at the front, each accompanied by a<br />

brief descriptive comment.<br />

Architecture<br />

Allen, Gordon.<br />

728.6 A42<br />

The cheap cottage and small house; a manual of economical building.<br />

[1919.] Batsford.<br />

"Convenience in use, beauty in appearance, economy in first outlay, minimisation in<br />

subsequent repairs, reductions in housework—items of this kind affecting modern<br />

cottage design receive consideration in the following pages." Preface.<br />

Begule, Lucien.<br />

qb 726 B38<br />

L'eglise Saint-Maurice, ancienne cathedrale de Vienne en Dauphine;<br />

son architecture, sa decoration; accompagne d'une notice historique<br />

par Jules Bouvier. 1914.<br />

Bibliographical foot-notes.<br />

Calliat, Victor.<br />

qb 725.1 C13<br />

Hotel de Ville de Paris, mesure, dessine, grave et publie par Victor<br />

Calliat, avec une histoire de ce monument et des recherches sur le<br />

gouvernement municipal de Paris, par Le Roux de Lincy. 2 pts. in lv.<br />

1844.<br />

Corroyer, fidouardJules. b 726 C82<br />

Description de l'Abbaye du Mont Saint-Michel et de ses abords,<br />

precedee d'uile notice historique. 1877.<br />

Contains an itinerary and notes helpful to visitors.<br />

[Cousins, Frank]<br />

b 724.9 C84g<br />

[Gardner-White-Pingree house, 128 Essex street, Salem, Mass.;<br />

10 photographs.] Frank Cousins Art Co.<br />

This house, designed by Samuel Mclntire in 1810, was the last one he built in<br />

Salem.


BOOKS ADDED—OCTOBER 1920 403<br />

[Cousins, Frank.] qb ?24 g Cg 40<br />

[The old Assembly house in Salem, Mass.; six photographs.]<br />

Frank Cousins Art Co.<br />

This house, designed by Samuel Mclntire in 1782, was the first he built in Salem.<br />

Germain, Alphonse.<br />

r 726 G32<br />

La cathedrale de Chartres. 1914. (Les cathedrales.)<br />

Bibliographical foot-notes.<br />

A history of the construction of the cathedral and its sculptures from the 13th to<br />

the 16th centuries.<br />

Lowell, Guy. qb 728.8 Lgsm<br />

More small Italian villas and farmhouses. 1920. Architectural Book<br />

Pub. Co.<br />

Forms v.2 of his "Smaller Italian villas and farmhouses." Consists largely of fullpage<br />

plates.<br />

Ramsey, Stanley C. qb 724.59 R18<br />

Small houses of the late Ge<strong>org</strong>ian period, 1750-1820. 1919. Technical<br />

Journals.<br />

Consists of 100 plates illustrating houses, cottages, shops, offices, doorways, and<br />

porches of the period.<br />

qb 728 V32<br />

Le village moderne; d'apres les projets des architectes frangais & etrangers;<br />

habitations economiques, constructions rurales, fermes, plans, etc.<br />

[planches]. [1917.]<br />

Music<br />

Althaus, Basil.<br />

Selected violin solos and how to play them.<br />

Office. ("The Strad" library, no.14.)<br />

787-1 A46<br />

1911. "The Strad"<br />

Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra Association Company. r 785 C48C<br />

Cincinnati symphony orchestra year book (23d season), 1917/18.<br />

[1918.]<br />

Cogswell, Hamlin Elisha.<br />

7»7 C66<br />

How to <strong>org</strong>anize and conduct the school or community band and<br />

orchestra; a guide for supervisors of music, orchestra and band leaders.<br />

1919. Pepper.<br />

Halevy, Jacques £lie Fromental.<br />

qM 782.4 H16<br />

[The Jewess.] La Juive; opera en cinq actes; paroles de E. Scribe,<br />

partition piano et chant, reduite par Garaude. Lemoine.<br />

French words.<br />

Krehbiel, Henry Edward.<br />

782 K4im<br />

More chapters of opera; being historical and critical observations<br />

and records concerning the lyric drama in New York from 1908 to<br />

1918. 1919. Holt.<br />

A sequel to the author's "Chapters of opera." It gives a detailed account of operatic<br />

activities and the war against German music in the Metropolitan Opera House, and closes<br />

with the hope that one beneficial result may be an approach to "national opera."


404 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Lang, Edith, & West, Ge<strong>org</strong>e.<br />

781.6 L23<br />

Musical accompaniment of moving pictures; a practical manual for<br />

pianists and <strong>org</strong>anists and an exposition of the principles underlying<br />

the musical interpretation of moving pictures. 1920. Boston Music Co.<br />

"Aims to develop resourcefulness in presenting music which really illustrates pictures.<br />

Many musical scores are given and many situations discussed, including the<br />

successful 'jazz' for the slapstick comedy." Booklist, igso.<br />

Liszt, Franz. qM 785.4 L73f<br />

Fest-klange, partitur. Breitkopf. (Symphonische dichtungen; anhang,<br />

Varianten zu no.7.)<br />

Scholes, Percy A. 780 S36<br />

Listener's guide to music, with a concert-goer's glossary; with an<br />

introduction by Sir W. H. Hadow. 1920. Milford.<br />

"Books for additional reading," p.88.<br />

Prepared for the use of soldier classes in France. In simple language, with a<br />

minimum of technicalities, the writer explains keys, scales, modulation, rhythm, melody,<br />

harmony, and counterpoint, and discusses the sonata, the symphony, the fugue, the oratorio,<br />

the opera, and the orchestra. Condensed from Spectator, 1919.<br />

Recreation<br />

Grey, Edward Grey, viscount. 790 G887<br />

Recreation. 1920. Houghton.<br />

Address delivered at the Harvard Union, Dec, 8, 1919.<br />

A discussion of leisure time and how to spend it, with comments on the author's favorite<br />

recreations—fishing, gardening, and reading. Especially interesting are his reminisccnses<br />

of Roosevelt as a lover of birds.<br />

Millais, John Guide. 799 M68s<br />

A sportsman's wanderings. 1920. Houghton.<br />

Contents: When I was young.—Some early experiences in shooting.—Travels in<br />

Iceland, 1889.—All sorts and conditions of men.—Arthur Neumann, pioneer and elephant<br />

hunter.—Scottish salmon-fishing.—One African day, 1913.—The Lofoden islands, 1915.<br />

—An Arctic residence, 1916.—Fealar, 1918- Highland deer-stalking.<br />

Staunton, Howard. 794.1 S79CI1S<br />

The chess player's text-book; rev. by E. E. Cunnington. Jaques.<br />

"A concise and easy introduction to the game, illustrated by numerous diagrams of<br />

instructive situations."<br />

Tabourot, Jehan, (pseud. Thoinot Arbeau). 793.3 Tu<br />

Orchesographie; reimpression precedee d'une notice sur les danses<br />

du i6e siecle par Laure Fonta. 1888.<br />

A treatise in the form of a dialogue on the dance and tlie manner of dancing, first<br />

published in 1588. Contains illustrations and music.<br />

Literature<br />

Barton, Sir Dunbar Plunket. 822.33 F 9<br />

Links between Ireland and Shakespeare. 1919. Maunsel.<br />

The author "has solved some long-standing problems... and even where his researches<br />

fail to cast any new light upon the text, he often succeeds in making some relevant<br />

and interesting discoveries by the way." Spectator, loro.<br />

Boileau-Despreaux, Nicolas.<br />

g.g B590<br />

CEuvres poetiques; suivies d'eeuvres en prose, publiees avec notes et<br />

variantes. [1905.] (Les meilleurs auteurs classiques, francais & etrangers.)


BOOKS ADDED—OCTOBER 1920 405<br />

Depew, Chauncey Mitchell. 815 D430<br />

Orations and after-dinner speeches. 1890. Cassell.<br />

An authorized selection of 52 representative addresses, compiled and edited by<br />

Joseph B. Gilder, and revised by the author. Condensed from Publishers' note.<br />

Firkins, Oscar W. 823 Ag3zf<br />

Jane Austen. 1920. Holt.<br />

A critical and biographical study in three parts: the novelist, the realist, and the<br />

woman.<br />

Gilbert, Allan H. r 821 M7izg<br />

Geographical dictionary of Milton. 1919. Yale University Press.<br />

(Cornell studies in English.)<br />

Approximately the first half of the "Dictionary" was accepted as a doctoral dissertation<br />

by the Graduate faculty of Cornell University in the year 1912.<br />

A list of place-names found in Milton's prose and poetical works, with explanations,<br />

and quotations, as far as possible, from his authorities.<br />

Hays, Heber Michel. r 883 H48zh<br />

Notes on the works and days of Hesiod, with introduction and appendix.<br />

1918. [Banta.]<br />

"Bibliography," p.222-226.<br />

Thesis for Ph.D., University of Chicago.<br />

Hudson, William Henry, 1862-1918. 840.9 H88<br />

Short history of French literature, with memoir of the author by<br />

A. A. Jack. 1919. Bell.<br />

"It attempts to record, not merely the achievements of individual writers, but also<br />

the general movement of literature as a whole; and in doing this, it seeks to exhibit the<br />

vital connection of the literature of each period with the changing movements of national<br />

life." Author's preface.<br />

Covers the period from the middle ages to the later 19th century, giving a relatively<br />

large amount of space to modern literature.<br />

Olgin, Moissaye Joseph. 891.7 O23<br />

Guide to Russian literature (1820-1917). 1920. Harcourt.<br />

The same<br />

r 891.7 O23<br />

A chronological arrangement of selections from the productions of the 19th and<br />

20th centuries that show artistic qualities or represent some aspect of Russian life. Contains<br />

a list of pronunciations of authors' names and an appendix on juvenile literature<br />

in Russia.<br />

Thomas, Charles Swain, & Paul, H. G. ed. 810.8 T37<br />

Atlantic prose and poetry, for junior high schools and upper grammar<br />

grades. 1919. Atlantic Monthly Press.<br />

A selection of readings combining the best of the old with the best of the modern.<br />

Includes brief sketches of the authors represented.<br />

Poetry<br />

Heine, Heinrich. 831 H41D0<br />

Book of songs; tr. by John Todhunter. 1907. Clarendon Press.<br />

Ledwidge, Francis. 821 L 5 IC<br />

Complete poems, with introductions by Lord Dunsany. 1919-<br />

Brentano.<br />

Lindsay, Nicholas Vachel. 811 L72g<br />

Golden whales of California, and other rhymes in the American<br />

language. 1920. Macmillan.


4o6<br />

CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Markham, Charles Edwin.<br />

811 M3gg<br />

Gates of paradise, and other poems; the fourth volume of verse.<br />

1920. Doubleday. •<br />

Sidgwick, Maude C.<br />

Sonnets. 1919. Heffer.<br />

821 S568<br />

Stars and stripes.<br />

811.08 S79<br />

Yanks; A. E. F. verse. 1919. Putnam.<br />

Appeared in the "Stars and stripes," the official newspaper of the American expeditionary<br />

forces.<br />

An anthology of army verse by men who went overseas.<br />

Tietjens, Mrs Eunice.<br />

811 T45<br />

Profiles from China; sketches in free verse of people and things<br />

seen in the interior. 1919. Knopf.<br />

Drama. Theatre<br />

Bregy, Katharine Marie Cornelia. 812 B72<br />

The little crusaders; a drama of the children's crusade. 1919. Reilly.<br />

Brownson, Mary W. & Kerst, V. E.<br />

792.5 B82<br />

Victory through conflict; the music written or arranged by Walter<br />

Wild, the dances directed by Marion Gifford, illustrated by Woodman<br />

Thompson; the pageant given on the college campus, June 8-9, 1920,<br />

during the 50th anniversary celebration [Pennsylvania College for<br />

Women, 1870-1920, Pittsburgh]. 1920. Privately printed. [Pittsburgh.]<br />

The same<br />

r 792.5 B82<br />

Cooke, Marjorie Benton.<br />

793-1 C77<br />

The first Thanksgiving dinner; a play for 6th to 12th grade schools.<br />

1906. Dramatic Pub. Co. (School plays, 110.5.)<br />

Fisher, Blanche Proctor.<br />

793-1 F53<br />

Finding the Mayflowers; a Puritan play for children. 1918. Baker.<br />

Furness, Horace Howard, b. 1865.<br />

812 F991<br />

"The gloss of youth;" an imaginary episode in the lives of William<br />

Shakespeare and John Fletcher. 1920. Lippincott.<br />

Glaspell, Susan, afterward Mrs Cook.<br />

812 G46pl<br />

Plays. 1920. Small.<br />

Contents: Trifles; a play in one act.—The people; a play in one act.—Close the<br />

book; a comedy in one act.—The outside; a play in one act.—Woman's honor; a comedy<br />

in one act.—'Bernice; a play in three acts.—Suppressed desires; a comedy in two<br />

scenes [written] (in collaboration with G. C. Cook).—Tickless time; a comedy in one<br />

act [written] (in collaboration with G. C. Cook).<br />

Gomez de Avellaneda y Arteaga, Gertrudis.<br />

q 862 G59<br />

Obras de la Avellaneda; edicion nacional del centenario. v.3-4.<br />

1914.<br />

v.3. Obras dramaticas.<br />

v.4. Novelas y leyendas.<br />

Harris, James Rendel.<br />

822 H2g<br />

Return of the "Mayflower;" an interlude. 1919. Manchester University<br />

Press.


BOOKS ADDED—OCTOBER 1920 407<br />

Haughton, William. r 822 H352e<br />

Englishmen for my money; or, A woman will have her will; ed. with<br />

introduction and notes by A. C. Baugh. 1917.<br />

Thesis by A. C. Baugh for Ph.D., University of Pennsylvania.<br />

Houghton, Stanley.<br />

822 H835f<br />

Five one act plays. 1913. French.<br />

Contents: The dear departed.—Fancy free.—The master of the house.—Phipps.—<br />

The fifth commandment.<br />

Housman, Laurence, & Barker, H. G.<br />

Prunella; or, Love in a Dutch garden. 1919. Little.<br />

822 H83P<br />

Joseph, Helen Haiman.<br />

793-1 J44<br />

Book of marionettes. 1920. Huebsch.<br />

"Bibliography," p.229-232.<br />

A brief history of the puppets of antiquity, their later development in the Orient, in<br />

Europe, and in America, followed by chapters on puppet plays for children, the making<br />

and manipulating of marionettes, and the construction of the stage.<br />

McFadden, Elizabeth Apthorp.<br />

793-1 M15<br />

Why the chimes rang; a play in one act; adapted from the story of<br />

the same name, by R. M. Alden. 1915. French.<br />

The same<br />

j 793.1 M15W<br />

Gives suggestions for scenery, music, costumes, and properties.<br />

Moliere, Jean Baptiste Poquelin.<br />

842 M7gb<br />

Le bourgeois gentilhomme; ed. with an introduction and notes by<br />

F. M. Warren. 1902. Heath. (Heath's modern language series.)<br />

The same. (In his Theatre choisi, p.624-721.)<br />

842 M7gth<br />

Osborne, Harry.<br />

792.07 O29<br />

How to stage a play; a manual for the amateur stage director. 1919.<br />

Denison.<br />

Gives directions for stage settings, lighting, scenery, and mechanical effects, and<br />

for rehearsals, make-up, and costumes. Ends with a glossary of stage terms.<br />

Pinski, David.<br />

892.52 P64te<br />

Ten plays; tr. from the Yiddish by Isaac Goldberg. 1920. Huebsch.<br />

Contents: The phonograph.—The god of the newly rich wool merchant.—A dollar.<br />

—The cripples.—The inventor and the king's daughter.—Diplomacy.—Little heroes.—<br />

The beautiful nun.—Poland—1919-—The stranger.<br />

One act plays, including farces, satires, comedies, and tragedies.—the latter with<br />

European war themes.<br />

Presbrey, Eugene Wiley.<br />

812 P92<br />

Courtship of Miles Standish; adapted from Longfellow's poem.<br />

1909. French.<br />

Thorp, Josephine.<br />

Road to tomorrow; a pageant-play.<br />

1 792-5 T41<br />

1920. Womans Press.<br />

8l2 Vl8<br />

Van Dyke, Henry.<br />

The house of Rimmon; a drama in four acts. 1908. Scribner.<br />

8l2 W l ? m<br />

Walker, Stuart.<br />

More portmanteau plays; ed. with an introduction by E. H. Bierstadt.<br />

1919. Stewart.<br />

Contents: The lady of the weeping willow tree.-The very naked boy.—Jonathan<br />

makes a wish.


4o8 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Wisconsin University—University extension division. 812 W81<br />

Plays for community Christmas. [1919.] .(Wisconsin University.<br />

Bulletin; general series no.794.)<br />

Contents: The elves and the shoemaker (for children); a dramatization of the<br />

story by that name by Von Donahue and L. T. Holmes.—Where love is God is (for<br />

young people), by Tolstoy; dramatization by S. K. Boon.—Holy night (for adults), by<br />

J. C. Devine.—Twelfth night festivities (for the community), by E. L. Knox.<br />

"Some desirable material for school and community Christmas," p.37-39.<br />

Issued by the Bureau of community development.<br />

The same. 1919. (In its Bulletin no.794.) r 378.1 W81 no.794<br />

Humor. Satire<br />

Herford, Oliver. 817 H 4 6t<br />

This giddy globe, by Peter Simple [pseud.]. 1919. Doran.<br />

In the form of a geographical primer, with humorous chapters on the creation, the<br />

earth's crust, the face of the globe, the poles, and the countries of the earth, including<br />

Boston.<br />

Montesquieu, Charles de Secondat, baron de. 847 M85P<br />

Persian letters; tr. by John Davidson. 3v. 1899. Gibbings.<br />

"In the guise of letters written by and to two Persians of distinction travelling in<br />

Europe, Montesquieu not only satirized unmercifully the social, political, ecclesiastical<br />

and literary follies of his day m France, but indulged in a great deal of the free writing<br />

which was characteristic of the tale-tellers of the time." Encyclopedia Britannica.<br />

Biography<br />

Clark, Champ. 92 C5182C<br />

My quarter century of American politics. 2v. 1920. Harper.<br />

"What the majority of readers are most likely to appreciate in these volumes is their<br />

wealth of interesting anecdotes and incidents, not only of politics but in many other<br />

fields, and by no means confined to the twenty-five years named in the title." Review,<br />

1920.<br />

Cody, William Frederick. 92 C655CO<br />

An autobiography of Buffalo Bill. 1920. Cosmopolitan Book Corporation.<br />

Binder's title reads "Buffalo Bill's life story."<br />

A story of adventurous days in the old West, with accounts of the Indians, the buffaloes,<br />

the stage coach, and the pony express.<br />

Fisher, John Arbuthnot Fisher, baron. 92 F533f<br />

Memories and records. 2v. 1920. Doran.<br />

v.i. Memories.<br />

v.2. Records.<br />

"Anecdote, official report, character sketch, apt quotation, hint of literary and religious<br />

preferences are a glittering woof woven into the warp of solid naval history."<br />

Weekly review, 1920.<br />

Hoover, Herbert Clark. 92 H77gk<br />

Kellogg, Vernon Lyman. Herbert Hoover; the man and his work.<br />

1920. Appleton.<br />

A personal story told by one who was closely associated with Mr Hoover in the work<br />

of the Commission for relief in Belgium. The last chapters are devoted to an account<br />

of this work, of the American food administration, and of the American relief administration.


BOOKS ADDED—OCTOBER 1920 409<br />

Judith, Jule Bernat, called Mile. 92 j4g4J<br />

My autobiography; ed. by Paul G'Sell and tr. from the French by<br />

Mrs Arthur Bell. 1912. Nash.<br />

"Social and political intrigues, mingled with reminiscence, anecdote and scandal of<br />

the Parisian professional world, make up the substance of [this volume]... Madame<br />

Judith...a woman of the people.. .became a favorite of the French stage during the<br />

middle period of the nineteenth century." Boston evening transcript, 1913.<br />

"The work is full of intimate sidelights on French history and literature from the<br />

revolution preceding the Second Empire to the foundation of the republic after the<br />

Franco-Prussian War." Nation, 1913. •<br />

Mercier, Desire Felicien Frangois Joseph, cardinal. 92 M633k<br />

Kellogg, Mrs Charlotte (Hoffman). Mercier, the fighting cardinal<br />

of Belgium; foreword by Brand Whitlock. 1920. Appleton.<br />

"Bibliography," p.248-249.<br />

The author, as a member of the Commission for relief in Belgium, knew Cardinal<br />

Mercier personally and is fully qualified to write of his great work. "Her talent and her<br />

devotion combine to give us an inspiring and an ennobling picture of one of the finest<br />

figures of our times." Brand Whitlock, in Foreword.<br />

Meredith, Ge<strong>org</strong>e. 92 M635b<br />

Butcher, Alice Mary (Brandreth), lady. Memories of Ge<strong>org</strong>e Meredith,<br />

O. M. 1919. Scribner.<br />

Recollections of a friendship of 41 years, compiled partly from diary notes.<br />

"Lady Butcher has set herself to sketch Meredith as he talked. Her memory of<br />

him is full of the little details that bring out the quality of his conversation—rich, fantastic,<br />

critical, bubbling from mood to mood—just like the dialogue in his books." Outlook<br />

(London), 1920.<br />

Paton, John Gibson. 92 P2g61<br />

Langridge, Albert Kent, & Paton, F. H. L. John G. Paton, later<br />

years and farewell; a sequel to "John G. Paton; an autobiography,"<br />

with an introduction by Lord Kinnaird. [1910.] Hodder.<br />

Covers the last two decades of the missionary's life, including two visits to this<br />

country to plead with our government to prohibit the exporting of firearms and intoxicants<br />

to the savages of the New- Hebrides.<br />

Roosevelt, Theodore. r 92 R684n<br />

New York (state)—Legislature. Memorial to Theodore Roosevelt.<br />

1919.<br />

Contents: Theodore Roosevelt, a biographical sketch.—Proceedings of the Legislature<br />

on the announcement of the death of Theodore Roosevelt, Jan. 8, 1919-—Roosevelt<br />

memorial day (Memorial services in honor of Theodore Roosevelt, Capitol, Assembly<br />

chamber, Albany, N. Y., Feb. 9th, 1919).—Appendix: Address of Senator H. C. Lodge<br />

of Massachusetts, in honor of Theodore Roosevelt, before the Congress of the United<br />

States, Feb. 9, 1919.<br />

Seneca, Lucius Annaeus. 92 S475h<br />

Holland, Francis. Seneca. 1920. Longmans.<br />

Seneca "is set forth as an eminent man of action, teacher of Nero, and for five<br />

years with Burrhus, almost the administrator of the Empire, who recorded as philosophy<br />

what he had lived as wisdom and prudence. . .Writing for the men of a world in<br />

which tyranny held its capricious sword over the most virtuous heads, [he] may be<br />

excused for being less metaphysical than the Greeks and in his stoicism shrewd and<br />

adaptable." Nation, 1920.<br />

Stevenson, Mrs Fanny (Van de Grift) Osbourne.<br />

92 S8 47 s<br />

Sanchez, Mrs Nellie (Van de Grift). Life of Mrs Robert Louis<br />

Stevenson. 1920. Scribner.<br />

Essentially the story of the married life of the Stevensons written by Mrs. Stevenson's<br />

sister, who was intimately acquainted with her noted brother-m-law also<br />

"We are inclined to think the book better worth while than anything that has been<br />

printed about Stevenson since the 'Letters.' " Outlook, 1920.


410 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Wade, Lee.<br />

r 92 Wn8i<br />

In loving memory of Lieutenant Lee Wade II, 1892-1914; tributes<br />

of affection and esteem from his friends. 1915. Privately printed.<br />

A brief sketch of the life of the lieutenant instructor at Culver Military Academy,<br />

followed by letters of condolence.<br />

Wood, Leonard.<br />

92 W854ho<br />

Holme, John Gunnlaugur. Life of Leonard Wood. 1920. Doubleday.<br />

Written by a newspaper man, in the interests of Wood as a presidential candidate.<br />

Collected Biography-<br />

Husband, Joseph Biegler.<br />

920 H95<br />

Americans by adoption; brief biographies of great citizens born in<br />

foreign lands, with an introduction by W. A. Neilson. 1920. Atlantic<br />

Monthly Press.<br />

Contents: Stephen Girard.—John Ericsson.—Louis Agassiz.—Carl Schurz.—Theodore<br />

Thomas.—Andrew Carnegie.—James J. Hill.—Augustus Saint-Gaudens.—Jacob A<br />

Riis.<br />

r 920 Hg87<br />

Hvem er hvem? haandbok over samtidige norske maend og kvinder;<br />

utgivet av Chr. Brinchmann, Anders Daae, K. V. Hammer. 1912.<br />

Heraldry. Flags<br />

Pennsylvania—State library. r g2g.8 P3g<br />

Arms of Pennsylvania and the great seal of the commonwealth, by<br />

W. H. Egle.<br />

From the Report of the state librarian.<br />

A history and description of the coat of arms, with illustrations from 1777 to 1870.<br />

A brief account of the state seal, showing the first one used in 1780.<br />

Tappan, Eva March.<br />

Q2g. 9 Tig<br />

The little book of the flag. 1917. Houghton.<br />

Gives a history ot our flag, with a list of flag anniversaries and selections for flag<br />

day. For school use.<br />

Maps<br />

Maps—British Isles. (1918.)<br />

qr 912.42 M2<br />

Stanford's parliamentary map of the British Isles, showing the parliamentary<br />

counties, divisions of counties & boroughs according to the<br />

"Representation of the people act, 1918." 1918. Stanford.<br />

"A list of the parliamentary boroughs in the LTnited Kingdom," on separate sheet.<br />

Four sheets, made to fit together; size, 59 x 49 inches; scale, about 12 miles to 1<br />

inch.<br />

Contains inset maps of Glasgow, Edinburgh and Leith, Belfast, Dublin Leeds Shetland<br />

islands, Bradford, Manchester and Salford. Birmingham and Smethwick, Kingston<br />

upon Hull, County of London, Liverpool and Bootle, Sheffield, Bristol, Nottingham,<br />

and Wolverhampton.<br />

Maps—Venezuela. (1918.) qr gi2.87 M2<br />

Atlas de Venezuela, estado Carabobo; editado por Vicente Lecuna,<br />

dibujado y grabado por Luis Mufioz Tebar. 1918.<br />

Size, 19H x 2sH inches, folded in 4° cover; scale, approximately $i mile to 1 inch.


BOOKS ADDED—OCTOBER 1920 4„<br />

Travel and Description<br />

Europe<br />

Jones, Paul Van Brunt.<br />

0142 1A<br />

The household of a Tudor nobleman. 1918. University of Illinois.<br />

(Illinois University. Studies in the social sciences, v.6, 110.4.)<br />

"Bibliography," p.247-251.<br />

The same. (In Illinois University. Studies in the social<br />

sciences, v.6, no.4.) r 305 I22 v.6<br />

Describes the personnel of the household, the food and food supply the dining<br />

chamber and hall, financial management, worship and charity, miscellaneous service<br />

and diversions.<br />

Powell, E. Alexander.<br />

914.96 P87<br />

New frontiers of freedom, from the Alps to the iEgean. 1920.<br />

Scribner.<br />

An account of a post-war journey through Italy, Dalmatia, Montenegro, Albania,<br />

Macedonia, Turkey, Roumania, Hungary, and Serbia, with chatty comments on the<br />

condition of their people and governments.<br />

United States<br />

Ge<strong>org</strong>ia—Agriculture, Department of.<br />

r 917.58 G3ig<br />

Ge<strong>org</strong>ia; her resources, her industries, her possibilities. [1919.]<br />

(Quarterly bulletin, serial 110.79.)<br />

An exposition of Ge<strong>org</strong>ia as the field of opportunity, giving general facts backed by<br />

official statistics.<br />

United States—Council of national defense.<br />

r 917.53 U25<br />

Committee on women's defense work.<br />

War workers' handbook; prepared by Elizabeth Green, Information<br />

department, Oct. 1, 1918. 1918.<br />

A guide book to Washington, D. C, giving information about boarding and housing<br />

accommodations and about recreational opportunities—clubs, community centers, outdoor<br />

camps, river trips, swimming, tennis, etc.<br />

Virginia—Agriculture and immigration department. 917-55 V349<br />

Handbook of Virginia. 1919.<br />

The same<br />

r 917.55 V34I1<br />

Describes the climate, commercial and educational facilities, industries, and mineral<br />

- resources, as offering special inducements to homeseekers and investors. Has an alphabetical<br />

list of counties, with sketches of their history and products.<br />

Virginia—Agriculture and immigration department. r 917.55 V34V<br />

Virginia; its agricultural and industrial resources. [1917-] (Bulletin,<br />

no.104.)<br />

A brief review of the manufacturing, commercial, and general industrial activities<br />

of cities having a population of 5,000 or over. Profusely illustrated.<br />

Other Countries<br />

qr 915 A83<br />

Asia; journal of the American Asiatic Association, 1918-date. v.18-<br />

date. 1918-date.<br />

Stephens, Henry.<br />

918.2 S83<br />

Illustrated descriptive Argentina. 1917- Knickerbocker Press.<br />

Reproductions of photographs, each with descriptive note. Compiled with the idea<br />

of giving the reader a truer impression of Argentina than either pictures or description<br />

alone could do.


412 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Stephens, Henry.<br />

gi8 S83<br />

South American travels. 1915. Knickerbocker Press.<br />

An account of a trip through Peru, Bolivia, Chile, Argentina, Paraguay, Uruguay,<br />

and southern Brazil.<br />

Wade, Sir Charles Gregory. 9194 Wu<br />

Australia; problems and prospects. 1919. Clarendon Press.<br />

The author is (igig) agent-general for New South Wales. He discusses Australia's<br />

climate, resources, industrial and social problems, finance, constitution, land settlement,<br />

the imperial migration, and the future relationship between Great Britain and the<br />

distant parts of her empire.<br />

History<br />

Europe<br />

Dodd, Mrs Anna Bowman.<br />

g44 D66<br />

Up the Seine to the battlefields. 1920. Harper.<br />

A historical sketch of the Seine, attempting to make known its architectural wonders<br />

and scenic beauties.<br />

Goode, William Thomas. g47 G62<br />

Bolshevism at work. 1920. Harcourt.<br />

The author is (1920) principal of Graystoke Place Training College, London.<br />

An example of indirect Bolshevik propaganda and of little value as evidence of the<br />

real situation in Russia. Condensed from Spectator, 1920.<br />

Trevelyan, Mrs Janet Penrose (Ward). 945 T734<br />

Short history of the Italian people from the barbarian invasions t<br />

the attainment of unity. 1920. Putnam.<br />

"Bibliography," p.551-559.<br />

Contains maps.<br />

Vincent, John Heyl, bp. & Joy, J. R. 938 V34<br />

Outline history of Greece. 1888. Chautauqua Press. (Chautauqua<br />

reading circle literature.)<br />

Based on Bishop Vincent's "Chautauqua text book of Greek history."<br />

United States<br />

Chambrun, Jacques Aldebert de Pineton, comte de, & g73.gi32 C35<br />

Marenches, Charles, comte de.<br />

The American army in the European conflict. 1919. Macmillan.<br />

Contains maps.<br />

Not a mere chronicle of what the combat divisions of the American army accomplished,<br />

but a comprehensive survey of our whole overseas military programme as it<br />

passed in review before the eyes of two skilled observers—French officers attached to<br />

General Pershing s staff. Condensed from Atlantic monthly, 1920.<br />

Clark (Arthur H.) Company, pub. r 016.973 C51<br />

United States; a catalogue of books relating to the history of its<br />

various states, counties and cities, arranged alphabetically by states<br />

and offered for sale at reasonable prices. 1920.<br />

Crawford, Mary Caroline. g74 4 cg 7<br />

In the days of the Pilgrim Fathers. 1920. Little.<br />

Appendix: Bradford's "Who's who" of the Mayflower passenger list—A "comic<br />

relief chapter in Plymouth history.<br />

A tercentenary history of the' Pilgrims, with chapters on "Some early books about<br />

Plymouth and "Social life in the Pilgrim colony."<br />

"A book that is not merely authoritative but interesting." Springfield republican,<br />

1920.


BOOKS ADDED—OCTOBER 1920 4,,<br />

Hamer, Philip May. gy5 y Hlg<br />

Secession movement in South Carolina, 1847-52. 1918. Haas.<br />

"Bibliography," p.145-152.<br />

Thesis for Ph.D., University of Pennsylvania.<br />

Harrison, Walter. Q73 7 H<br />

Pickett's men; a fragment of war history. 1870. Van Nostrand.<br />

A record compiled by the inspector-general of Pickett's division from notes taken<br />

during the Civil war and from intimate personal knowledge.<br />

Otis, James, (pseud, of James Otis Kaler). 974-4 O31<br />

Mary of Plymouth; a story of the Pilgrim settlement. 1910. Amer.<br />

Book Co.<br />

Pictures the home life of the colonists for young readers. Told by a sixteen year<br />

old member of the company that landed from the Mayflower.<br />

Paine, Ralph Delahaye. 973-5 P16<br />

Fight for a free sea; a chronicle of the War of 1812. 1920. Yale<br />

University Press. (Chronicles of America series, v.17.)<br />

Contents: "On to Canada!"—Lost ground regained.—Perry and Lake Erie—Ebb<br />

and flow on the Northern front.—The navy on blue water.—Matchless frigates and<br />

their duels.—"Don't give up the ship!"—The last cruise of the Essex.—Victory on Lake<br />

Champlain.—Peace with honor.<br />

"Bibliographical note," p.223-225.<br />

Pennsylvania Andersonville Memorial Commission. 973-7 P3993<br />

Pennsylvania at Andersonville, Ga.; ceremonies at the dedication<br />

of the memorial erected by the commonwealth of Pennsylvania in the<br />

National cemetery at Andersonville, Ga. in memory of the 1849 soldiers<br />

of Pennsylvania who perished in the Confederate prison at Andersonville,<br />

Ga., 1864 and 1865. 1905.<br />

Skinner, Constance Lindsay. 979-5 S62<br />

Adventurers of Oregon; a chronicle of the fur trade. 1920. Yale<br />

University Press. (Chronicles of America series, v.22.)<br />

Contents: The river of the West.—Lewis and Clark.—The reign of the trapper.—<br />

The Tonquin.—Astor's Overlanders.—Astoria under the Nor'westers.—The king of old<br />

Oregon [John McLoughlin].—The fall of the fur kingdom.<br />

"Bibliographical note," p.273-276.<br />

Tomes, Robert, & Smith, B. G. r 973.7 Tsg<br />

The great Civil war; a history of the late rebellion, with biographica<br />

sketches of leading statesmen and distinguished naval and military com<br />

manders, etc. 3v. [1876.] Virtue.<br />

First published under title "The war with the South."<br />

"It has been the aim...to make this history full, fair, and impartial—a history to<br />

be read and appreciated equally by the men of the South and the men of the North...<br />

Space has been found for important official documents, and the result is that while the<br />

reader can always appeal to authority, a storehouse has been preserved for the benefit<br />

of the future historian." Preface.<br />

Weill, Ge<strong>org</strong>es Jacques. 973 W45<br />

Histoire des Etats-Unis de 1787 a 1917. 1919. (Bibliotheque France-<br />

Amerique.)<br />

"Note bibliographique," p.205-206.


414 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Wise, Jennings Cropper. r 975-5 W8i<br />

Ye kingdome of Accawmacke; or, The eastern shore of Virginia in<br />

the 17th century. 1911. Bell Book and Stationery Co.<br />

"Bibliography," p.379-381.<br />

Binder's title reads "Early history of the eastern shore of Virginia."<br />

Includes documents like the "Pledge to the Commonwealth," the "Northampton<br />

protest," the "Northampton grievances," "Bacon's appeal to Accomac," and the "Accomac<br />

memorial" addressed to Berkeley after the rebellion of 1676—of local interest,<br />

yet having an important bearing on the early history of the state.<br />

Other Countries<br />

Asian, Kevork. 956 A83<br />

Armenia and the Armenians from the earliest times until the great<br />

war (1914); tr. from the French by Pierre Crabites, with a preface on<br />

the evolution of the Armenian question by the translator. 1920. Macmillan.<br />

Keith, Arthur Berriedale. 967 K16<br />

Belgian Congo and the Berlin act. 1919. Clarendon Press.<br />

Contains bibliographical foot-notes.<br />

Presents the political history of the Congo and an analysis of the Berlin Act, indicating<br />

the amendments necessary if the benefits of civilization and freedom 5f trade are<br />

to be extended to central Africa. Is carefully annotated, with a reprint of the Berlin<br />

act and other important state papers in the appendix.<br />

"Exact and scholarly. [The author] disentangles with a sure hand the mysterious<br />

committees and associations and companies out of which King Leopold evolved his independent<br />

Congo State." Spectator, 1919.<br />

Skelton, Oscar Douglas. 971 S62<br />

The Canadian dominion; a chronicle of our Northern neighbor.<br />

1919. Yale University Press. (Chronicles of America series, v.49.)<br />

Contents: The first 50 years.—The fight for self-government.—The union era.—<br />

The days of trial.—The years of fulfilment.<br />

"Bibliographical note," p.279-283.<br />

European War<br />

Adam, H. Pearl. 940.918 A19<br />

Paris seesit through; a diary, 1914-19. 1919. Hodder.<br />

An English resident of Paris before and during the European war gives an intimate<br />

account of the city, its people, and its politics from the outbreak of the war through the<br />

Peace conference. The appendix is called "Paris to-day: a chapter for visitors."<br />

American Economic Association. r 940.923 A512<br />

Report of the Committee on war finance. 1919.<br />

Being "American economic review," v.9, no.i, supplement no.2, March 1919.<br />

A critical study of income and excess profits taxes, federal land and capital taxes,<br />

public credit, bank credit, and currency, with suggestions as to what is desirable during<br />

the post-war or transition period.<br />

American Friends Service Committee. r 940.917 A51<br />

Bulletin. 110.18-19, 23. I9i8?-i9.<br />

Contents: First annual report of Charles Evans, chief of Friends' unit in France.<br />

—Plan of the Society of Friends for the reconstruction of 40 villages to the west of Verdun,<br />

France. —Second year of American Friends' war relief service.


BOOKS ADDED—OCTOBER 1920 415<br />

Brown, Herbert C 940.9137 B78<br />

History of E company, 37th U.S. engineers; publishing committee<br />

F. A. McDermott [and others]. 1919. [Ellis.]<br />

A chronological arrangement of the company's activities, chiefly in France, compiled<br />

from the Morning report, from recollections of the supervising officers, and from<br />

diaries of the men. Contains biographical sketches of the officers and a company<br />

roster.<br />

Dillon, Emile Joseph. 940.916 D58<br />

The inside story of the Peace conference. 1920. Harper.<br />

Not a history of the conference, but "a sketch of the problems which the war created<br />

or rendered pressing; of the conditions under which they cropped' up; of the simplicist<br />

ways in which they were conceived by the distinguished politicians who volunteered to<br />

solve them; of the delegates' natural limitations and electioneering commitments and of<br />

the secret influences by which they were swayed; of the peoples' needs and expectations;<br />

of the unwonted procedure adopted by the Conference and of the fateful consequences of<br />

its decisions to the world." Foreword.<br />

Evans, Edward Radcliffe Garth Russell. 940.915 E94<br />

Keeping the seas. 1920. Warne.<br />

A personal narrative of the Dover patrol and its work in keeping open "the lane"<br />

across the English Channel during the European war.<br />

Ford, Ge<strong>org</strong>e Burdette. 940.917 F7<br />

Out of the ruins. 1919. Century.<br />

"An account of reconstruction in France at once interesting to the general reader<br />

and valuable to the student of government.. .Particularly helpful are Mr. Ford's chapters<br />

on recent legislation in France.. .relating not only to the restoration of the devastated<br />

regions, but to the principles of city planning and construction throughout<br />

France for all future time." National municipal review, 1920.<br />

France—Ministere de la guerre. r 940.91 F8612<br />

La France et ses allies; documents de la section photographique de<br />

l'armee frangaise.<br />

Reproductions of photographs, with text in English, French, Portuguese, Italian,<br />

Spanish, German, and Greek.<br />

Gordon-Smith, Gordon. 94°-9i3 G6st<br />

From Serbia to Jugoslavia; Serbia's victories, reverses and final<br />

triumph, 1914-18, with a preface by Slavko Grouitch. 1920. Putnam.<br />

The author, a former war correspondent who was later attached to Serbian headquarters,<br />

describes the heroic efforts of the Serbs from the Danube to Durazzo and in<br />

the campaign on the Salonika front.<br />

Goricar, Josef, & Stowe, L. B. 940.911 G67<br />

Inside story of Austro-German intrigue; or, How the world war<br />

was brought about. 1920. Doubleday.<br />

"A valuable contribution to the history of the rivalries and intrigues which preceded<br />

the war...It also points out to the world the inevitable results of attempts to suppress<br />

minority races in an empire, and of the destruction of truth, honour, and human sympathy<br />

which come from a selfish, secret, and lying diplomacy." Albert Bushnell Hart,<br />

in Introduction.<br />

Lawrence, Dorothy. 940.918 L42<br />

Sapper Dorothy Lawrence, the only English woman soldier, late<br />

Royal engineers, 51st division, 179th tunnelling company, B. E. F.<br />

1919. Lane. (On active service series.)<br />

An account of the young journalist's attempts to serve in the great war and of her<br />

final success, aided by Tommies.


4i6<br />

CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Leviathan (ship). 940-915 L66<br />

History of the U. S. S. Leviathan, cruiser and transport forces,<br />

United States Atlantic fleet; comp. from the ship's log and data<br />

gathered by the History committee on board the ship. [1919.] Brooklyn<br />

Eagle Job Department.<br />

"The record of the U. S. S. Leviathan, queen of the troop transport fleet which<br />

made possible the successful participation of the United States in the war with Germany,<br />

is a record of consistent service and remarkable efficiency which upholds the best and<br />

noblest traditions of the United States naval service." Preface by Josephus Daniels,<br />

secretary of the navy.<br />

McPherson, William Lenhart. 940.913 M22<br />

The strategy of the great war; a study of its campaigns and battles<br />

in their relation to allied and German military policy. 1919. Putnam.<br />

"It is the purpose of this volume to interpret, the influences which controlled the<br />

military policy of the two belligerent groups, and to present a clear view of the curious<br />

evolution of tactics which led from open warfare through the deadlock of rigid positional<br />

fighting around again to semi-open and then to practically open warfare." Preface.<br />

Pittsburgh, Czecho-Slovak Army and Relief Committee, r 940.924 P67<br />

Trail of the Hun in Austria-Hungary; a few examples of Austro-<br />

Hungarian "kultur." Pittsburgh.<br />

An account of atrocities committed by the Germans upon the Czecho-Slovaks, with<br />

illustrations from photographs.<br />

Small, James Louis, comp. 940.919 S63<br />

Home—then what? the mind of the doughboy, A. E. F., by the<br />

doughboy himself, with foreword by J. K. Bangs. 1920. Doran.<br />

Essays and extracts of essays selected from those submitted in a prize competition<br />

by the members of Comrades in Service, an <strong>org</strong>anization started among the American<br />

soldiers in France by Professor O. D. Foster of Chicago. Includes the three prize<br />

essays.<br />

Books for the Blind<br />

The Library has a collection of about 3,700 books and 75 periodicals for the blind.<br />

The Pennsylvania Home Teaching Society and Free Circulating Library for the Blind<br />

supports in this district a teacher, herself totally blind, who, under the direction of this<br />

Library, visits the adult blind in their homes and teaches them to read. This service<br />

and the use of the books are absolutely free to all the adult blind in Pittsburgh and western<br />

Pennsylvania and the Director requests that names and addreses of such persons be<br />

sent to him in order that the teacher may call upon them.<br />

Line Type<br />

Dana, James Dwight. qE 550 Diga<br />

Geological story briefly told; stereotyped and printed with the permission<br />

of the author and owners of the copyright, Ivison, Blakeman,<br />

Taylor & Co. 1881. Amer. Printing House for the Blind.<br />

Scott, Sir Walter. qE 821 S43I2<br />

Lady of the lake; printed from stereotype plates made by using for<br />

moulds the pages of a copy of the book printed at Raleigh. N. C, 1868.<br />

1875. Amer. Printing House for the Blind.


BOOKS ADDED—OCTOBER 1920 41/<br />

Moon Type<br />

Adderley, James Granville.<br />

qE 92 F866a<br />

Francis, the little poor man of Assisi; a short story of'the founder<br />

of the Brothers minor. 3v. 1918. Moon Soc.<br />

Bell, John Joy.<br />

The whalers. 3v. Moon Soc.<br />

Bible—Old testament. Genesis.<br />

Genesis, chapters 1-5 in Hebrew.<br />

Bible—Old testament. Isaiah.<br />

Isaiah, chaps. 35 & 49.<br />

Bible—Old testament. Isaiah.<br />

Isaiah, chaps. 53, 55 & 60 (in Hebrew).<br />

Bible—Old testament. Isaiah.<br />

[Isaiah, chap. 53, Psalms 19, 23 & 125. 1910.]<br />

Connor, Ralph, (pseud, of Charles William Gordon).<br />

Sky pilot; a tale of the foothills. 2v. Moon Soc.<br />

qE B412W<br />

qE 222.1 B47<br />

E 224.1 B47<br />

E 224.1 B47is<br />

E 224.1 B47i<br />

qE C753S<br />

[Dorling, Henry Taprell.]<br />

qE 940.915 D73<br />

Carry on! naval sketches and stories, by Taffrail [pseud.]. 2v.<br />

1919. Moon Soc.<br />

Eliot, Ge<strong>org</strong>e, (pseud, of Mrs Mary Ann (Evans) Cross).<br />

Silas Marner, the weaver of Raveloe. 5v. Moon Soc.<br />

Hunt, Violet Brooke-.<br />

Lord Roberts; a biography. 6v. 1917. Moon Soc.<br />

London, Jack.<br />

Tales of the fish patrol. 2v. Moon Soc.<br />

qE E476S4<br />

qE 92 R536h<br />

qE L822t<br />

Lorimer, Ge<strong>org</strong>e Horace.<br />

qE 817 L87<br />

Letters from a self-made merchant to his son. 3v. 1915. Moon<br />

Soc.<br />

Mitford, Mary Russell.<br />

qE M754S<br />

Selected stories from "Our village." 3v. Moon Soc.<br />

Moon, William.<br />

Geography. 2v. Moon Soc.<br />

Pearse, Mark Guy.<br />

Daniel Quorm and his religious notions. 4v<br />

for the Blind.<br />

qE 910 M87<br />

E P 3 48d<br />

National Institute<br />

Porter, Mrs Eleanor (Hodgman).<br />

qE P835P2<br />

Pollyanna. 4v. Moon Soc.<br />

Rice, Mrs Alice Caldwell (Hegan).<br />

qE R395m 2<br />

Mrs Wiggs of the Cabbage Patch. 2v. Moon Soc<br />

Roberts, Morley.<br />

qE R537m<br />

Madonna of the Beechwood, and other stories. 2v. National Insti-<br />

tute for the Blind.


418 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Roe, Edward Payson. qE Rsgsb<br />

Barriers burned away. v.2. National Institute for the Blind.<br />

Scott, Sir Walter.<br />

Ivanhoe. ' 8v. National Institute for the Blind.<br />

Stevenson, Robert Louis.<br />

Treasure island. 5v. National Institute for the Blind.<br />

Wilkins, Mary Eleanor, afterward Mrs Freeman.<br />

Revolt of "Mother." National Institute for the Blind.<br />

qE S43ii4<br />

qE S848t2<br />

E W728r<br />

Yonge, Charlotte Mary.<br />

qE Y2gd<br />

Dove in the eagle's nest. 8v. National Institute for the Blind.<br />

Revised Braille with Contractions<br />

Andrews, Mary Raymond Shipman. qE As68g<br />

A good Samaritan; put into Revised Braille, grade 1^4, for the<br />

special use of the American war-blind by the author in cooperation<br />

with the American Library Association. Amer. Printing House for<br />

the Blind.<br />

Brooks, Charles Stephen.<br />

qE 814 B77<br />

Chimney-pot papers; embossed and printed for the New York State<br />

Library. 2v. 1920. Amer. Printing House for the Blind.<br />

Cobb, Irvin Shrewsbury.<br />

qE 817 C62a<br />

"Speaking of operations;" put into Revised Braille, grade 1J-2, for<br />

the special use of the American war blind by the author. 1919. Amer.<br />

Printing House for the Blind.<br />

Conwell, Russell Herman.<br />

qE 174 C76<br />

Acres of diamonds; put into Revised Braille, grade 1*4, for the<br />

special use of the American war-blind by H. V. Toulon in the name of<br />

the Y. M. C. A. "Sunshine hut," in cooperation with the American Library<br />

Association. 1919. Amer. Printing House for the Blind.<br />

Crane, Frank.<br />

qE 814 C86<br />

If you are up against it—go around! put into Revised Braille, grade<br />

\ l / 2 , for the special use of the American war-blind by the author in cooperation<br />

with the American Library Association. 1919. Amer. Printing<br />

House for the Blind.<br />

Cushing, Luther Stearns.<br />

qE 328.1 C93<br />

Manual of parliamentary practice; put into Revised Braille, grade<br />

V/2, for the special use of the American war blind by the National<br />

W. C. T. U. in co-operation with the American Library Association. 2v.<br />

1920. Amer. Printing House for the Blind.<br />

Drinkwater, John. b. 1882.<br />

qE 822 D82<br />

Abraham Lincoln; a play, with an introduction by Arnold Bennett;<br />

embossed and printed for the New York State Library. 1920. Amer.<br />

Printing House for the Blind.


BOOKS ADDED—OCTOBER 1920<br />

Ferber, Edna. qE F 37 it<br />

That's marriage, and The frog and the puddle; put into Revised<br />

Braille, grade iY 2 , for the special use of the American war blind by<br />

the Library war service, American Library Association. Amer. Printing<br />

House for the Blind.<br />

Glass, Montague.<br />

E G4660<br />

Object matrimony; put into Revised Braille, grade i l / 2 , for the<br />

special use of the American war blind by the author in co-operation<br />

with the American Library Association. Amer. Printing House for the<br />

Blind.<br />

Graham, John Cameron.<br />

E 636.5 G77<br />

Brooding and rearing chicks; supplement by F. H. Cockell; embossed<br />

and printed by the Library war service, American Library<br />

Association. 1919. Amer. Printing House for the Blind.<br />

Harte, Bret.<br />

E H3igt<br />

Tennessee's partner; put into Revised Braille, grade i l / 2 , for the special<br />

use of the American war blind by Beatrice Mantle. Howe Pub.<br />

Soc. for the Blin,d.<br />

Henry, O. (pseud, of Sydney Porter). qE H452sh<br />

Shoes, and The moment of victory; put into Revised Braille, grade<br />

i l / 2 , for the special use of the American war blind by the Library war<br />

service, American Library Association. Amer. Printing House for the<br />

Blind.<br />

Hines, John Chesterfield.<br />

qE Hs67b<br />

The blue streak, and A one-man dog; put into Revised Braille, grade<br />

IJ4, for the special use of the American war blind by the Library war<br />

service, American Library Association. Amer. Printing House for the<br />

Blind.<br />

Holland, Rupert Sargent.<br />

qE 973 H89<br />

Historic adventures; put into Revised Braille, grade \Y 2 , for the<br />

special use of the American war-blind by the American Red Cross,<br />

through the Red Cross Institute for the Blind, in cooperation with the<br />

American Library Association. 3V. 1920. Amer. Printing House for<br />

the Blind.<br />

Laughlin, Clara Elizabeth.<br />

qE L368e2<br />

Everybody's lonesome; a true fairy story; put into Revised Braille,<br />

grade l J / 2 , for the special use of the American war blind by the National<br />

W. C. T. U. in co-operation with the American Library Association.<br />

Amer. Printing House for the Blind.<br />

Leupp, Francis Ellington.<br />

E L6sgd2<br />

A day with father; put into Revised Braille, grade l J /i, for the<br />

special use of the American war blind by Mrs F. E. Leupp in co-operation<br />

with the American Library Association. Amer. Printing House<br />

for the Blind.<br />

4ig


CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Lewis, Harry Reynolds.<br />

E 636.5 L67<br />

Poultry keeping; put into Revised Braille, grade 1^4, for the special<br />

use of the American war blind; gift of the American Red Cross through<br />

the Red Cross Institute for the Blind in co-operation with the American<br />

Library Association. 4v. Amer. Printing House for the Blind.<br />

London, Jack. qE L822]<br />

Love of life; put into Revised Braille, grade i 1^, for the special use<br />

of the American war blind by Mrs Jack London. Amer. Printing<br />

House for the Blind.<br />

Macafee, Nellie Elizabeth. E 615.82 Mn<br />

Massage; an elementary text-book for nurses; embossed and printed<br />

for the Library war service, American Library Association. 1919.<br />

Amer. Printing House for the Blind.<br />

Mitchell, John Kearsley. qE 615.82 M74<br />

Principles, methods and therapeutics of massage; put into Revised<br />

Braille, grade \Y 2 , for the special use of the American war blind; gift<br />

of the American Red Cross Institute for the Blind in cooperation with<br />

the American Library Association. 1919. Amer. Printing House for<br />

the Blind. (System of physiologic therapeutics.)<br />

Montague, Margaret Prescott. qE M846g<br />

The gift; embossed and printed for the New York State Library.<br />

Amer. Printing House for the Blind.<br />

Page, Thomas Nelson. qE Pi45b<br />

Burial of the guns; put into Revised Braille, grade i] 2 , for the<br />

special use of the American war blind by the author in co-operation<br />

with the American Library Association. Amer. Printing House for<br />

the Blind.<br />

Palmer, Margaret D. qE 615.82 P19<br />

Lessons on massage, including Swedish remedial gymnastics and<br />

bandaging; put into Revised Braille, grade i} 2 , for the special use of<br />

the American war blind; gift of the American Red Cross through the<br />

Red Cross Institute for the Blind in cooperation with the American Library<br />

Association. 3%-. 1919. Amer. Printing House for the Blind.<br />

Peple, Edward Henry. E P4i7n<br />

A night out; put into Revised Braille, grade i l /2, for the special<br />

use of the American war blind, by the author in co-operation with the<br />

American Library Association. Amer. Printing House for the Blind.<br />

Poe, Edgar Allan.<br />

q E p 74I d<br />

Descent into the maelstrom, The purloined letter, and The masque<br />

of the red death; put into Revised Braille, grade l 1 /., for the special<br />

use of the American war blind by the National W. C. T. U. in co-operation<br />

with the American Library Association. Amer. Printing House<br />

for the Blind.


BOOKS ADDED—OCTOBER 1920 421<br />

Richmond, Mrs Grace Louise (Smith). qE R425r<br />

Red Pepper Burns; put into Revised Braille, grade i]/ 2 , for the<br />

special use of the American war-blind by the author in cooperation<br />

with the American Library Association. 2v. Amer. Printing House<br />

for the Blind.<br />

Rinehart, Mrs Mary E. (Roberts).<br />

qE R472I<br />

Love stories; put into Revised Braille, grade i]/ 2 , for the special<br />

use of the American war blind by the author in co-operation with the<br />

American Library Association. 3v. Amer. Printing House for the<br />

Blind.<br />

Twain, Mark, (pseud, of Samuel Langhorne Clemens). qE T8g7t<br />

The $30,000 bequest, and The danger of lying in bed; put into Revised<br />

Braille, grade 1Y2, for the special use of the American war blind<br />

by the Library war service, American Library Association. Amer.<br />

Printing House for the Blind.<br />

United States. Constitution.<br />

qE 342.7 U25a<br />

Constitution of the United States and Declaration of independence;<br />

put into Revised Braille, grade l 1^, for the special use of the American<br />

war blind by the National W. C. T. U. in co-operation with the American<br />

Library Association. 1920. Amer. Printing House for the Blind.<br />

Wade, Mrs Mary L.<br />

qE 641 Wn<br />

Book of potato cookery; embossed and printed for the New York<br />

State Library. 1920. Amer. Printing House for the Blind.<br />

Webster, Jean.<br />

Dear enemy. 6v. Howe Pub. Soc. for the Blind.<br />

E W383de<br />

Young, Samuel Hall.<br />

qE 917-98 Y39<br />

Adventures in Alaska; embossed and printed for the New York<br />

State Library. 1920. Amer. Printing House for the Blind.<br />

Young People's Books<br />

Bailey, Margery.<br />

' J B161S<br />

Seven peas in the pod, with illustrations by A. B. Preston. Little.<br />

Seven new fairy tales, one for each day of the week, with seven curious songs "for<br />

the medium voice and one finger." Herein will be found the story of the weaver's lass<br />

who was a lucky seventh daughter, and the tale of the princess who had but one accomplishment<br />

and that one none too rare. One may read also of the prince who married a<br />

water nixie and of the little dumb princess and how she found her tongue.<br />

Large print and good pictures.<br />

Bennett, Charles Alpheus.<br />

j 744 B43g<br />

Grammar grade problems in mechanical drawing. 1919. Manual<br />

Arts Press.<br />

Elephant stories; retold from St. Nicholas. 1919. Century. j E 4 54e<br />

Such titles as, The king of the elephants.—The working elephants of India.—Rogue<br />

elephants.—An elephant hunt in Siam.—A girl who trams an elephant.<br />

Frank I. Solar Hand Craft Syndicate.<br />

j 598.2 F87<br />

Bird houses. Book 1. [1920?] (Hand craft blue print series.)


422 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Gordy, Wilbur Fisk. j 94°.gii G66<br />

Causes and meaning of the great war. 1919. Scribner.<br />

About one-half of the book is devoted to the conditions which led to the European<br />

war Military events are treated briefly and emphasis is laid upon the reasons why the<br />

United States entered the conflict, upon national ideals and the new international relations<br />

and responsibilities.<br />

Joan of Arc. j 9 2 J3 2 9r<br />

Richards, Mrs Laura Elizabeth (Howe). Joan of Arc. 1919. Appleton.<br />

Introduces descriptions of the dress, manners, and customs of the time; also legends<br />

and picturesque incidents connected with the persons, the chateaux, and the places mentioned.<br />

McFadden, Elizabeth Apthorp. j 793-1 M15W<br />

Why the chimes rang; a play in one act; adapted from the story of<br />

the same name, by R. M. Alden. 1915. French.<br />

Gives suggestions for scenery, music, costumes, and properties.<br />

Meyer, Zoe. j 57°-4 M65<br />

Orchard and meadow; illustrated by C. E. Atwood. 1919. Little.<br />

Jack and Mary, two little country children, become acquainted with the animals,<br />

birds, and plants in orchard and meadow.<br />

May be used as a nature reader in second and third grades.<br />

Olcott, William Tyler. j 523-8 O23<br />

Field book of the stars. Ed.2, rev. & enl. 1914. Putnam.<br />

"Names of the stars and their meanings," p. 133-137-<br />

Maps and diagrams, grouped under the seasons, with directions for locating the constellations<br />

and brief information about the principal stars.<br />

Pier, Arthur Stanwood. j P556hi<br />

The Hilltop troop. Houghton.<br />

Story of a feud between different sections of a small town.<br />

united in a boy scout troop.<br />

The boys are finally<br />

[Rowbotham, Francis Jameson.] j 9 2 5 R78<br />

Story-lives of great scientists. [1918.] Gardner.<br />

Contents: Lord Bacon.—Galileo.—William Harvey.— Sir Isaac Newton.—Linnaeus.<br />

—J. B. Lamarck.—Sir Humphry Davy.—Michael Faraday.—Sir Charles Lyell.—Sir<br />

J. C. Ross.—Charles Darwin.—Louis Pasteur.—Lord Kelvin.—Lord Lister.—Sir William<br />

Crookes, M. and Madame Curie.<br />

Binder's title reads "Story lives of men of science,"<br />

Slusser, Effie Young, and others. j 581.15 S63<br />

Stories of Luther Burbank and his plant school; ed. by L. M. Waldo,<br />

with an introduction by Luther Burbank. 1920. Scribner.<br />

Interesting account of Luther Burbank's life and his wonderful work in creating<br />

and developing new and valuable plants, fruits, and flowers. Such chapter headings as,<br />

Miss Eschscholtzia has a new dress.—The lily pupils.—The calla's story.—The training<br />

of Thornless.—The new strawberry.—The ennobling of Little Beach.<br />

Many pictures, including eight color plates.


Rules for Lending Books<br />

I. Hours. The adult Lending Rooms of the Central and branch<br />

libraries are open daily from 9 a. m to 9 p. m., Sundays and holidays<br />

excepted. The Children's Rooms in the branches are closed after 6 p m<br />

The Central Children's Room is open daily except Sundays and holidays<br />

from 9 a. m. to 9 p. m.<br />

2. Borrowers. Any resident or taxpayer of Pittsburgh is entitled<br />

to borrow books from the Library by signing the proper application<br />

and agreement and receiving a borrower's card. In the case of a child<br />

under fourteen years of age the application must also be signed by the<br />

parent or guardian.<br />

Non-residents who can call at the Library for their books- may<br />

obtain a borrower's card on payment of one dollar a year in advance.<br />

For non-residents who wish their books sent by mail or express the<br />

annual fee is two dollars. If a non-resident is employed or attending<br />

school in the city the guaranty of a resident tax-payer will be accepted<br />

instead of this fee.<br />

Temporary residents may borrow books en making a deposit of<br />

five dollars, or more if deemed desirable, this sum to be returned to the<br />

depositor upon surrender of his borrower's card.<br />

3. Borrowers' cards. A borrower's card may lie used at the Central<br />

and branch libraries.<br />

Each borrower is responsible for all books charged on his card.<br />

Change of residence must be reported immediately.<br />

Lost cards should be reported at once. Adult cards will be replaced<br />

fourteen days after notice of such loss. Juvenile cards will lie replaced<br />

fourteen days after notice of loss is given upon the payment of a fine<br />

of five cents, or replaced without pa} r ment six months after notice of<br />

loss is given.<br />

4. Issue of books. Holders of adult cards may borrow as many<br />

books of non-fiction as are needed at one time, together with two books<br />

of fiction, only one of which shall have been published within the current<br />

or the preceding year. Holders of juvenile cards may borrow two<br />

juvenile books at one time.<br />

Books may be kept two weeks, -except some new and popular<br />

books, which may be kept but seven days. Magazines are lent for<br />

seven days only.


424 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

5. Renewals. Non-fiction and certain standard fiction may be<br />

once renewed for two weeks from the date on which the request for<br />

renewal is received.<br />

Requests for renewal may be made in person, by mail, or by telephone.<br />

In each case the call number of the book, the number of the<br />

borrower's card, and the date on which the book is due must be given.<br />

In return the borrower will receive a renewal card, which must be<br />

brought with the book when it is returned.<br />

6. Reserves. Books may be reserved at the Library by payment<br />

of one cent for a postal card notice. As soon as the book is returned<br />

to the Library, this postal card will be mailed to the person making<br />

the request, and the book will be reserved two days. Requests for<br />

reserves ma3' be made by telephone, in which case the cost of the postal<br />

card will be collected when the borrower calls for the book.<br />

7. Fines. A fine of two cents a day (including Sundays and holidays)<br />

must be paid on each book kept overtime. The holder of a<br />

juvenile card may forfeit the use of his card for six months from the<br />

date upon which an overdue book is returned in place of payment of<br />

this fine. If a book is not returned within three weeks after the date<br />

on whichit is due, a messenger will be sent for it. This messenger has<br />

authority to collect the fine incurred and an additional fee of twentyfive<br />

cents for messenger service.<br />

A borrower must pay for books lost or injured while charged on<br />

his card. No books may be borrowed until fines and claims for damages<br />

have been paid.<br />

No claim can be established because of the failure of the Post<br />

Office to deliver notices to or from the Library.


Publications of the Library Now in Print<br />

Prices. Where two prices are given, the first is that for which<br />

the publication is sold at the Library only. All prices are strictly net,<br />

except for individual publications ordered in lots of twenty or more.<br />

Remittances must be made in advance, payable to Carnegie Library of<br />

Pittsburgh. All publications not marked * may be had free at the<br />

Library, or will be sent postpaid for 5 cents each.<br />

*Classified Catalogue of the Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh.<br />

FIRST SERIES, 1895-1902. 1907. vol. 1-3. 3,890 pp. $12.00.<br />

SECOND SERIES, 1902-1906. 1908. vol. 4-5. 2,020 pp. $5.00.<br />

THIRD SERIES, 1907-1911. 1914. vol. 6-8. 3,475 pp. $8.00.<br />

Bound in buckram with gilt tops. Include full author and subject indexes.<br />

The same [in pamphlet form].<br />

FIRST SERIES, 1895-1902. 10 parts. 1903-07.<br />

Part 1. General Works. 1907. 67 pp. 10 cents, postpaid.<br />

Part 2. Philosophy and Religion. 1903. 223 pp. Out of print.<br />

Part 3. Sociology and Philology. 1904. 340 pp. 15 cents; postpaid, 25 cents.<br />

Part 4. Natural Science and Useful Arts. 1904. 598 pp. 35 cents; postpaid,<br />

50 cents.<br />

Part 5. Fine Arts. 1905. 351 pp. 15 cents; postpaid, 25 cents.<br />

Part 6. Literature. 1905. 308 pp. 15 cents; postpaid, 25 cents.<br />

Part 7. Fiction. 1906. 446 pp. 25 cents; postpaid, 40 cents.<br />

Part 8. History and Travel. 1907. 691 pp. 50 cents; postpaid, 65 cents.<br />

Part 9. Biography. 1907. 381 pp. 20 cents; postpaid, 30 cents.<br />

Part 10. Indexes, Title-Pages, Contents, Preface and Synopsis of Classification.<br />

1907. S50 pp. $1.00; postpaid, $1.20.<br />

SECOND SERIES, 1902-1906. 5 parts. 1907-08.<br />

Part 1. General Works, Philosophy, Religion, Sociology and Philology. 1907.<br />

425 pp. Out of print.<br />

Part 2. Natural Science, Useful Arts and Fine Arts. 1907. 477 pp. 45<br />

cents ; postpaid, 60 cents.<br />

Part 3. Literature, English Fiction and Fiction in Foreign Languages. 1908.<br />

342 pp. 40 cents ; postpaid, 50 cents.<br />

Part 4. History and Travel, Collected Biography and Individual Biography.<br />

1908. 465 pp. 45 cents; postpaid, 60 cents.<br />

Part 5. Indexes, Title-Pages, Contents, Preface and Synopsis of Classification.<br />

190S. 460 pp. 80 cents; postpaid, 95 cents.<br />

THIRD SERIES, 1907-1911. 10 parts. 1912-14.<br />

Part 1. General Works, Philosophy, Religion. 1912. 372 pp. 4° cents;<br />

postpaid, 50 cents. . -<br />

Part 2. Sociology, Philology. 1912- 418 pp. 45 cents; postpaid, 60 cents.<br />

Part 3. Natural Science, Useful Arts. 1913. 623 pp. 60 cents; postpaid,<br />

75 cents. .,<br />

Part 4. Fine Arts. 1913. 237 PP- 25 cents; postpaid, 35 cents.<br />

Part 5. Literature. 1913. 271 PP- 30 cents; postpaid, 40 cents.<br />

Part 6. English Fiction, Fiction in Foreign Languages. 1913- 294 PP- 3<br />

cents; postpaid, 40 cents.<br />

„„, c<br />

Part 7 History and Travel. 19U. 401 PP- 4 cents; postpaid, 50 cents.<br />

Part 8. Biography. 1914- 276 pp. 30 cents; postpaid, 40 cents.<br />

Par. 9- Books for the Blind. 19.4. 44 PP- 5 cents j postpa.d "cent..<br />

Part 10. Indexes, Title-Pages, Contents, Preface and Synopsis of Classification.<br />

1914. 816 pp. 80 cents; postpaid, $1.00.<br />

FOURTH SERIES, 1912-1916. 10 parts. 1919-<br />

Part 1 General Works, Philosophy, Religion. 1919. 2°S PP- 50 cents;<br />

Parrr^logy" Philology. ...9. 36o PP. 80 cents ; postpaid, $,.00.<br />

425


426 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Monthly Bulletin. 50 cents a year, postpaid.<br />

Not published in August and September.<br />

Annual Reports, ist-24th, 1896-1919. Sent free upon request.<br />

Except the 3d, 6th and 20th, which are out of print.<br />

Books in the Library of the American Philatelic Society. 1910. 20 pp.<br />

Carnegie Institute and Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh (Handbook).<br />

1920. 72 pp. 25 cents; postpaid, 30 cents.<br />

Catalogue of the Carnegie Library School; a school for training in<br />

General Library Work, Library Work with Children and School<br />

Library Work. Sent free upon request.<br />

*Debate Index. 3d edition. 1919. 116 pp. 25 cents; postpaid, 30 cents.<br />

The Function of the Public Library in a Democracy. 1920. 20 pp.<br />

Periodicals and Other Serials Currently Received by the Carnegie<br />

Library of Pittsburgh. 7th edition. 1915. 42 pp.<br />

Rules for Filing Cards in the Dictionary Catalogues of the Carnegie<br />

Library of Pittsburgh. Reprint of 2d edition. 1918. 32 pp.<br />

What a Public Library Finds to Do; by Elisa May Willard. 1917. 18 pp.<br />

Reference Lists<br />

History<br />

Books of Interest in Connection with the European War.<br />

1914. 26 pp.<br />

Braddock's Expedition. 11 pp. (.Monthly Bulletin, Nov. 1906.)<br />

England and the English; a Few Suggestions for Reading. 1918. 12 pp.<br />

Expedition of General Forbes against Fort Duquesne. 1908. 20 pp.<br />

Expeditions of General Bouquet to the Ohio Country, 1763 and 1764.<br />

11 pp. (Monthly Bulletin, Dec. 1909.)<br />

Letters of General Forbes; Reprint of 35 Letters Relating to the Expedition<br />

against Fort Duquesne. 63 pp. 20 cents; postpaid,<br />

25 cents. (Monthly Bulletin, Feb.-May 1909.)<br />

•Pennsylvania; a Reading List for the Use of Schools, with Special<br />

Reference to Indian Warfare and the Local History of Pittsburgh,<br />

1911. 83 pp. 20 cents; postpaid, 25 cents.<br />

The Pilgrims; Selected Material for Use in Connection with the Pilgrim<br />

Tercentenary Celebration. 1920. 13 pp.<br />

Pittsburgh in 1816. 1916. 75 pp.<br />

Washington's Visits to Pittsburgh and the Ohio Country. 15 pp.<br />

(Monthly Bulletin, Feb. 1908.)<br />

The Whiskey Insurrection. 9 pp. (Monthly Bulletin, July 1906.)<br />

Biography<br />

Famous Royal Women; a Reading List for Girls. 1908. II pp.<br />

Lives and Letters; a Selected and Annotated List. 1910. 36pp.<br />

*Men of Science and Industry; a Guide to the Biographies of Scientists,<br />

Engineers, Inventors and Physicians, in the Carnegie Library of<br />

Pittsburgh, 1915. 189 pp. 20 cents; postpaid, 30 cents.


PUBLICATIONS OF THE LIBRARY 427<br />

Housing. 1912. 45 pp.<br />

Immigration. 1918. 12 pp.<br />

Sociology<br />

Vocational Guidance. Supplement. 10 pp. (Monthly Bulletin Dec<br />

I9I5-)<br />

Publications of Interest to Engineers<br />

Air-Brakes. 1915. 55 pp.<br />

Air Conditioning. 1914. 58 pp.<br />

Brick Manufacture and Bricklaying. 26 pp. (Monthly Bulletin, Jan.<br />

1912.)<br />

By-Product Coking. 1915. 40 pp.<br />

Case-Hardening. 1918. 10 pp.<br />

Electric Driving in Rolling-Mills and Foundries. 11 pp. (Monthly<br />

Bulletin, Nov. 1907.)<br />

Engineering Ethics. 1917. 17 pp.<br />

Floods and Flood Protection. 48 pp. (Monthly Bulletin, July 1908.)<br />

Floods and Flood Protection. Supplement. 1911. 19 pp.<br />

The Gyroscope. 1917. 23 pp.<br />

*Index to Proceedings of the Engineers' Society of Western Pennsylvania,<br />

Volumes I to 20, 1880-1904; Compiled by Harrison W.<br />

Craver. 1906. 144 pp. $1.00 postpaid.<br />

*Index to the Classified Catalogue of the Technology Department. 2d<br />

edition. 1916. 63 pp. 10 cents; postpaid, 15 cents.<br />

Lampblack. 1919. 8 pp.<br />

List of Technical Indexes and Bibliographies Appearing Serially. 1910.<br />

17 PP-<br />

Market Prices Appearing Currently in Technical and Trade Journals.<br />

1918. 6 pp.<br />

*Men of Science and Industry; a Guide to the Biographies of Scientists,<br />

Engineers, Inventors and Physicians, in the Carnegie Library of<br />

Pittsburgh. 1915. 189 pp. 20 cents; postpaid, 30 cents.<br />

Metal Corrosion and Protection. 2d edition, revised and enlarged.<br />

58 pp. (Monthly Bulletin, July 1909.)<br />

Mica. 12 pp. (Monthly Bulletin, Oct. 1908.)<br />

Refuse and Garbage Disposal. 1909- 39 PP-<br />

Road Dust Preventives. 1916. 39 pp.<br />

*Sand; its Occurrence, Properties and Uses. 1918. 72 pp. 15 cents;<br />

postpaid, 20 cents.<br />

Scientific and Technical Reference Books. 19 pp. (Monthly Bulletin,<br />

Nov. 1916.)<br />

*Sewage Disposal and Treatment. 1910. 96 PP- T5 cents; postpaid,<br />

20 cents.<br />

Smoke Prevention. 18 pp. (Monthly Bulletin, May 1907.)<br />

Sodium Nitrate Industry of Chile. 7 PP- (Monthly Bulletin, March<br />

1908.)


428 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Steam Turbines. 21 pp. (Monthly Bulletin, Nov. 1904.)<br />

*Technical Book Review Index, v.i-date, March 1917-date. 50 cents<br />

a year, postpaid.<br />

No. 1-3, March, April, May, 1917, published in the Monthly Bulletin of those<br />

months, 5 cents each, postpaid.<br />

v.i, no.4~v.4 no.i (July 1917-March 1920), issued separately, quarterly, 15 cents<br />

each, postpaid.<br />

Trees and Forestry. 1917. 18 pp.<br />

Library Work with Children<br />

•Annotated Catalogue of Books Used in the Home Libraries and<br />

Reading Clubs. 1905. no pp. 20 cents; postpaid, 25 cents.<br />

•Catalogue of Books, Annotated and Arranged, and Provided by the<br />

Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh for the Use of the First Eight<br />

Grades in the Pittsburgh Schools. 1907. 331 pp. 35 cents;<br />

postpaid, 50 cents.<br />

Patriotism Through Literature; by Elva S. Smith. 1919. 17 pp.<br />

(Monthly Bulletin, June 1919.)<br />

Story-Telling<br />

Stories from the Ballads of Robin Hood; Outlines for Story-Telling<br />

1914. 38 pp.<br />

Stories from the Norse; Outlines for Story-Telling. 1914. 22 pp.<br />

•Stories to Tell to Children. 2d edition. 1918. 72 pp. 25 cents; postpaid,<br />

30 cents.<br />

Reading Lists<br />

Famous Royal Women; a Reading List for Girls. 1908. n pp.<br />

"Foreign Lands Where Wonders Are." 1911. 14 pp.<br />

"'Pennsylvania; a Reading List for the Use of Schools, with Special<br />

Reference to Indian Warfare and the Local History of Pittsburgh.<br />

October 18, 1920.<br />

1911. 83 pp. 20 cents, postpaid, 25 cents.


CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

MONTHLY BULLETIN<br />

VOL. 25 NOVEMBER 1920 NO. 9<br />

CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

AS IT APPEARED IN 1S95<br />

PITTSBURGH<br />

CARNEGIE LIBRARY<br />

1920


Board of Trustees<br />

S. H. CHURCH, President<br />

ANDREW W. MELLON, Vice-President<br />

J. D. HAILMAN, Secretary<br />

JAMES H. REED, Treasurer<br />

E. V. BABCOCK DAVID B. OLIVER<br />

W.W. BLACKBURN<br />

H. K. PORTER<br />

JOHN H. DAILEY<br />

W. H. ROBERTSON<br />

W. Y. ENGLISH CHARLES L. TAYLOR<br />

ROBERT GARLAND<br />

J. J. TURNER<br />

JOHN H. HENDERSON<br />

H. D. WILLIAMS<br />

JOHN S. HERRON<br />

DANIEL WINTERS<br />

J. J. TURNER, Chairman<br />

Library Committee<br />

E. V. BABCOCK J. D. HAILMAN<br />

ROBERT GARLAND DANIEL WINTERS<br />

Director<br />

JOHN H. LEETE<br />

Central Library, Schenley Park<br />

Branch Libraries<br />

Lawrenceville Branch, 279 Fisk Street<br />

West End Branch, Wabash and Neptune Streets<br />

Wylie Avenue Branch, Wylie Avenue and Green Street<br />

Mount Washington Branch, 315 Grandview Avenue<br />

Hazelwood Branch, 4748 Monongahela Street<br />

East Liberty Branch, Station Street and Larimer Avenue<br />

South Side Branch, Carson and Twenty-second Streets<br />

Homewood Branch, Hamilton and Lang Avenues


Contents<br />

Page<br />

Twenty-fifth Anniversary - 433<br />

Twenty-five Years - 436<br />

The Pilgrim Compact - - 439<br />

Prices of Library Publications 440<br />

New Publications of the Library<br />

- - - - - - 440<br />

Books Added, October 1 to<br />

November 1, 1920.<br />

Agriculture - - - - - 460<br />

Architecture - 463<br />

Army. Military Science - - 453<br />

Biography - - - - - 468<br />

Blind, Books for the - - - 475<br />

Business. Communication - 461<br />

Chemical Technology - - 461<br />

Chemistry - - - - - 457<br />

Commerce - - - - - - 455<br />

Domestic Economy<br />

Drama. Theatre -<br />

Economics - - -<br />

Education - - -<br />

Engineering<br />

Ethics - - - -<br />

European War -<br />

Fiction -<br />

Fine Arts<br />

French Fiction<br />

Gardening - - -<br />

461<br />

467<br />

449<br />

454<br />

459<br />

446<br />

474<br />

44i<br />

462<br />

443<br />

463<br />

Page<br />

Genealogy. Names. Flags - 470<br />

General Works - - - - 444<br />

History - - - - - 472<br />

Humor - - - - - - 468<br />

Insurance - - - - - - 453<br />

International Law - - - 453<br />

Language - - - - - - 456<br />

Labor - - - - - - 450<br />

Law - - - - - - - 452<br />

Literature - - - - - 466<br />

Medicine, Physiology, Hygiene<br />

- - - - - - 458<br />

Money. Finance - - - 451<br />

Music - - - - - - - 465<br />

Philosophy - - - - -• 445<br />

Photography, Applications of 464<br />

Poetry - - - - - - 467<br />

Politics and Government - 448<br />

Recreation - - - - - 465<br />

Religion - - - - - - 446<br />

Science - - - - - - 456<br />

Sociology - - - -<br />

Spanish Fiction -<br />

Taxation<br />

Travel and Description<br />

Useful Arts - - -<br />

Young People's Books<br />

- 448<br />

444<br />

- 452<br />

471<br />

- 458<br />

478


Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh<br />

Monthly Bulletin<br />

Published monthly, except in August and September, by the Carnegie Library of<br />

Pittsburgh, Forbes Street and Bellefield Avenue, Schenley Park, Pittsburgh, Pa. President,<br />

S. H. Church, Carnegie Library, Forbes Street and Bellefield Avenue; Secretary,<br />

J. D. Hailman; Treasurer, James H. Reed, 1027 Carnegie Building; Director, John H.<br />

Leete, Carnegie Library, Forbes Street and Bellefield Avenue.<br />

Subscription 50 cents a year.<br />

Vol. 25 November 1920 No. 9<br />

Twenty-fifth Anniversary<br />

Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh<br />

Twenty-five years ago. on the fifth of November, the Carnegie<br />

Library of Pittsburgh was formally opened to the public.<br />

It seemed fitting to celebrate in some way the quarter century<br />

anniversarv of that event and. as finally determined upon, the<br />

celebration took the form of an invitation to all residents of<br />

Pittsburgh to become better acquainted with their library.<br />

From seven to ten on the evening of November fifth, the entire<br />

Library, including the departments which are not usually open<br />

to the public, such as the Catalogue. Order. Printing and Binding<br />

Departments, were at work and open for inspection. In<br />

everv room there were exhibitions characteristic of its resources<br />

and planned to give as comprehensive an idea as possible of the<br />

various things which that particular department has to offer.<br />

In addition there were several special features.<br />

One of these<br />

was a very fine private collection of rare books, including<br />

beautifully illuminated manuscript volumes dating back as far<br />

as the eleventh century, and early specimens of printed books.<br />

Among the latter is one of the earliest examples of printing<br />

433


434 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

maps from engraved copper plates instead of from wooden<br />

blocks. Another feature was the two story-telling hours which<br />

proved as enjoyable to the grown people as to the children.<br />

Still another was the exhibition of books suitable for children.<br />

These included books of many prices and kinds, finely illustrated<br />

editions, old favorites and new ones. With this exhibition<br />

is a collection of rare old books lent by the Carnegie Library<br />

School. This exhibition of children's books will continue<br />

for several weeks in order that people who wish to buy books<br />

for Christmas gifts to children may have an opportunity to see<br />

beforehand some of the best and most attractive ones.<br />

A booklet setting forth a few of the contrasts between the<br />

resources of this Library in 1895 and in 1920 was issued before<br />

the anniversary and was distributed as widely as possible. The<br />

main part of the text of this booklet is reprinted in this Bulletin.<br />

With the booklet went an invitation tp visit the Library on the<br />

evening of November fifth.<br />

Many business houses helped make the invitation known by<br />

displaying placards or exhibitions of Library books. Newspapers,<br />

periodicals, school and college publications, and the bulletins<br />

issued by various <strong>org</strong>anizations of the city gave space<br />

for articles about the Library or for a notice of the anniversary<br />

celebration. The cordial and generous assistance given by<br />

<strong>org</strong>anizations and individuals was invaluable in helping to extend<br />

the invitation to everyone in Pittsburgh.<br />

One of the chief purposes of the celebration was to acquaint<br />

people with the resources of the Library, with its educational<br />

possibilities, and with the many phases of library work of<br />

which the average borrower of books or user of reference volumes<br />

is unaware. Everything was planned with this purpose<br />

in mind, and results more than met expectations. Many of the<br />

several thousand people who saw the work of printing and<br />

binding, the work with schools and with children, the Library<br />

School which trains young women for library work, the work<br />

with the blind, the resources of the department which lends<br />

books, the collections of books in foreign languages, the many<br />

phases of the service available in the Reference and Technology


TWENTY-FIFTH ANNIVERSARY 435<br />

Departments, the variety of available periodicals and newspapers<br />

both old and current, the processes of ordering and<br />

receiving and cataloguing books, and the great numbers of<br />

books in the book stacks, expressed themselves as having previously<br />

had no conception of the breadth of the field of library<br />

work and of the many interests which it serves. Most of the<br />

visitors felt that they had made only a beginning toward becoming<br />

acquainted with even the things which particularly<br />

interested them.<br />

Among the letters received at the time of the celebration was<br />

one from Miss Elisa May Willard who was the Reference Librarian<br />

of the Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh from its opening<br />

until she retired from professional work three years ago. Her<br />

reminiscences are quoted here not only because they set forth<br />

the contrast between present and past facilities, but because they<br />

are, to those who have long used the Library, an interesting<br />

reminder of former days.<br />

From Miss Willard's letter.<br />

The approaching twenty-fifth anniversary of the Library brings to<br />

my mind a picture of the Carnegie Library as I first entered it in September<br />

1895. It was a large, empty, unfurnished building with a very<br />

few books in it, many more volumes arriving daily, and a small group of<br />

seven people (the entire staff) working early and late, cataloguing the<br />

small collection of books with which the Library was to open on<br />

November 5. Our aim was to have a printed book catalogue of all the<br />

books in the Library ready to give out on the opening day, and to that<br />

end we bent our chief efforts, while at the same time selecting equipment,<br />

determining policies, and looking after the many details which<br />

were to make the Library our ideal of what a public library should be.<br />

Those last days before the opening were rather feverish, but we had our<br />

printed catalogue ready for the opening—and a queer little thing it<br />

looks now, with its 9,000 books, compared with the stately row of catalogues<br />

of the more than 470,000 volumes now in the Library.<br />

All the assistants were fresh from the library schools and ambitious<br />

to help the librarian, Mr. E. H. Anderson, to develop what we were<br />

sure would be the best library in America. At the very beginning<br />

there was the framework of a great library, the building for it, the<br />

<strong>org</strong>anization for it, and the intention of the founder, but the doors were<br />

opened to the public after only seven months spent in buying books<br />

and equipment, consequently our beginnings were very small indeed,<br />

although our plans were for a large future. There were that first year


436 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

no branches, no Technology Department, no Children's Room, no<br />

printing plant or bindery, no books for schools, no open-shelf room, no<br />

Library School. What seemed to us a very large building was only<br />

about a fourth the size of the present one, and was occupied only in<br />

part by the Library proper. The north end of the building upstairs,<br />

now the Library School, was then the Art Gallery; the south end, now<br />

occupied by the Periodical Room, Catalogue and Order Rooms, was the<br />

Museum, and what is now the Children's Room was the lecture room<br />

where the first University Extension lectures were given.<br />

Our weakest point at the opening was the limited supply of books.<br />

My chief recollection of the opening week is of the fast emptying<br />

shelves in the stack and the eager public outside the loan desk continuing<br />

to ask for books which were already out. The eager multitudes<br />

were all in the Loan Department, however, and to my Reference Room<br />

upstairs came only a few bookish people who had got the library habit<br />

in the old Mercantile Library. There was no east wing to the Reference<br />

Room then, and the only bookshelves in the room were on the east<br />

side under the windows, and we had so few reference books that we<br />

filled up the shelves with bound magazines to hide their emptiness.<br />

The Reference Department staff consisted only of the Reference Librarian<br />

assisted when necessary by some of the cataloguers.<br />

The Loan Department had no open shelves, and the only books in<br />

sight were the new books in a little glass case at the loan desk. These<br />

the people could point to through the glass, and they were then taken<br />

out by an assistant. The wings on each side of the Loan Department,<br />

now part of the open-shelf room, were the periodical and newspaper<br />

rooms.<br />

These were our small beginnings from which has swiftly grown the<br />

present great library.<br />

Twenty-five Years<br />

Reprinted from the booklet issued for the twenty-fifth anniversary of the opening<br />

of the Library.<br />

A quarter century is not a long period in the life of such an<br />

institution as a library, but in the case of the Carnegie Library<br />

of Pittsburgh circumstances have made the twenty-five years<br />

which are its span of existence, a period of rapid growth.<br />

When, on the fifth of November 1895, the Library opened<br />

its doors, it had a city of less than three hundred thousand to<br />

serve. Now it has double that number.<br />

In 1895 there was only the one building for the entire city.<br />

Now there are, in addition to the enlarged Central Building,<br />

eight branch libraries and one hundred sixty-two other


TWENTY-FIVE YEARS 437<br />

agencies, such as schools, industrial plants, business houses.<br />

Even this number is inadequate for efficient service.<br />

On the day the Library was opened to the public it had nine<br />

thousand books ready for use; now it has approximately half<br />

a million, and its number of books in foreign languages is<br />

almost five times the size of the entire original collection.<br />

In 1895 the Library staff consisted of sixteen people; now<br />

there are more than two hundred.<br />

Twenty-five years ago only one book could be borrowed at<br />

a time. Now one may borrow four books of fiction and as<br />

many of non-fiction as are needed.<br />

Then, practically all the books were kept in the stack and<br />

one must get inspiration as to what he wanted by consulting the<br />

catalogue or asking the librarians for suggestions. To-day<br />

more than thirty-five thousand books in the Central Library<br />

are arranged on open shelves where the reader may examine<br />

them and select at will. In the branch libraries practically all<br />

the books are so arranged.<br />

When the Library opened it had one hundred thirty periodicals<br />

placed in alcoves opening off from the Lending Room.<br />

Now it has nine times as many in a room equipped for comfortable<br />

reading. In this room there are also nearly a hundred<br />

newspapers ; originally there were twenty-nine.<br />

In the earliest days of the Library, children who had the<br />

temerity to come for books asked for them in the general Lending<br />

Room. On the first of February 1896, a Children's Room<br />

with three hundred selected volumes was opened. At present<br />

a very important part of the Library's work is done by a Children's<br />

Department which not only has more than one hundred<br />

fourteen thousand selected books for children, but conducts<br />

story-telling hours for them, teaches them how to find information<br />

in books, and helps teachers and parents to select literature<br />

appropriate for use with children. This work is supplemented<br />

by a department which co-operates with the schools of the city<br />

in every way possible, to make appropriate literature available<br />

to boys and girls. The classroom collections of books which<br />

are sent out by hundreds to the schools are a part of this work.


438 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

From the early days of the Library it was recognized that a<br />

large collection of carefully selected scientific and technical<br />

literature would be particularly useful and valuable in an industrial<br />

center such as Pittsburgh. At the opening of the Library,<br />

however, such material was small in quantity and formed a part<br />

of the Reference Room collection. Now there is a separate<br />

Technology Department with nearly fifty thousand books and<br />

much in the way of periodicals and trade literature.<br />

Until 1907 the Library had no books for the blind. Now it<br />

has nearly four thousand books and periodicals in six different<br />

types and sends out a teacher to any adult blind person who<br />

cannot read one of these types.<br />

In 1895 the Library did very little printing and what it had<br />

to have was done outside the building. Now it has a Printing<br />

Department which not only prints all of the many things which<br />

are necessary to keep track of the books, to conduct the work of<br />

the Library, and to provide the millions of cards which make<br />

up the card catalogues in the various departments, but also the<br />

publications which the Library issues in book form.<br />

The Library now does within its own walls all the binding,<br />

rebinding, and repairing necessary to keep its books in good<br />

condition.<br />

From the earliest days of the Library requests for information<br />

have come by mail. This work has increased until in the<br />

first nine months of 1920 replies were sent in response to six<br />

hundred eighty-nine mail requests coming from thirty-six states<br />

of the Union and seven foreign countries. These requests by<br />

mail are, of course, few in comparison with the questions which<br />

come by telephone or in person.<br />

In addition to telling where information may be found, the<br />

Library can now furnish at a nominal price actual copies of the<br />

information by means of prints made by its photostat. During<br />

1920 these prints have been called for from places as far away<br />

as China and Argentina.<br />

There are many things which the Library cannot do because<br />

it has not the necessary equipment, but every facility which it<br />

has is at the disposal of each individual in the community.


November 21, 1620<br />

THE PILGRIM COMPACT 439<br />

The Pilgrim Compact<br />

The Pilgrims, who did much toward shaping the development<br />

of our country, gave early evidence of belief in constitutional<br />

government. On the twenty-first of November 1620, or<br />

as dates were reckoned in that day, on the eleventh of November,<br />

while they were still on the Mayflower, they drew up a<br />

compact by which the colony was to be governed. This compact<br />

is evidence that these early settlers did not repudiate authority<br />

in government as one might expect after the persecution which<br />

they had suffered at the hands of the government under which<br />

they had lived; on the contrary, they asserted authority, but it<br />

was to be an authority divine in origin and equitable in administration.<br />

They believed that the rights of the individual were<br />

safeguarded by being set down in black and white in a document<br />

which provided for a government for the general good.<br />

The text of this interesting compact is reproduced here from<br />

Governor William Bradford's "History of Plymouth Plantation."<br />

In y e name of God, Amen. We whose names are underwriten, the<br />

loyall subjects of our dread soveraigne Lord, King James, by y c grace<br />

of God, of Great Britaine, Franc, & Ireland king, defender of y e faith,<br />

&c, haveing undertaken, for y e glorie of God, and advancemente of y e<br />

Christian faith, and honour of our king & countrie, a voyage to plant y e<br />

first colonie in y e Northerne parts of Virginia, doe by these presents<br />

solemnly & mutually in y' presence of God, and one of another, covenant<br />

& combine our selves togather into a civill body politick, for our<br />

better ordering & preservation & furtherance of y e ends aforesaid; and<br />

by vertue hearof to enacte, constitute, and frame such just & equall<br />

lawes, ordinances, acts, constitutions, & offices, from time to time, as<br />

shall be thought most meete & convenient for y e generall good of y"<br />

Colonie, unto which we promise all due submission and obedience. In<br />

witnes wherof we have hereunder subscribed our names at Cap-Codd<br />

y e 11. of November, in y e year of y e raigne of our soveraigne lord, King<br />

James, of England, France, & Ireland y e eighteenth, and of Scotland y'<br />

fiftie fourth. An 0 : Dom. 1620.


440 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Prices of Library Publications<br />

The list of "Publications of the Library Now in Print" at<br />

the back of this Bulletin gives the price of each. Any publication<br />

not marked * in that list will be sent postpaid on receipt<br />

of five cents.<br />

New Publications of the Library<br />

Catalogue of Books in the Children's Department<br />

The Library is issuing a revised and enlarged edition of its<br />

"Catalogue of Books in the Children's Department of the Carnegie<br />

Library of Pittsburgh." This new edition is in two<br />

volumes, the first containing the author and title lists, the<br />

second the subject index. The first volume, which contains 466<br />

pages, is off the press and may be obtained at the Library for<br />

$1.00; postpaid, for $1.15. The second volume will soon be<br />

ready for distribution.<br />

Technical Book Review Index<br />

The "Technical Book Review Index" for the first quarter<br />

of 1920, which contains 105 pages, was issued early in October.<br />

The 100 page number for the second quarter has recently been<br />

issued. For the benefit of those whose subscription did not<br />

begin until 1920, the "List of Publishers Referred to in the<br />

Technical Book Review Index," which appeared in the December<br />

1919 number, has been reprinted and will be mailed on<br />

receipt of five cents.


Books Added to the Library<br />

October 1 to November 1, 1920<br />

An r or b prefixed to the call number indicates that the book must be<br />

called for and used in the Reference or the Technology Room; j that it is<br />

especially suitable for children; and q that it is quarto size or larger<br />

Fiction<br />

Agate, James E. A263r<br />

Responsibility; a novel. Doran.<br />

The theme is illegitimacy, from the point of view of the father in later years. The<br />

scene is England, and the action ends during the great war.<br />

Bazin, Rene. B3392P<br />

Pierre & Joseph; tr. by F. H. Potter. Harper.<br />

A story of two Alsatian brothers who faced each other on opposite sides at the beginning<br />

of the European war.<br />

Bojer, Johan. B597P<br />

Power of a lie; tr. from the Norwegian by Jessie Muir, with an introduction<br />

by Hall Caine. Moffat.<br />

The story of a man who signed his friend's bond and later denied it when the<br />

friend became bankrupt. Shows the relentless power of a lie for bringing evil and sorrow<br />

into men's lives.<br />

Bullard, Arthur, (pseud. Albert Edwards). B874S<br />

The stranger. Macmillan.<br />

The romance between a young country girl who becomes a successful artist in New<br />

York, and a Mohammedan "stranger."<br />

Carswell, Catherine. C2340<br />

Open the door; a novel. Harcourt.<br />

Depicts the love life of a young Scotch girl and her reaction from a strict and Puritanical<br />

upbringing to unconventional freedom.<br />

Melrose's £250 prize novel, 1920.<br />

Chase, Joseph Smeaton.<br />

C3912P<br />

Penance of Magdalena, and other tales of the California missions.<br />

Houghton.<br />

Other tales of the California missions: Padre Urbano's umbrella.—The bells of<br />

San Gabriel.—The buried treasure of Simi.—Love in the padres' garden.<br />

Extracted from a larger work, "The California padres and their missions," by the<br />

author and Mr Charles F. Saunders.<br />

Child, Richard Washburn. C4362V<br />

The vanishing men. Dutton.<br />

Appeared in "Collier's weekly," v.64-65, Sept. 27, 1919-Jan. 10, 1920.<br />

The story of a beautiful girl and three men who love her and who mysteriously<br />

vanish one after the other.


44^<br />

CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Couperus, Louis.<br />

C83gto<br />

The tour; a story of ancient Egypt; tr. from the Dutch by Alexander<br />

Teixeira de Mattos. Dodd.<br />

A party of wealthy Romans seeking diversion are "personally conducted" through<br />

Egypt in the reign of Tiberius. Sets forth ancient Roman and Egyptian customs, but the<br />

point of view is modern.<br />

Dunn, Joseph Allan Elphinstone.<br />

D9243d<br />

Dead man's gold. Doubleday.<br />

A Western romance centering about the secret of a gold lode.<br />

Fletcher, Joseph Smith.<br />

F635P<br />

The Paradise mystery. Knopf.<br />

A detective story with the scene laid in a small English cathedral town.<br />

Graga Aranha, Jose Pereira da.<br />

G763C<br />

Canaan; tr. from the Portuguese by M.J. Lorente, with a preface<br />

by Guglielmo Ferrero. Four Seas Co.<br />

A novel of contemporary life, in which a young German, weary of the cruelty and<br />

corruption of Europe, emigrates to Brazil only to find similar conditions of a dying<br />

civilization.<br />

Holding, Elisabeth Sanxay.<br />

H7151<br />

Invincible Minnie. Doran.<br />

The story of a woman whose weakness was unfortunately of such strength that it<br />

ruined the lives of everyone she loved and of everyone who loved her.<br />

London, Jack.<br />

L822i<br />

The iron heel. Grosset.<br />

A fantastic tale of the Socialist struggle for power in the United States from 1912<br />

to 1932, based on a manuscript found seven centuries later.<br />

MacGill, Patrick.<br />

Mi624m<br />

Maureen. McBride.<br />

A story of Irish peasant life in Donegal at the present time. Sinn Fein activities<br />

are indirectly connected with the tragic ending. Written in dialect.<br />

McMichael, Charles B. tr.<br />

M213S<br />

Short stories from the Spanish. Boni.<br />

Contents: The death of the empress of China; The veil of Queen Mab; The box,<br />

by Ruben Dario.—After the battle; The menace; Souls in contrast, by J. O. Picon.—<br />

Adios Cordera! by Leopoldo Alas.<br />

Marroquin, Lorenzo.<br />

M4125D<br />

Pax (Peace); tr. by Isaac Goldberg and W. V. Schierbrand. Brentano.<br />

(Brentano's Hispano-American series.)<br />

A South American novel dealing with domestic and political storm and stress in<br />

Colombia.<br />

Maurois, Andre.<br />

M497S<br />

The silence of Colonel Bramble; translated from the French. Lane.<br />

(On active service series.)<br />

A European war story told in the form of mess-room conversations Shows the national<br />

characteristics of the English, the Irish, and the Scotch.<br />

Ostrander, Isabel Egenton.<br />

O297U<br />

Unseen hands, by Robert Orr Chipperfield [pseud.]. McBride.<br />

A detective story which involves two sudden deaths and several catastrophes threatening<br />

the various members of one family.<br />

Phillpotts, Eden.<br />

Psi8e<br />

Evander. Macmillan.<br />

A tale of ancient Italy in the days when the gods appeared to men.<br />

mild social satire.<br />

Intended as a


BOOKS ADDED—NOVEMBER 1920 443<br />

Pinkerton, Mrs Kathrene Sutherland (Gedney), & P°35P<br />

Pinkerton, R. E.<br />

Penitentiary Post. Doubleday.<br />

An adventure story of the great Northwest, the scene of which is one of the most<br />

advanced fur-trading posts of the Hudson Bay Company.<br />

P956P<br />

Prison life; or, Interesting biographies of Picciola, heroine of Siberia,<br />

Silvio Pellico and Baron Trenck, who were imprisoned for political<br />

offenses. Barnes.<br />

Contents: Picciola; or,- The prison-flower.—Prascovie Lopouloff, the heroine of<br />

Siberia.—The story of Silvio Pellico.—The story of Baron Frederick Trenck.<br />

Binder's title reads "Stories of prison life."<br />

Sedgwick, Anne Douglas. 8448th<br />

The third window. Houghton.<br />

Appeared in "Atlantic monthly," v.125, Feb.-April 1920.<br />

A tragic tale built upon the theme that the dead may not be dead.<br />

English country house after the world war.<br />

The scene is an<br />

Smith, Gordon Arthur. S6482P<br />

The pagan [and other stories]. Scribner.<br />

Other stories: Tropic madness.—Jeanne, the maid.—Every move.—Letitia.—A<br />

young man's fancy.—The return.<br />

Appeared in "Scribner's magazine," v.52-67, Dec. 1912-March 1920.<br />

"The pagan" consists of a group of stories which relate the adventures of Taillandy,<br />

the pagan poet, in France before the great war.<br />

Swinnerton, Frank Arthur. S9782C<br />

The chaste wife. Doran.<br />

A story of married lovers and their estrangement because of the husband's confession<br />

of an incident in his past life.<br />

Vorse, Mrs Mary Marvin (Heaton). V384g<br />

Growing up. Boni.<br />

An amusing story of the efforts of a young father and mother to understand and<br />

train their three lively children.<br />

Wells, Herbert Ge<strong>org</strong>e. W494iin<br />

In the days of the comet. Doran.<br />

A romance of a world made new by the purifying fumes of a comet.<br />

White, Samuel Alexander. W6363a<br />

Ambush. Doubleday.<br />

A story of rival fur companies in Canada, and the romance of a factor and the<br />

daughter of his rival company's chief.<br />

French Fiction<br />

Achard, Amedee. 843 A17C<br />

Le clos-pommier.<br />

Aigueperse, Mathilde. 843 A28<br />

Le choix de Maura.<br />

Aigueperse, Mathilde. 8 43 A28k<br />

Kerdelec doit.. .Kerdelec veut!<br />

Ardel, Henri. 8 43 A6 7 au<br />

Au retour.<br />

Story of the love and self-sacrifice of a young French widow, for the sake of her<br />

child.


444 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Ardel, Henri. 8 43 A67r<br />

Renee Orlis.<br />

Love story of a charming young French girl of beautiful character.<br />

Decaen, Alice.<br />

Jacotte et son cousin.<br />

[Deschard, Mme, (pseud. M. Maryan).]<br />

Odette.<br />

Deschard, Mme, (pseud. M. Maryan).<br />

Le rachat. (Bibliotheque des meres de familie.)<br />

8 43 D35<br />

8 43 D457<br />

843 D457r<br />

Thelen, Myriam.<br />

8 43 T34<br />

La mesangere; preface par fitienne Lamy.<br />

A story of life in a home for the daughters of workingmen in a provincial city of<br />

France.<br />

Spanish Fiction<br />

Lopez Roberts, Mauricio. 8 63 L85<br />

Cuentos de viejas.<br />

General Works<br />

Bostwick, Arthur Elmore. r 025 B64<br />

Some principles of business-like conduct in libraries. 1920. American<br />

Library Association. (American Library Association. Library<br />

handbook no.11.)<br />

Suggestions for dealing with complaints, with other libraries, and with the library<br />

board, as well as with the daily run of work.<br />

Clement, Marguerite, comp.<br />

qr 016.84 C56<br />

Selected list of French books for libraries of high schools and normal<br />

schools. [1918. Wilson.]<br />

An annotated list, with approximate prices—the outcome of collaboration between<br />

universities of France and the United States.<br />

Hubbard, Henry Vincent, & Kimball, Theodora.<br />

qr 025.4 H87<br />

Landscape architecture; a comprehensive classification scheme for<br />

books, plans, photographs, notes and other collected material, with combined<br />

alphabetic topic index and list of subject headings. 1920. Harvard<br />

University Press.<br />

Krause, Louise Beerstecher. 026 K41<br />

The business library; what it is and what it does. 1919. Technical<br />

Pub. Co.<br />

Contents: The <strong>org</strong>anization of the business library.—The service rendered by the<br />

business library.—Periodicals; how to use and how to file them.—Government documents<br />

and the business library.—Trade catalogs, photographs and lantern slides.—Classification<br />

and cataloging in the business library.—Mechanical equipment for the business<br />

library.—Reference books for the business library.—The essential qualifications of the<br />

business librarian.<br />

"References for additional reading" at the end of most of the chapters.<br />

The same<br />

r 026 K41


BOOKS ADDED—NOVEMBER 1920 445<br />

qr 074 M81<br />

Le Monde illustre; journal hebdomadaire, 1872-73, 1876-79, 1881-82.<br />

[v.31-33, 39-44, 48]-5l i n 3v. 1872-82.<br />

v-31-33, 39-44 incomplete; made up of odd numbers from Oct. 26, 1872 to April 19,<br />

1879, bound in one volume; with this is bound L'lllustration, v.73, Jan. 4, March 1,<br />

15-29, April 5, 26, 1879. The volumes for 1881 and 1882, v.48-51 are complete.<br />

Moreau, fidouard de. r 027.7 Lg3m<br />

La bibliotheque de l'Universite de Louvain, "1636-1914." 1918.<br />

Dated at end of article: ce 13 juillet, 1915.<br />

Appendice I. Liste de quelques manuscrits qui ont peri dans l'incendie de la<br />

bibliotheque (p.50-80); appendice II. Liste des principales archives de I'ancienne<br />

universite qui ont peri dans l'incendie (p.81-99) ; appendice III. Liste de quelques incunables<br />

qui ont peri dans l'incendie (p.100-114).<br />

r 071 S46<br />

Sell's world's press; the handbook of the fourth estate; founded by<br />

Henry Sell, 1919. 35th ed. 1919.<br />

r 027.6 S68<br />

[Soldiers' book fund campaign; campaign material for Pittsburgh district.<br />

1917. Pittsburgh.]<br />

Contents: Letter of the chairman.—Receipt book and collectors' authorization card.<br />

—Directions for captains.—Reasons for the campaign for war libraries (card).—Money<br />

needed for soldiers' libraries by the Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh (pamphlet).—Libraries<br />

for our soldiers and sailors (pamphlet issued by the Library War Council, Washington,<br />

D. C).<br />

Philosophy<br />

Cannan, Gilbert. 128 C17<br />

The release of the soul. 1920. Boni.<br />

"In this highly metaphysical, mystical essay he [Cannan] attempts to convey a<br />

programme for the immediate future of society and especially for the artist." New York<br />

Evening post, 1920.<br />

Cumberland, Stuart C. 134 C91<br />

That other world; personal experiences of mystics and their mysticism.<br />

1918. Richards.<br />

An attempt to expose the practices and tricks of so-called mediums by giving<br />

natural explanations of what appear to be supernatural phenomena.<br />

Dresser, Horatio Willis. *34 D81<br />

The open vision; a study of psychic phenomena. 1920. Crowell.<br />

Emphasizes the psychical experience by direct impression; that is. by the inner or<br />

spiritual vision which is independent of outward signs and mediums.<br />

Gibson, James. J5 1 G37<br />

Locke's theory of knowledge and its historical relations. 1917-<br />

Cambridge University Press.<br />

Originally intended as an introduction to Locke's "Essay concerning human understanding,"<br />

but later expanded into a separate treatise. It gives an exposition of Locke s<br />

doctrine, followed by a discussion of the relation of his thought to that of his predecessors<br />

and contemporaries, including Descartes, Leibnitz, and Kant.<br />

Hardy, Thomas John. *34 H26<br />

Spiritism in the light of the faith; a comparison and a contrast.<br />

1919. Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge.<br />

The author concludes that "a Christian cannot become a spiritist without renouncing<br />

his Christianity."


446 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Royce, Josiah. x 93 R 8 *<br />

Lectures on modern idealism. 1919. Yale University Press.<br />

Delivered at Johns Hopkins University in 1906 under the title "Aspects of post-<br />

Kantian idealism." The ground covered is largely the same as that in his "Spirit of<br />

modern philosophy," but the treatment is technical and professional rather than general<br />

and popular.<br />

United States—Surgeon-general's office. • r 136.8 U25<br />

Recruit psychological examination for illiterates and non-Englishspeaking<br />

citizens and aliens; to be used by recruiting officers at gen<br />

recruiting stations. 1919.<br />

Describes four tests known as form board, cube analysis, picture completion, and<br />

spot pattern.<br />

Ethics<br />

Hartley, Catherine Gasquoine, afterward Mrs Gallichan. 173 H32W<br />

Women's wild oats; essays on the re-fixing of moral standards. 1920.<br />

Stokes.<br />

An attempt to strike a balance between a "too ready acceptance of the fashions of<br />

the day" and a "too loyal obedience to the prejudices of yesterday." The author harks<br />

back to the Jewish ideal of marriage as a curb to the present restlessness of women;<br />

on the other hand, she would facilitate divorce, lift the stigma of illegitimacy from innocent<br />

children, and provide honorable recognition of sex partnerships outside marriage.<br />

Condensed from Book review digest, 1920.<br />

Marden, Orison Swett. 170 M37y<br />

You can, but will you? 1920. Crowell.<br />

A collection of essays on practical ethics and success in life.<br />

Stebbins, Jane E. r 178 S81<br />

Fifty years history of the temperance cause; with a full description<br />

of the origin and progress of the new plan of labor by the women up to<br />

the present time, by T. A. H. Brown. 1874. Stebbins.<br />

Weaver, Eli Witwer. 174 W36ch<br />

Choosing an occupation. 1920. Association Press. (U. Y. S. book<br />

no.i.)<br />

"Books of general interest," p.22; "List of books on vocations," p.22-25.<br />

Issued for the Llnited Y. M. C. A. Schools.<br />

The same<br />

r 174 W36<br />

Contains a list of educational courses offered by the United Y. M. C. A. schools in<br />

the United States and its possessions, with a list of the schools themselves.<br />

Religion<br />

Browne, Ge<strong>org</strong>e Forrest, bp. 274.2 B81<br />

The venerable Bede, his life and writings. 1919. Soc. for Promoting<br />

Christian Knowledge. (Studies in church history.)<br />

A new edition. The historical chapters are revised, and accounts of Bede's scientific<br />

and theological work and of Anglo-Saxon art and education are added.<br />

Fisher, Ge<strong>org</strong>e Park. 239 F53C<br />

The Christian religion. 1886. Chautauqua Press.<br />

By the (1886) professor of ecclesiastical history in Yale college. The book is an<br />

argument for Christianity especially adapted to disbelievers and doubters.


BOOKS ADDED—NOVEMBER 1920 447<br />

Graves, Frank Pierrepont.<br />

232 G81<br />

What did Jesus teach? an examination of the educational material<br />

and method of the Master. 1919. Macmillan.<br />

"Supplementary reading" list at end of each chapter.<br />

"Books for the study of Jesus as a teacher," p.183-191.<br />

The author is (1919) dean of the School of education, University of Pennsylvania.<br />

Studies based on the gospel of Mark, giving a common-sense appreciation of the<br />

character of Jesus.<br />

Harrington, Charles Kendall. 266 H28<br />

Captain Bickel of the Inland sea. 1919. Revell.<br />

The biography of an American sailing-master who carried on a gospel mission<br />

among the islanders of Japan for nearly twenty years.<br />

Merrill, William Pierson. 261 M63<br />

Christian internationalism. 1919. Macmillan.<br />

A well argued attempt to lay the foundation of internationalism on the basis of<br />

Christianity. The author recognizes the problems confronting internationalism, but<br />

insists that faith and hope may remove them. Condensed from American journal of<br />

sociology, ig20.<br />

Palladius, bp. of Helenopolis. 271 P18<br />

Lausiac history of Palladius, by W. K. L. Clarke. [ 1918.] Soc. for<br />

Promoting Christian Knowledge. (Translations of Christian literature,<br />

series 1: Greek texts.)<br />

A document describing the monastic life of the Thebaid.<br />

Abbot Butler's reconstruction of the original.<br />

The text is founded on<br />

Patton, Cornelius Howard. 261 P31<br />

World facts and America's responsibility. 1919. Association Press.<br />

Contents: Why these ten facts?—The renaissance of Asia.—The decadence of the<br />

non-Christian religions.—The rapid extension of Christianity.—The East and the West<br />

fight for a common cause.—The East looks to America for example and help.—America<br />

breaks from her isolation.—America and Great Britain in a fellowship of service.—<br />

Democracy becomes the <strong>org</strong>anizing principle of the world.—Rise of the new idealism.—<br />

The church girds herself for her great task.<br />

Slicer, Thomas Roberts. 230 S63g<br />

Great affirmations of religion; an introduction to real religion, not<br />

for beginners but for beginners again. [1911.] Amer. Unitarian Assoc.<br />

Sermons preached in the Church of All Souls, New York city, during the author's<br />

early ministry there.<br />

Thomson, John Ebenezer Honeyman. 296 T38<br />

The Samaritans: their testimony to the religion of Israel; being the<br />

Alexander Robertson lectures, delivered before the University of Glasgow<br />

in 1916. 1919. Oliver.<br />

A history of the people, their language, and their literature, showing the relation in<br />

which their rites and ceremonies stand to those of the Jews.<br />

[Tripitaka.] r 016.294 T74<br />

Catalogue of Ta-jih-pen-hsii-ts'ang-ching; transliterated by Daitaro<br />

Saeki; ed. by Zokyo Shoin. 1915.<br />

An index to this edition of the Tripitaka, or Buddhist scriptures, which was compiled<br />

and published by a special committee of Japanese Buddhist scholars. The edition<br />

consists of 750 volumes arranged in 150 cases and contains more than 1700 works.


-1-18 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Sociology<br />

Federation of the Jewish Philanthropies of Pittsburgh.<br />

Annual statement (7th), 1918. [1919. Pittsburgh.]<br />

r 361 F31<br />

Napoleon, I, emperor of the French.<br />

308 N12<br />

Oeuvres choisies de Napoleon; mises en ordre et precedees d'une<br />

etude litteraire, par A. Pujol. 1843.<br />

National Child Welfare Association.<br />

qr 362.7 N1553<br />

Child welfare handbook. [1919.]<br />

Gives examples of the graphic material used for exhibition purposes to present vital<br />

facts and proved methods pertaining to the physical, mental, and moral development<br />

of children. Lists the practical results of child welfare exhibits in various cities.<br />

National Congress of Mothers and Parent-teacher r 362.7 Ni554t<br />

Associations.<br />

Twenty years' work for child welfare, 1897-1917. [1917?]<br />

A report of yearly progress in the welfare of the child in home, church, school, and<br />

state.<br />

United States—Children's bureau.<br />

Children's year follow-up series, no.1-3. [1919-]<br />

For contents see Contents book kept at the reference desk.<br />

r 362.7 U2schi<br />

Ward, Harry Frederick.<br />

3°4 W21<br />

The new social order; principles and programs. 1920. Macmillan.<br />

The writer is (1920) professor of Christian ethics in L T nion Theological Seminary.<br />

He discusses the principles underlying the new order and attempts to analyze the<br />

various programs for social change offered by the British labor party, the Russian<br />

soviet republic, the League of nations, the Socialist party in the United States, and the<br />

churches.<br />

Politics and Government<br />

Allinson, Edward Pease, & Penrose, Boies.<br />

352 A43<br />

City government of Philadelphia. 1887. Johns Hopkins University.<br />

(Johns Hopkins University studies in historical and political science.<br />

v.S.)<br />

The same. (In Johns Hopkins University studies in historical and<br />

political science, v.5.) r 305 J35 v.5<br />

A brief history of the city considered strictly in relation to its evolution and growth<br />

as a municipal corporation.<br />

Canada—Civil service commission.<br />

r 351.1 Ci6r<br />

Report of transmission to accompany The classification of the civil<br />

service of Canada, describing the schedules for the classification of<br />

positions and the standardization of compensation, explaining their<br />

need, basis, and use and the method of their preparation, and including<br />

a discussion of the problem of personnel in the civil service of Canada,<br />

with recommendations for a comprehensive employment policy and<br />

plan, by Arthur Young & Company. 1919.<br />

Hamilton, Charles Hadley.<br />

r 352.1 H19<br />

Treatise on the law of taxation by special assessments. 1907. Jones.<br />

Discusses the origin, history, and present status of this particular form of municipal<br />

taxation, especially in the United States. Cites many cases.


BOOKS ADDED—NOVEMBER 1920 449<br />

Holcomb, William Penn. 352 H69<br />

Pennsylvania boroughs. 1886. Johns Hopkins University. (Johns<br />

Hopkins University studies in historical and political science, v.4.)<br />

The same. (In Johns Hopkins University studies in historical and<br />

political science, v.4.) r 305 J35 v.4<br />

A history of the borough and its importance as a feature of local self-government.<br />

Lippmann, Walter.<br />

323 L73<br />

Liberty and the news. 1920. Harcourt.<br />

Contents: Journalism and the higher law.—What modern liberty means.—Liberty<br />

and the news.<br />

Milton, John.<br />

32, WJI<br />

Areopagitica, with a commentary by Sir R. C Jebb and with supplementary<br />

material. 1918. Cambridge University Press.<br />

The same. 1868. (In Arber, Edward, ed. English reprints,<br />

v - r -)<br />

r 820.8 A66 v.i<br />

Reprint of the edition of 1644.<br />

New York (state)—Reconstruction commission. qr 353.9 N2617<br />

Report to Governor Alfred E. Smith on retrenchment and re<strong>org</strong>anization<br />

in the state government, Oct. 10, 1919. 1919.<br />

This commission is a non-partisan body appointed by the governor. It recommends<br />

simplification of the state government by the consolidation of numerous state departments,<br />

and an executive budget system, and makes suggestions about state printing,<br />

salaries, and pensions.<br />

Non-partisan Citizens' Protective Committee of r 352.001 N421<br />

Baltimore County.<br />

Baltimore county's protest against the proposed annexation of<br />

nearly one-half of its people and property without the constitutional<br />

referendum; opinions of G. W. Steele [and others]. 1917. Jeffersonian<br />

Print.<br />

Economics<br />

Aller, Curtis Cosmos.<br />

r 330.9 A43<br />

An industrial survey of Seattle. 1918. Washington University.<br />

(Washington University. Industrial research bureau. Bulletin no.3.)<br />

A discussion of the industrial growth of the city and statistics of its industries, with<br />

recommendations of plans to aid in its future development.<br />

Baudrillart, Henri Joseph Leon.<br />

339 B32<br />

Histoire du luxe prive et public depuis l'antiquite jusqu'a nos jours.<br />

4 v. 1878-80.<br />

Marshall, Alfred.<br />

338 M41<br />

Industry and trade; a study of industrial technique and business<br />

<strong>org</strong>anization; and of their influences on the conditions of various<br />

classes and nations. 1919. Macmillan.<br />

Bibliographical foot-notes.<br />

Takes the place of the promised second volume of his "Principles of economics."<br />

The first part describes some origins of the present day <strong>org</strong>anization of business among<br />

the principal industrial nations; the second considers the general tendencies of this <strong>org</strong>anization;<br />

the last deals with monopolistic factors in business, especially American<br />

trusts and German cartels.


450 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Page, William, b. 1861, ed.<br />

r 330.9 P14<br />

Commerce and industry; a historical review of the economic conditions<br />

of the British empire from the Peace of Paris in 1815 to the<br />

declaration of war in 1914, based on parliamentary debates, with a preface<br />

by Sir William Ashley. 2v. 1919. Constable.<br />

v.2 has title: "Commerce and industry; tables of statistics for the British empire<br />

from 1815."<br />

Bibliographical foot-notes.<br />

"The object has been to provide an impartial review of public opinion on commercial<br />

and industrial matters as represented by debates in Houses of Parliament during the past<br />

century." Editorial note.<br />

Scott, John Waugh. 331.88 S42<br />

Syndicalism and philosophical realism; a study in the correlation of<br />

contemporary social tendencies. 1919. Black.<br />

Bibliographical foot-notes.<br />

The author, who is (1919) lecturer on moral philosophy, University of Glasgow,<br />

attempts to show that certain recent teachings about the nature of ultimate reality and<br />

some manifestations of the modern labor movement are fundamentally allied. Beginning<br />

with a history of the development of syndicalism, he traces its relation to the "evolutionism'*<br />

of M. Bergson and to the realism of Mr Bertrand Russell.<br />

United States—Council of national defense. r 330.9 U25<br />

Readjustment and reconstruction information. 2 pts. in 2v. 19T9.<br />

Prepared by the Reconstruction research division.<br />

pt.i. Readjustment and reconstruction activities in foreign countries.<br />

pt.2. Readjustment and reconstruction activities in the States.<br />

United States—Library of Congress.<br />

qr 016.338 U25I<br />

List of publications which contain statistics of production of<br />

foreign countries. 1917.<br />

Mimeograph copy.<br />

United States—Markets bureau. qr 338.1 U2537f<br />

Food surveys, April 29, 1918-June 27, 1919. v.1-2. 1918-19.<br />

Published monthly, with frequent special numbers.<br />

v.i, no.4; v.2, no.5, 12 wanting.<br />

No more published.<br />

Labor<br />

[American Rolling Mill Co. Middletown, Ohio.] r 331.8 A51<br />

Facts for foremen. [1919?]<br />

Information for employees, items of the company's policy, and an account of its<br />

welfare work.<br />

Beard, Mrs Mary (Ritter). 331.87 B34<br />

A short history of the American labor movement. 1920. . Harcourt.<br />

"An excellent summary of American labor history. The book is based on recent<br />

more voluminous works, but the clarity of explanation and the skill in selecting the<br />

salient facts of somewhat complicated situations and incidents are largely the author's<br />

own." Springfield republican, ig20.<br />

Hammond, Matthew Brown. qr 331.8 H22<br />

British labor conditions and legislation during the war. 1919. Oxford<br />

University Press, Amer. branch.<br />

Issued in the series Preliminary economic studies of the war by the Division of economics<br />

and history of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.<br />

A narrative of the situation in England, which shows that the welfare of the worker<br />

necessitates more complex relations between labor and capital, and which suggests a<br />

greater co-ordination of the efforts of employer and employed, and greater efficiency<br />

on the part of both.


BOOKS ADDED—NOVEMBER 1920 451<br />

National Civic Federation. 331.8 N15<br />

The labor situation in Great Britain and France [by] the Commission<br />

on foreign inquiry of the National Civic Federation. 1919. Dutton.<br />

• A „ r v P °A t '" f ° Ur parts: " The labor Problem in Great Britain from the public view-<br />

P° 1 " t \. r<br />

by<br />

c, A -. P - N e l "Varying forms of labor <strong>org</strong>anization, methods and purposes,"<br />

by J. W. Sullivan; "Social and industrial relations in Great Britain, France and America<br />

from the viewpoint of an employer," by A. F. Bemis ; "Housing and agricultural<br />

reconstruction," by A. F. Bemis.<br />

Society of Industrial Engineers. r 33I S67<br />

American and international labor conditions; complete report of the<br />

proceedings of the fall national conference held under the auspices o<br />

the Society of Industrial Engineers, Cleveland, O., Oct. 29, 30 and 31<br />

1919. [1919?] [F. H. Jaenicken Co. Press.]<br />

United States—Employment service. qr 331.86 U251<br />

U.S. employment service bulletin; weekly, Jan. 28, 1918-Feb. 28,<br />

1919. v.l-v.2, no.3. 1918-19.<br />

Publication suspended.<br />

West Virginia—Labor bureau. r 331 W56<br />

Biennial report (i4th-date), 1917-date. [i9i9]-date.<br />

Money. Finance<br />

Escher, Franklin. 332.6 E79<br />

Practical investing. 1916. Bankers Pub. Co.<br />

"The author avoids figures. . .and confines himself to the principles and practice<br />

of the art of investment. The numerous sorts of securities are described.. .the reasons<br />

which should guide investors in their selections are set out, and the manner in'which<br />

it is prudent to diversify investments." New York times, 1914.<br />

Hollander, Jacob Harry. 336.3 H72<br />

War borrowing; a study of treasury certificates of indebtedness of<br />

the United States. 1919. Macmillan.<br />

Bibliographical foot-notes.<br />

The author is (1919) professor of political economy in Johns Hopkins University.<br />

He presents an examination of the part played by public credit in our national defense<br />

during the world war and points out what he considers serious errors in the method of<br />

financing adopted.<br />

Lyon, Walter Hastings. 338.8 L99C<br />

Corporation finance, part 2: distributing securities, re<strong>org</strong>anization.<br />

1916. Houghton.<br />

Forms part 2 of the author's "Capitalization; a book on corporation finance."<br />

"Deals more especially with two topics, the distribution of corporate securities and<br />

the financial side of corporate re<strong>org</strong>anizations. It also presents some discussion of the<br />

disposition made of corporate income." Preface.<br />

Public service properties. 1918. Barstow. r 332.6 P98<br />

Gives general data regarding public utility companies with yearly gross earnings in<br />

excess of $7,800,000.


452 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Taxation<br />

Black, Henry Campbell.<br />

r 336.2 B51<br />

Treatise on Federal taxes, including those imposed by the Revenue<br />

act of 1918 (enacted Feb. 1919) and other United States internal revenue<br />

acts now in force, with commentaries and explanations, references<br />

to the rulings and regulations of the Treasury department and pertinent<br />

decisions of the courts. 1919. Vernon Law Book Co.<br />

Supplement. 1920.<br />

Bound with his "Treatise on Federal taxes."<br />

Eastman, Frank Marshall.<br />

r 336.2 E18<br />

Law of taxation in Pennsylvania, to which is added the act of Congress<br />

approved Aug. 5, 1909, imposing an income tax on the net earnings<br />

of corporations. 2v. 1909. Soney.<br />

Supplement. 1914.<br />

Does not treat assessments for municipal improvements, liquor licenses, nor local<br />

and special tax laws.<br />

The Supplement, bound with v.2, contains all laws enacted and all decisions reported<br />

relating to taxation in Pennsylvania up to Oct. I, 1013, and a table of all statutes<br />

contained in the original work and in the Supplement.<br />

Levine, Louis.<br />

Taxation of mines in Montana. 1919. Huebsch.<br />

336.2 L667<br />

Contains bibliographical foot-notes.<br />

A monograph which aims to set forth the available information on the situation in<br />

the state, as well as the elementary economic principles involved, and to point the way to<br />

a solution along moderately progressive lines followed by other states.<br />

Zangerle, John A.<br />

r 336.2 Z28<br />

Untaxed wealth of Cleveland and why; an exposition of the difficulties<br />

of administering the general property tax laws of Ohio in Cuyahoga<br />

county. [1918.] [Press of S. J. Monck.]<br />

The writer, who is auditor of Cuyahoga county, suggests some reforms valid under<br />

present constitutional provisions and also some based on amendments, such as the<br />

classification of property, and a graded income tax with household exemption of $1,000<br />

instead of the present $500.<br />

Law<br />

Illinois—Uniformity of legislation in the United States, r 345 I227<br />

Commission on.<br />

Report to Frank O. Lowden, governor, also text of proposed laws:<br />

Uniform conditional sales act and Uniform fraudulent conveyance act.<br />

[I9I9-]<br />

United States—Library of Congress. qr 016.3477 U25<br />

List of references on freedom of the seas, including its application<br />

to the European war. 1918.<br />

Carbon copy.


BOOKS ADDED—NOVEMBER 1920 453<br />

International Law<br />

Allied and Associated Powers (1914- ). Treaty qr 341.2 A43t<br />

with' Germany, June 28, 1919.<br />

Treaty of peace between the Allied and Associated Powers and<br />

Germany, the protocol annexed thereto, the agreement respecting the<br />

military occupation of the territories of the Rhine, and the treaty between<br />

France and Great Britain respecting assistance to France in the<br />

event of unprovoked aggression by Germany. Signed at Versailles,<br />

June 28th, 1919. 1919. H. M. Stationery Off.<br />

French and English text.<br />

"(Annex.) Assistance to France in the event of unprovoked aggression of Germany.<br />

Agreement between the United States and France signed at Versailles June 28, 1919,"<br />

p.440-453.<br />

Contains maps and signatures in facsimile.<br />

Index. 1920.<br />

Chamberlain, Thomas Gassner. 341.6 C35<br />

Why we fought; foreword by W. H. Taft. 1919. Macmillan.<br />

A discussion of the League of nations, with speeches made in its behalf, and including<br />

the convenant as adopted at the Plenary session of the fnterallied peace conference,<br />

April 28, 1919.<br />

Sarolea, Charles. 341-6 S24<br />

Europe and the league of nations. 1919. Bell.<br />

"Takes up a number of problems growing out of the treaty of peace and out of the<br />

league convenant such as The status of small nations within the covenant, America within<br />

the league, The trial of the kaiser, The future of Poland, Germany's political reconstruction.<br />

The author expresses great dissatisfaction with the economic terms of the<br />

treaty." New York times, 1920.<br />

Army. Military Science<br />

Blakeslee, Fred Gilbert. r 355.14 B52<br />

Army uniforms of the world. 1919.<br />

"Bibliography," p.181-183.<br />

Describes the dress of the soldier in different periods of history, the military badges<br />

of rank, and methods of wearing articles of equipment, with special attention to the<br />

development of the uniforms of the United States from colonial times to the present<br />

day.<br />

Fiske, Bradley Allen. 355 F54<br />

The art of fighting; its evolution and progress, with illustrations<br />

from campaigns of great commanders. 1920. Century.<br />

Rear-Admiral Fiske discusses the principles of war in general, takes up historical<br />

examples from the earliest authentic records of Egypt down to the armistice of Nov.<br />

1918, and concludes with a section on strategy in which he applies the principles and illustrations<br />

to present conditions and to the future of the human race, particularly to<br />

those of the United States.<br />

Insurance<br />

Hoffman, Frederick Ludwig. r 368 H67<br />

Facts and fallacies of compulsory health insurance. [1917.] [Prudential<br />

Press.]<br />

"An address read i'n part before the section on social and economic science of the<br />

American Association for the Advancement of Science, Dec. 28, 1916, and the National<br />

Civic Federation, Jan. 22, 1917.<br />

"List of scientific publications of the Prudential Insurance Co. of America, p.L^J.


454 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Hoffman, Frederick Ludwig.<br />

368 H678<br />

Failure of German compulsory health insurance; a war revelation.<br />

[1918?] [Prudential Press.]<br />

"An address delivered at the 12th annual meeting of the Association of Life Insurance<br />

Presidents at New York, Dec. 6, 1918."<br />

Points out that the imperial regime in Germany originally adopted the scheme in<br />

order to curtail the powers of the socialistic party, and sounds a warning against any<br />

tendency towards paternalism and coercion in America.<br />

Education<br />

Butte, Mont.—Survey commission. r 379.786 B98<br />

Report of a survey of the school system of Butte, Montana; submitted<br />

to the Board of school trustees, June 2, 1914. [1914.]<br />

Takes up problems of instruction and administration, giving the forms used in collecting<br />

the data and making suggestions for improving the opportunities of public education.<br />

qr 371.gi C23<br />

Carry on; a magazine on the reconstruction of disabled soldiers and<br />

sailors; ed. by the Office of the surgeon-general, U. S. Army; monthly,<br />

June 1918-July 1919. v.i, no.1-10. 1918-19.<br />

Published for the surgeon-general by the American Red Cross.<br />

None published for July and Dec. 1918 and Feb. 1919.<br />

No more published.<br />

Clerval,J. A. 370.9 C57<br />

Les ecoles de Chartres au moyen-age (du 5" au i6 e siecle). 1895.<br />

"Table des sources bibliographiques," pref. p.9-20.<br />

A history of the schools, giving for each century an account of the masters, the pupils,<br />

their books, and the courses of study pursued.<br />

Colton, Elizabeth Avery. r 578.7 C726<br />

The various types of southern colleges for women. [1917.] [Mitchell<br />

Printing Co.]<br />

Reprint of Bulletin no.2, rgi6, published by the Southern Association of College<br />

Women.<br />

Points out the kind of education provided at the various institutions calling themselves<br />

colleges for women," and gives information about individual institutions.<br />

Congress of Women's Clubs of Western Pennsylvania. r 374.3 C74<br />

[Directory.] 1917. [Pittsburgh.]<br />

Franklin, Alfred Louis Auguste. 3?g 4 p 8 -<br />

La Sorbonne, ses origines, sa bibliotheque, les debuts de l'imprimerie<br />

a Paris, et la succession de Richelieu, d'apres des documents<br />

medits. 2. ed. corrigee et augmentee. 1875.<br />

Bibliographical foot-notes.<br />

Harvard Endowment Fund. qr 3y8 7 H<br />

Harvard and the future. 1919.<br />

Presents the scope of the university and its various schools, with a summary of<br />

financial needs for the future.<br />

ouuunarj or<br />

Oxford University. r ^^ Q^<br />

Oxford University calendar for the year 1920. [1919.] Clarendon<br />

Press.


BOOKS ADDED—NOVEMBER 1920 455<br />

Pittsburgh—Public education board. r 371.17 P67<br />

Reports on teachers' pensions; reports of Finance and administration<br />

committee, Special committee on pensions, Citizens' committee;<br />

S. H. Wolfe, consulting actuary; savings and annuity plan. 1917.<br />

[Pittsburgh.]<br />

r 379-43 S79<br />

Statistisches jahrbuch der hoheren schulen Deutschlands, Luxemburgs<br />

und der Schweiz und der hoheren deutschen schulen im ausland; nach<br />

amtlichen quellen bearbeitet, 1914/15. v.35, pt.i. 1914.<br />

Commerce<br />

American Commerce Association. r 385 Asi22e<br />

Express and parcel post services; <strong>org</strong>anization, management and service,<br />

rates and charges. 1918. (Traffic library.)<br />

The appendix includes express forms, rules to agents, and information on international<br />

shipments between the United States and Canada.<br />

American Commerce Association. r 385 Asi22tr<br />

Traffic geography. 1919. (Traffic library.)<br />

A bird's eye view of various traffic flows, such as iron, cattle, grain, lumber, coal;<br />

an analysis of the factors which determine population, location of industries, and development<br />

of freight services; and a discussion of traffic territories and rate zones.<br />

American exporter. r 38 2 A5122<br />

American exporter's export trade directory; export merchants,<br />

manufacturers' export agents, foreign exchange bankers, foreign freigh<br />

forwarders, steamship lines, foreign consuls, etc. in principal ports<br />

the United States; comp. under the supervision of B. O. Hough, 1919-<br />

20. 1919.<br />

National Institute of Social Sciences. 385 N15<br />

Government versus private railroads. 1919. (Journal, v.5.)<br />

This volume also represents no.51 of the Journal of the American Social Science<br />

Association.<br />

Contents: Arguments for and against government ownership and operation of railroads,<br />

by E. R. A. Seligman.—Objections to government ownership of railroads, by<br />

S. O. Dunn.—Coordinated development of waterways and railroads, by VV. D. Hines.—<br />

Private ownership, operation and financing of the railroads, by T. D. Cuyler.—Program<br />

of railroad legislation, by T. E. Burton.—A railroad policy briefly outlined, by G. A.<br />

Post.—Competition and private initiative in railroad development and management, by<br />

R. S. Lovett.—Nationalizing railroad corporations by statute, by A. YV. Smith.—Stabilizing<br />

railroad investments, by P. M. Warburg.—Objections to government guarantee of return<br />

on railroad capital, by Samuel Rea.—The greater efficiency of private operation of<br />

railroads, by A. J. County.—Effects of government ownership on development and efficiency<br />

of railroads, by J. J. Esch.—Adjustment of wages and conditions of service<br />

under government and corporate ownership of railroads, by W. N. Doak.—Public control<br />

of railroad wages, by W. C. Osborn.<br />

The same. 1919. (In its Journal, v.5.) r 305 N15 v.5<br />

Pan American Union. r 016.382 P21<br />

Reference list on commerce, exporting and importing; comp. by<br />

C. E. Babcock, acting librarian, Pan American Union. 1919.


456 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Toulouse University, International Trade Relations r 382 T64<br />

Society [A. E. F.]<br />

Report to American business men who have been members or loyal<br />

supporters of the A. E. F. 1919.<br />

An account of the conditions of business and finance in Europe, with regard to<br />

Franco-American trade.<br />

United States—Standards, Bureau of.<br />

International metric system; graphic comparisons.<br />

Chart, 40 x 71 inches.<br />

qr 389 U25in<br />

Wilson, Herbert Ge<strong>org</strong>e.<br />

r 385 W76<br />

Special freight services, allowances and privileges. 3 pts. in 3v.<br />

1917-19. (Traffic library.)<br />

Issued by the American Commerce Association.<br />

A discussion of these services which shows "their definite application to freight<br />

movements, in conformity with tariff and regulation requirements." Preface.<br />

Language<br />

Dumas, Alexandre, the elder. 448 D89<br />

Histoires d'animaux, selected with notes, vocabularies and imitative<br />

exercises by T. H. Bertenshaw. 1900. Longmans. (Longmans'<br />

illustrated French reading books.)<br />

A collection of stories from the author's "Le capitaine Pamphile" and "Histoire de<br />

mes betes."<br />

Lewis, William Dodge, & Holmes, M. D.<br />

420.7 L67<br />

Knowing and using words. 1917. Allyn.<br />

Discusses correct pronunciation, words confused and misused, the derivation,<br />

growth, building, and analysis of words, what words say for and to us, devices for remembering<br />

troublesome words, and common words often misspelled.<br />

Shedd, Ephraim Cutler.<br />

475 S54<br />

The first Latin book. 1901. Harison.<br />

A method of aiding beginners in Latin to become familiar with the vocabulary and<br />

constructions of Caesar.<br />

Science<br />

Chapman, Frank Michler.<br />

598.2 C36W<br />

What bird is that? a pocket museum of the land birds of the eastern<br />

United States, arranged according to season, with 301 birds in color by<br />

E. J. Sawyer. 1920. Appleton.<br />

The same<br />

j 598.2 C36W<br />

A useful guide to identification of resident and migratory birds. Gives description<br />

and range of each bird and brief notes on its habits. The illustrations, though small,<br />

are drawn to nearly the same scale.<br />

Davis, Edward Everett.<br />

r 507 D31<br />

Experiments in the elementary sciences for country schools. 191".<br />

(Texas University. Bulletin no.1770.)<br />

Gleichen, Alexander Wilhelm.<br />

r 535.8 G48<br />

Theory of modern optical instruments; a reference book for physicists,<br />

manufacturers of optical instruments and for officers in the army


BOOKS ADDED—NOVEMBER 1920 457<br />

Gleichen, Alexander Wilhelm—continued.<br />

r 535.8 G48<br />

and navy; tr. from the German by H. H. Emsley and W. Swaine, with<br />

an appendix on rangefinders. 1918. H. M. Stationery Off.<br />

"Bibliography," p.359-361.<br />

Published for the Scientific and industrial research department of England.<br />

Hartung, Ge<strong>org</strong>.<br />

qr 554.68 H33<br />

Die geologischen verhaltnisse der inseln Lanzarote und Fuertaventura.<br />

[1856?]<br />

International Correspondence Schools, Scranton, Pa. r 510.8 I24<br />

Elements of mechanical and electrical engineering; prepared for<br />

students of the International Correspondence Schools, Scranton, Pa.<br />

v.6. 1898. Colliery Engineer Co.<br />

v.6. Tables and formulas.<br />

Keeler, Harriet Louise.<br />

580 K150U<br />

Our northern autumn; a study of its characteristic flowers, its<br />

brilliant foliage and its conspicuous fruits. 1920. Scribner.<br />

MacCaughey, Vaughan.<br />

570.974795 M12<br />

Natural history of Chautauqua. 1917. Huebsch.<br />

The same<br />

r 57°-974795 M12<br />

Nature guide to the vicinity of Chautauqua Lake, New York, by a teacher of natural<br />

history in the Chautauqua summer schools. Lists the flora and fauna, considers<br />

the geology of the region, and touches briefly on meteorology and astronomy.<br />

Mackenzie, J. S. F.<br />

523 M18<br />

A night raid into space; the story of the heavens told in simple<br />

words. [1920?] Hardingham.<br />

Very elementary descriptive work, especially for British readers. Not a guide to<br />

identification of stars and constellations.<br />

Chemistry<br />

Rudisule, Alois.<br />

r 543 R83<br />

Nachweis, bestimmung und trennung der chemischen elemente.<br />

v.1-5. 1913-18.<br />

v.i. Arsen, antimon, zinn, tellur, selen.<br />

v.2. Gold, platin, vanadin, wolfram, germanium, molybdan, silber, quecksilber.<br />

v.3. Kupfer, cadmium, wismut, blei.<br />

v.4. Palladium, rhodium, iridium, ruthenium, osmium, beryllium, eisen, titan, silicium.<br />

v.5. Aluminium, nickel, kobalt, mangan, zir.k, chrom. uran.<br />

Smith, Ge<strong>org</strong>e McPhail.<br />

545 S648<br />

Introductory course in quantitative chemical analysis, with explanatory<br />

notes, stoichiometrical problems and questions. 1919. Macmillan.<br />

Exercises based on elementary courses at University of Illinois.<br />

Voge, Adolf Law.<br />

r 546 V 3 6i<br />

In<strong>org</strong>anic compounds (14,000) clast according to common properties<br />

by means of a decimal symbolization. 2 pts. 1911. Privately printed.<br />

pt.i. Introduction.—Code.—Systematics.—Index.<br />

pt.2. Condenst-formula index.<br />

Weyl, Theodore, and others.<br />

1 r 547 W58<br />

Les methodes de la chimie <strong>org</strong>anique; traite concernant les travaux<br />

de laboratoire, par Th. Weyl, avec la collaboration de K. Arndt [and<br />

others]; traduit par R. Cornubert; preface de A. Haller. 3v. I9>4-I9-


458 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Useful Arts<br />

6o8 Bl 5<br />

Baff, William E.<br />

Inventions; their development, purchase and sale. 1920. Van Nostrand.<br />

A guide to the profitable exploitation of patented investments. Primarily for the<br />

inventor without business experience, but considers also certain problems of the financier<br />

and the manufacturer.<br />

Boston Woven Hose & Rubber Company.<br />

r 678 B64<br />

The story of rubber; whatit is and what it does. 1916.<br />

Buel, James William.<br />

qr 606 C43DU<br />

The magic city; a massive portfolio of original photographic views<br />

of the great World's fair and its treasures of art, including a vivid<br />

representation of the famous Midway plaisance, with graphic descriptions.<br />

1894. Historical Pub. Co. (Historical fine art series.)<br />

Hopkins, Nevil Monroe.<br />

607 H78<br />

The outlook for research and invention, with an appendix of problems<br />

awaiting solution. 1919. Van Nostrand.<br />

Written in the laudable endeavor to promote efficiency in research; and, in this<br />

endeavor, the author considers the essential qualifications of scientific investigators, the<br />

possibilities, and the limitations.<br />

National Society for Vocational Education.<br />

607 Nisi<br />

Industrial education; trade tests, unit trade schools, general industrial<br />

schools, shopwork on productive basis, teacher training, state<br />

supervision, training and upgrading of women workers; addresses delivered<br />

at the 12th annual convention, St. Louis, Feb. 20-22, 1919. 1919.<br />

(Bulletin no.30.)<br />

The same. (In its Bulletin no.30.)<br />

r 607 N155 no.30<br />

Medicine, Physiology, Hygiene<br />

Clerical and Medical Committee of Inquiry into<br />

615.851 C57<br />

Spiritual, Faith and Mental Healing.<br />

Spiritual healing; report. 1914. Macmillan.<br />

Fischer, Martin Henry, & Hooker, M. O.<br />

612.397 F52<br />

Fats and fatty degeneration; a physico-chemical study of emulsions<br />

and the normal and abnormal distribution of fat in protoplasm. 1917.<br />

Wiley.<br />

"Interesting and instructive volume which should be widely read by all who are in<br />

any way interested in the subject of colloids." Science progress, 1920.<br />

Harrower, Henry Robert.<br />

r 616.0836 H31<br />

Practical <strong>org</strong>anotherapy; the internal secretions in general practice.<br />

1920. Harrower Laboratory.<br />

Lewis (H. K.) & Co. London.<br />

r 016.6 L67<br />

Catalogue of Lewis's medical & scientific circulating library, including<br />

a classified index of subjects; rev. to the end of 1917. 1918.<br />

Walmsley, Thomas.<br />

611.07 W18<br />

Manual of practical anatomy; a guide to the dissection of the human<br />

body, with a preface by T. H. Bryce. pt.i. 1920. Longmans.<br />

pt.i. The upper and lower limbs.


Engineering<br />

BOOKS ADDED—NOVEMBER 1920 459<br />

Baker, Ray Palmer, comp.<br />

620.7 B17<br />

Engineering education; essays for English. 1919. Wiley.<br />

A collection of fourteen judiciously selected papers and addresses by engineers and<br />

scientists in England and America. They deal, in general, with the place of the classics<br />

in engineering education, and with the importance of English, mathematics, physics,<br />

chemistry, and the imaginative faculty.<br />

Butte, Ge<strong>org</strong>e Charles Felix.<br />

r 622.338007 B98<br />

A model oil and gas contract. 1919. (Texas University. Bulletin<br />

no.1923.)<br />

Guillet, Leon.<br />

qr 623.451 G96<br />

Memoire sur le traitement thermique des obus (application de la<br />

methode Taylor) introduction et notes de Henrj^ Le Chatelier. 1916.<br />

(Publication de la Revue de metallurgie.)<br />

Hill, Claude William.<br />

621.83 H55<br />

Design of toothed gear. 1918. Griffin.<br />

"Most of the formula in this book were given originally in. . .the author's book on<br />

Electric Crane Construction, to which readers, who wish to go more fully into the subject...are<br />

referred." Preface.<br />

Holt Manufacturing Company.<br />

r 621.143 H74<br />

Care and operation of the "caterpillar" 45 tractor. 1917.<br />

With this is bound "Care and operation of the 'caterpillar' 75 tractor."<br />

Horton, Charles Marcus.<br />

r 620.7 H81<br />

Opportunities in engineering. 1920. Harper. (Opportunity books.)<br />

Contents: Engineering and the engineer.—Engineering opportunities.—The engineering<br />

type.—The four major branches.—Making a choice.—Qualifying for promotion.<br />

—The consulting engineer.—The engineer in civic affairs.—Code of ethics.—Future of<br />

the engineer.—What constitutes engineering success.—The personal side.<br />

Korner, Kamillo.<br />

qr 621.434 K38<br />

Der bau des Dieselmotors. 1918.<br />

A very fully illustrated manual of construction.<br />

Ladoo, Raymond B.<br />

qr 622.355 L13<br />

Talc mining in Vermont. 1919.<br />

Issued by the United States bureau of mines.<br />

Mimeograph copy.<br />

Oberg, Erik Valdemar.<br />

r 621.7163 O12<br />

Developing a gaging system for interchangeable manufacture; an<br />

abstract of a treatise describing the principles involved and the procedure<br />

followed in the development of a gaging system for interchangeable<br />

manufacture, based upon the experience of the Pratt & Whitney<br />

Co. in furnishing gaging equipment for small arms and heavy ordnance<br />

work. 1919.<br />

Published by Pratt & Whitney Co.<br />

Reprinted from "Machinery."<br />

Paul, James Hugh.<br />

621.186 P31<br />

Boiler chemistry and feed water supplies. 1919. Longmans.<br />

Essentially a chemical work on boiler feed-waters, their treatment and behavior and<br />

the nature of boiler scale. Valuable for the numerous analyses and the records of the<br />

effects of various waters.


460 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

qr 629.1126 P87<br />

Power wagon reference book, 1920; a handbook of practical information<br />

for makers, sellers and owners of motor-driven vehicles for commercial<br />

and agricultural purposes, comprising a review of the use of motor<br />

trucks in different trades with facts relating to their economy and efficient<br />

operation, and with complete tabulated specifications of motor<br />

wagons, farm tractors, trailers, passenger-cars and parts; ed. by S. A.<br />

Phillips. 1920. Power Wagon Pub. Co.<br />

Varinois, Maurice. r 621.943 V21<br />

Le fraisage; la fraise, les machines a fraiser, les machines a tailler<br />

les engrenages, examples de travaux de fraisage. 1919.<br />

Wardlaw, James. 622.33 W21<br />

Mining mathematics simplified. 1919. Privately printed.<br />

Simple arithmetical problems in mine drainage, haulage, ventilation, etc.<br />

Zimmermann, Karl.<br />

qr 624.1 Z64<br />

Die rammwirkung im erdreich; versuche auf neuer grundlage. 1915.<br />

"Literaturiibersicht," p.2-7.<br />

Agriculture<br />

[Favor, Ernest Howard.]<br />

632.9 F28<br />

Successful spraying; a text book on spraying for the grower of<br />

fruits and vegetables. 1918.<br />

Published by Horticultural department, Hayes Pump & Planter Company.<br />

^ On the advantages and the methods of spraying. Includes shade trees. Discusses<br />

various diseases and insect pests, giving specific methods of control.<br />

Grisdale, Joseph Hiram, comp. r 630.971 Gg2<br />

Preparing land for grain crops on the prairies; second edition, incorporating<br />

agricultural maps and additional information relating to<br />

temperature, precipitation, seed, soils, fertilizers and loans to farmers.<br />

[1919?]<br />

Issued from Natural resources intelligence branch, Department of interior, Canada.<br />

Kaupp, Benjamin Franklyn.<br />

636.5 K14<br />

Poultry culture, sanitation and hygiene. Ed.2. 1920. Saunders.<br />

For the poultry breeder desirous of making a serious study of the scientific principles<br />

of the subject.<br />

Lyon, Thomas Lyttleton. 6 3I L99S<br />

Soils and fertilizers. 1919. Macmillan.<br />

The<br />

same<br />

(Rural text-book series.)<br />

.' r 631 L99<br />

Text-book for secondary schools. Subject is presented without use of chemical formulas<br />

and no previous knowledge of natural science is necessary. The author is professor<br />

of soil technology at Cornell University.<br />

Waters, Bernard. r 6s6 ? W2Q<br />

Modern training, handling and kennel management. 1889. Blakely<br />

Printing Co.


Domestic Economy<br />

BOOKS ADDED—NOVEMBER 1920 461<br />

Cardelli, P. (pseud, of Henri Duval), and others.<br />

642 C19<br />

Nouveau manuel complet du confiseur et du chocolatier, par Cardelli,<br />

Lionnet-Clemandot, F. Malepeyre et Villon; nouvelle edition entierement<br />

refondue et considerablement augmentee, par Henri Blin.<br />

1919. (Encyclopedie-Roret.)<br />

Fales, Winnifred Shaw.<br />

640 p^<br />

Household dictionary. 1920. Small.<br />

Collection of domestic receipts and formulas.<br />

New York (city), Metropolitan Life Insurance Company. 649.1 N26<br />

The child; printed and distributed for the use of its policy-holders.<br />

1916.<br />

Pamphlet dealing with proper care and feeding of infants.<br />

Business. Communication<br />

Derby, Harry Leigh.<br />

r 658.62 D44<br />

Industrial traffic departments; <strong>org</strong>anization, management, systems<br />

and records. 1916. (Traffic library.)<br />

Issued by the American Commerce Association.<br />

Knoeppel, Charles Edward.<br />

658.7 K34g<br />

Graphic production control; by C. E. Knoeppel, assisted by various<br />

members of the author's firm and staff. 1920. Engineering Magazine<br />

Co.<br />

The same<br />

r 658.7 K34<br />

The author strongly advocates graphic methods for industrial records and statistics,<br />

and deals with the application of these methods. The book is illustrated with numerous<br />

graphic diagrams, many of which are printed in colors.<br />

Lawrence, Henry Carter.<br />

658.521 L42<br />

Cash discount piracy; a practical system designed to overcome cash<br />

discount evils. 1919. Consolidated Pub. Co.<br />

An arraignment of the practice of deducting discount after expiration of the "ten<br />

days term." Discusses remedial measures and submits correspondence covering various<br />

phases of the matter.<br />

Pennsylvania—Public service commission.<br />

r 657.55328 P3gt<br />

Tentative draft of uniform classification of accounts for natural gas<br />

companies. 1918.<br />

Potter, Edward C.<br />

r 658.62 P85<br />

Railway traffic departments; <strong>org</strong>anization and systems; the solicitation<br />

of freight. 1917. (Traffic library.)<br />

Issued by the American Commerce Association.<br />

Chemical Technology<br />

Fierz, Hans Eduard.<br />

Grundlegende operationen der farbenchemie. 1920.<br />

Hamilton, Edward Montague.<br />

Manual of cyanidation. 1920. McGraw.<br />

Practical manual of ore testing and plant operation.<br />

r 667.2 F46<br />

669.2 H21


462 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Hoyt, Samuel L. 669.042 H86<br />

Metallography, pt.i. 1920. McGraw.<br />

pt.i. Principles of metallography.<br />

Contains bibliographical foot-notes.<br />

The same<br />

Part 1 is a general introduction to the subject.<br />

and methods of general investigations.<br />

r 669.042 H86<br />

Deals only with general principles<br />

Hunter, Matthew Arnold, & Sebast, F. M. r 669.9125 Hg4<br />

Electrical properties of some high resistance alloys. [1917.] (Rensselaer<br />

Polytechnic Institute. Engineering and science series, no.10.)<br />

Issued by the Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Department of electrical engineering,<br />

Russell Sage laboratory.<br />

Stephenson, Joseph. 662.6 S83<br />

Industrial fuels. 1919. Westman Press.<br />

Deals briefly with properties, production, and certain applications of solid, liquid,<br />

and gaseous fuels, and has a chapter on fuel analysis.<br />

Fine Arts<br />

Bishop, Carlton Thomas. 744 B49<br />

Structural drafting and the design of details. 1920. Wiley.<br />

The same<br />

r 744 B49<br />

A useful work. Presupposes ability to use drawing instruments, but presents fully<br />

the fundamental operations within the province of the structural steel draftsman.<br />

Dieulafoy, Marcel Auguste. r 735 D57<br />

La statuaire polychrome en Espagne; illustre de 80 planches tirees<br />

hors texte et de planches en couleurs. 1908.<br />

Gives the origins of statuary in color, its history and development in Spain during<br />

the Latin-Byzantine, Roman, and Gothic periods, and during the renaissance, with a<br />

discussion of the several schools.<br />

Manning, Warren Henry. qr 710 B48gm<br />

City plan of Birmingham [Ala.]. 1919. Privately printed.<br />

A first study of the possibilities of Birmingham, "made to anticipate future growth<br />

along the lines of greatest efficiency and economy."<br />

Pillion, Louise. 735 P59<br />

Les sculpteurs frangais du 13 s siecle. [1912.] (Les maitres de l'art.)<br />

"Bibliographie," p.253—260.<br />

Traces the development of French sculpture from the point of view of style and<br />

shows the harmony and unity achieved in spite of the multitude of unknown craftsmen.<br />

Includes an "Essai d'un repertoire sommaire des principales oeuvres de sculpture monumentale<br />

du treizieme siecle existant encore en France."<br />

Siren, Osvald. r 759.5 G43S<br />

Giotto and some of his followers; English translation by Frederic<br />

Schenck. 2v. 1917. Harvard University Press.<br />

"Lists of pictures by Giotto and some of his followers," v.i, p.265-277.<br />

A series of lectures on the most prominent painters of Florence, 1300-60. The<br />

author, who is (1017) professor of the history of art in the University of Stockholm,<br />

endeavors to regard Giotto in relation to the art which preceded, surrounded, and followed<br />

him, and gives an analysis of his chief creations.<br />

Tapisseries et etoffes coptes. qb 746 T18<br />

Consists of five introductory pages and 48 plates mostly in color, showing Coptic<br />

art stuffs and tapestries, and the Greek, Roman, Byzantine, and Persian influence on<br />

them.


BOOKS ADDED—NOVEMBER 1920 46 3<br />

Whiting, Gertrude. r ^ ^<br />

A lace guide for makers and collectors; with bibliography and fivelanguage<br />

nomenclature, profusely illustrated with halftone plates and<br />

key designs. 1920. Dutton.<br />

ground1 d a e nd P finiWs n " P ° Cket; "*" ^^ «»>»»*" «»*« °* 145 bobbin lace<br />

"Bibliography," p.243-401.<br />

Contains a detailed description for the working of each of the 145 patterns used in<br />

M u s e " . y0Tc r ity. Ve Sampler " ' hat ^ ^ ^ ^ » "<br />

Young, W. A.<br />

M<br />

- — ' n<br />

73g Y4i<br />

The silver and Sheffield plate collector; a guide to English domestic<br />

metal work in old silver and old Sheffield plate. 1919. Dodd. [Collectors<br />

series.]<br />

Chapter 11, "Bibliographical," p.289-299.<br />

Aims to furnish information on domestic articles manufactured between the years<br />

J<br />

1097 and 1840.<br />

Gardening<br />

Bennett, Ida Dandridge.<br />

The busy woman's garden book. 1920.<br />

Small.<br />

?l6 B43b<br />

A practical book for amateur gardeners. It is devoted mostly to vegetables, but includes<br />

herbs, flowers, and shrubbery, and has a chapter on "The possibilities of a city<br />

flat.<br />

Dillistone, Ge<strong>org</strong>e. ?l6 Ds8<br />

Planning & planting of little gardens, with notes and criticisms by<br />

Lawrence Weaver. 1920. "Country Life."<br />

Presents the results of a garden planning competition which aimed to show how the<br />

greatest possible use might be made of given areas and how the most picturesque effects<br />

might be obtained therein. Considers the prize designs in detail, with criticism and<br />

suggestions.<br />

Architecture<br />

Benjamin, Asher.<br />

qr 720 B43P<br />

Practical house carpenter; a complete development of the Grecian<br />

orders of architecture, methodised and arranged in such a simple, plain<br />

and comprehensive manner as to be easily understood, each example<br />

being fashioned according to the style and practice of the present day.<br />

1830. Privately printed.<br />

[Cousins, Frank.] r 724.9 C840<br />

[The Octagon, Washington, D. C.; 18 photographs.] Frank Cousins<br />

Art Co.<br />

This house, built for Colonel John Tayloe in 1800, was occupied by President Madison<br />

after the burning of the White house by the British, Aug. 4, 1814.<br />

Evans, Herbert Francis.<br />

726 E94<br />

The Sunday-school building and its equipment. 1914. University<br />

of Chicago Press. (Principles and methods of religious education.)<br />

Describes the model church school building and presents many plans.


464 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Lefevre-Pontalis, Eugene Amedee.<br />

qb 726 L53<br />

L'architecture religieuse dans l'ancien diocese de Soissons au n e et<br />

au I2 e siecle. 2v. 1894-96.<br />

Bibliographical foot-notes.<br />

Mortet, Victor.<br />

b 720 M92<br />

Melanges d'archeologie (antiquite romaine et moyen age). 2v.<br />

1914-15.<br />

v.i. Premiere serie: Technique architecturale, metrologie.<br />

v.2: Deuxieme serie: Histoire de l'architecture, lexicographic<br />

Bibliographical foot-notes.<br />

Made up of articles on medieval and classical architecture, on composition and<br />

proportion in architecture, and on architecture in France. They appeared originally<br />

in the "Bibliotheque de l'Ecole des Chartes" and in the "Bulletin monumental," and<br />

are now brought out after the author's death by his brother, Charles Mortet.<br />

qb 729 T62<br />

Topical architecture; classified architectural motives and details, no.i-<br />

60; 1900-Dec. 1904 in 5v. 1900-04. American Architect and Building<br />

News Company.<br />

No.1-10 issued at one time; monthly, Nov. 1900-Dec. 1904.<br />

Title-page of v.i reads: Topical architecture: a series of classified designs arranged<br />

for draughtsmen, designers, architects and others, and issued in parts.<br />

April 1903-Dec. 1904 published by the American Architect Company (Oct.-Dec.<br />

1904 by the "American architect"), a later name for the American Architect and Building<br />

News Company.<br />

The sections devoted to "Ecclesiastical domes" were originally published separately<br />

by the American Architect Company in 1904 and edited by W. R. Ware.<br />

No more published.<br />

A series of plates without text.<br />

Willis, Robert, 1800-75.<br />

Architectural history of Glastonbury abbey.<br />

b 726 W75<br />

1866. Deighton.<br />

Read at the annual meeting of the Archaeological Institute of Great Britain and<br />

Ireland, at Dorchester, Aug. 4, 1865.<br />

Gives a documentary as well as a structural history of the church and of St.<br />

Joseph's chapel.<br />

[Wood, Robert.] qb 722.3 W85<br />

The ruins of Balbec, otherwise Heliopolis in Ccelosyria.<br />

/;>/•<br />

Description of a journey from Palmyra to Balbec, illustrated with 46 engraved<br />

plates.<br />

Applications of Photography<br />

Famous Players-Lasky Corporation, New York city. qr 778.5 F21<br />

Story of the Famous Players-Lasky Corporation; Paramount-artcraft<br />

motion pictures. 1919.<br />

An account of the production of moving pictures, their distribution in the United<br />

States and abroad, their exploitation by advertising and publicity, with a history of the<br />

corporation and a list of pictures produced up to Aug. 31, 1919.<br />

qr 770.5 P5286<br />

Photograms of the year, 1919-date; annual review of the world's pictorial<br />

photographic work. [i02o]-date. Iliffe.


BOOKS ADDED—NOVEMBER 1920 465<br />

Music<br />

Burlin, Mrs Natalie (Curtis), comp.<br />

qM 784.7 B92<br />

Negro folk-songs. 4 books in iv. 1918-19. Schirmer. (Hampton<br />

series.)<br />

G. S. S v0 choruses, no.6716, 6726, 6756, 6766.<br />

Books 1-2. Spirituals.<br />

Books 3-4. Work- and play-songs.<br />

Kappey, J. A. ed.<br />

qM 784.4 K13<br />

Songs of eastern Europe; a collection of 100 volkslieder of Austria,<br />

Bohemia, Hungary, Servia, Turkey and other countries, with English<br />

words by Clara Kappey. Boosey. (Royal edition of song books and<br />

operatic albums.)<br />

Words and music.<br />

Stevenson, Frederick.<br />

qM 784.6 S84<br />

An American ace; text by J. C. Alvord. Op. 82. 1919. Ditson.<br />

Scena for tenor solo and chorus of men's voices.<br />

qM 787.1 V347<br />

Violinist's book of songs; a collection of standard songs of every description<br />

arranged for violin or mandolin, with piano accompaniment,<br />

with an obligato part for second violin or mandolin; containing more<br />

than 200 modern concert songs, old time love songs, American patriotic<br />

songs, foreign national songs, grand opera songs, light opera songs,<br />

college songs, Southern songs, sacred songs, home songs, folk songs,<br />

sea songs, hymns; selected and ed. by A. E. Wier. 1919. Appleton.<br />

("Whole world" series.)<br />

Violin part in pocket.<br />

Recreation<br />

r 794.1 E98<br />

Exploits and triumphs, in Europe, of Paul Morphy, the chess champion,<br />

including an historical account of clubs, biographical sketches of famous<br />

players and various information and anecdote relating to the noble<br />

game of chess, by Paul Morphy's late secretary. 1859. Appleton.<br />

National Council of Public Morals for Great and<br />

792-7 N15<br />

Greater Britain.<br />

The cinema; its present position and future possibilities, being the<br />

report of and the chief evidence taken by the Cinema commission of<br />

inquiry instituted by the National Council of Public Morals. 1917-<br />

Williams.<br />

Rhead, Louis John.<br />

799 R38f<br />

Fisherman's lures and game-fish food, with colored pictures from<br />

life of various creatures fish eat, and new improved artificial imitation<br />

floating nature lures and chart-plans to show the haunts where fish<br />

feed on them in lake and stream. 1920. Scribner.<br />

Intended as a companion volume to the author's "Trout stream insects this<br />

book shows how all species of game fish may be increased by a new system of fading,<br />

and how angling conditions may be improved by the use of artificial nature lures in<br />

place of live bait.


CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH-<br />

Literature<br />

Beers, Henry Augustin. 8l0 -9 B380<br />

An outline sketch of American literature. 1887. Chautauqua Press.<br />

Bibliography at end of each chapter.<br />

Covers the period 1607-1887.<br />

Bleyer, Willard Grosvenor. 808 B54<br />

How to write special feature articles; a handbook for reporters, correspondents<br />

and free-lance writers who desire to contribute to popular<br />

magazines and magazine sections of newspapers. 1919- Houghton.<br />

An analysis of current practice, aiming to show the application of the principles of<br />

composition to the writing of articles. Includes a collection of typical newspaper and<br />

magazine articles with an outline for their analysis.<br />

De La Mare, Walter John. 821 B772zd<br />

Rupert Brooke and the intellectual imagination; a lecture. 1920.<br />

Harcourt.<br />

Read before the school at Rugby, March 28, 1919.<br />

"An interesting and valuable contribution to poetic interpretation. It is a beautifully<br />

written piece of prose woven with subtle analysis and keen perceptions, the kind<br />

of spoken meditation which takes one back to the days of Pater and Symonds." Boston<br />

evening transcript, ig20.<br />

Fowler, William Warde. 873 V34ZIO<br />

Virgil's "Gathering of the clans," being observations on Aeneid<br />

7, 601-817. 1918. Blackwell.<br />

Latin text (Oxford edition by Sir A. Hirtzel, 1904) and English translation by<br />

James Rhoades on opposite pages, p.8-25.<br />

Gwynn, Stephen. 824 G991<br />

Irish books and Irish people. [1919.] Stokes.<br />

Contents: Novels of Irish life in the 19th century.—A century of Irish humour.—<br />

Literature among the illiterates: I. The Shanachy. II. The life of a song.—Irish<br />

education and Irish character.—The Irish gentry.—Yesterday in Ireland.<br />

Holliday, Carl. 821.08 H72<br />

The cavalier poets; their lives, their day and their poetry. 1911.<br />

Neale Pub. Co.<br />

"Works by the cavalier poets," p.291-299.<br />

"Bibliography," p.303-311.<br />

A study of some twenty of the group of poets variously known as metaphysical,<br />

cavalier, rhetorical, fantastic, and Caroline, by the (1911) acting head of the department<br />

of English literature at Vanderbilt University.<br />

Mais, Stuart Petre Brodie. 808 M26<br />

English course for schools. 1920. Richards.<br />

"Books found to be suitable for use in school," p.484—487.<br />

Aims to stimulate a love of English in pupils of average ability and to enable them<br />

to appreciate good literature. Includes specimens of English prose and poetry for study,<br />

and selections from recent public examination papers of the University of London.<br />

Nichol, John. r 802 N31<br />

Tables of European history, literature, science, and art, from A. D.<br />

200 to 1909; and of American history, literature, and art; revised and<br />

brought down to date by W. R. Jack. 1909. Maclehose.


BOOKS ADDED—NOVEMBER 1920 467<br />

Schinz, Albert.<br />

French literature of the great war. 1920. Appleton.<br />

840 S33<br />

"Bibliography," p.391-395; "Documents relative to the war." p.397-404; "Catalogue,<br />

in alphabetical order, of some of the best war diaries and recollections," p.405-413.<br />

The author, professor of French literature at Smith College (1920), divides his<br />

book into two parts. In the first, he discusses the literature in general as distinguished<br />

by three periods—emotional reaction after the outbreak of the war, documentation on the<br />

causes of the war, and philosophical consideration of all that was involved in the great<br />

struggle. In the second part he takes up the poetry, drama, and fiction called forth<br />

by the war.<br />

Vigny, Alfred Victor, comte de. 848 V32<br />

Journal d'un poete; recueilli et publie sur les notes intimes, par<br />

Louis Ratisbonne. 1919.<br />

Poetry<br />

Buttura, Antonio, ed. qr 851.08 B98<br />

I quattro poeti italiani, con una scelta di poesie italiane dal 1200 sino<br />

a' nostri tempi. 1833.<br />

Contents: Dante Alighieri: La divina commedia; Canzone in lode di Beatrice; Sonetti.—Fr.<br />

Petrarca: Le rime; Trionfi.—Lodovico Ariosto: Orlando furioso; Satire; Sonetti.—Torquato<br />

Tasso: La Gerusalemme liberata; Aminta; Intermedi; Amore fuggitivo.—<br />

Scelta di poesie d'autori diversi.<br />

Carlin, Francis. 811 C21IC<br />

The cairn of stars; poems. 1920. Holt.<br />

Hardy, Thomas. 821 H26C<br />

Collected poems. 1919. Macmillan.<br />

Mu'allakat. 892.7 M94S<br />

Seven poems suspended in the temple at Mecca; tr. from the Arabic<br />

by F. E. Johnson, with an introduction by Shaikh Faizullabhai. 1894.<br />

Luzac.<br />

Poems of the sixth and seventh centuries.<br />

821.08 S68<br />

Soldier poets; songs of the fighting men. [1918.] Macdonald.<br />

Preface signed:<br />

Galloway Kyle.<br />

Trotter, Jacqueline Theodora, ed. 821.08 T76<br />

Valour and vision; poems of the war, 1914-18. 1920. Longmans.<br />

Arranged chronologically in five sections, each preceded by a list of the principal<br />

events of that year.<br />

Drama. Theatre<br />

Bagg, Helen. r 793-1 B15<br />

The spoken word; or, The better speech child. 1918.<br />

Typewritten copy.<br />

A little play for amateurs, based on a plea for more correct use of the English language.<br />

Bates, Esther Willard. 792-5 B31P<br />

A pageant of the league of free nations. 1919. Massachusetts<br />

Joint Committee for a League of Free Nations.<br />

"Books on a league of nations," p.36-


468 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Bell, John Keble, (pseud. Keble Howard).<br />

Come Michaelmas; a play in one act. 1909. French.<br />

822 B412<br />

Bird, Grace Electa, & Starling, Maud.<br />

793-1 B48<br />

Historical plays for children; illustrations by K. Jordan. 1920.<br />

Macmillan. (Everychild's series.)<br />

Contents: Christopher Columbus.—Vasco Nunez de Balboa.—Joliet and Marquette.<br />

—Ge<strong>org</strong>e Rogers Clark.—Sir Walter Raleigh.—Ferdinand Magellan.—Henry Hudson.—<br />

John Smith.—La Salle.—Lewis and Clark.—Benjamin Franklin.—James Wolfe.—William<br />

Penn.—Dolly Madison.—Abraham Lincoln.<br />

Dix, Beulah Marie, & Sutherland, Mrs E. G. (pseud, of 812 D64r<br />

Dorothy Lundt).<br />

Rose o' Plymouth-town; a romantic comedy in four acts. 1908.<br />

Dramatic Pub. Co. (Sergei's acting drama, no.609.)<br />

France, Anatole, (pseud, of Jacques Anatole Thibault). 842 F86b<br />

The bride of Corinth, and other poems & plays; a translation by<br />

Wilfrid Jackson & Emilie Jackson. 1920. Lane. (Works in an English<br />

translation ed. by Frederic Chapman and J. L. May.)<br />

Other poems and plays: Verses.—Crainquebille.—The comedy of a man who married<br />

a dumb wife.—Come what may.<br />

Heidenstam, Carl Gustaf Verner von.<br />

839.72 H41<br />

The soothsayer; authorized translation from the Swedish by K. M.<br />

Knudsen. 1919. Four Seas Co.<br />

One act play with Greek setting, by the poet laureate of Sweden.<br />

Marble, Mrs Annie (Russell).<br />

812 M361<br />

Standish of Standish, by J. G. Austin; dramatized by A. R. Marble.<br />

1919. Houghton.<br />

Rogers, Robert Emmons.<br />

812 R61<br />

Behind a Watteau picture; a fantasy in verse, in one act. 1918.<br />

Baker.<br />

Rostetter, Alice.<br />

812 R75<br />

The widow's veil; a comedy in one act, as played by the Provincetown<br />

players. 1920. Arens. (Flying stag plays for the little theatre,<br />

no.9.)<br />

Symons, Arthur.<br />

The toy cart; a play in five acts. 1919. Maunsel.<br />

Humor<br />

822 Sg8to<br />

Shute, Henry Augustus.<br />

817 Ss6r<br />

Real diary of the worst farmer. 1920. Houghton.<br />

Humorous record of an amateur farmer's life from March 10 to Xov. 21.<br />

Biography<br />

Balboa, Vasco Nunez de.<br />

g2 Bi87q<br />

Quintana, Manuel Jose. La vida de Vasco Nunez de Balboa; edited<br />

with notes and vocabulary by G. G. Brownell. 1914. Ginn. (International<br />

modern language series.)


BOOKS ADDED—NOVEMBER 1920 469<br />

Biddle, Nicholas. 92 6475b<br />

The correspondence of Nicholas Biddle dealing with national affairs,<br />

1807-1844; ed. by R. C. McGrane. 1919. Houghton.<br />

Nicholas Biddle, a member of one of America's most distinguished families, was<br />

president of the Second Bank of the United States.<br />

Butler, Ellis Parker. 92 Bg76b<br />

How it feels to be 50. 1920. Houghton.<br />

Appeared in the "American magazine," v.88, Dec. 1919, under the title "Poor old<br />

Ellis Parker Butler is 50 this month."<br />

A genial little essay describing life at 50 as "a joyful journey well begun."<br />

Chesterfield, Philip Dormer Stanhope, carl of. 92 C427e<br />

Ernst, William. Memoirs of the life of Philip Dormer, fourth earl<br />

of Chesterfield, with numerous letters now first published from the<br />

Newcastle papers. [1893.] Sonnenschein.<br />

Bibliographical foot-notes.<br />

Includes letters of the period during which Lord Chesterfield was Lord lieutenant of<br />

Ireland and of the period when he came from retirement to effect the junction between<br />

Pitt and the Duke of Newcastle, "now for the first time published from the voluminous<br />

...correspondence known as the Newcastle Papers, in the British Museum." Preface.<br />

Grey, Charles, earl, 1764-1845. 92 G8873t<br />

Trevelyan, Ge<strong>org</strong>e Macaulay. Lord Grey of the Reform bill; the<br />

life of Charles, second earl Grey. 1920. Longmans.<br />

A brilliant biography of the famous Whig. The author "has not been seduced<br />

from the path of historical virtue by that besetting vice of biographers, hero worship."<br />

Nation, -ig2o.<br />

Hankey, Donald William Alers. 92 H236h<br />

Letters of Donald Hankey, "a student in arms;" with introduction<br />

and notes by Edward Miller. 1920. Revell.<br />

These letters are delightfully human descriptions of his life as a subaltern aged 20,<br />

as an undergraduate, as a traveller in British East Africa, Madagascar, Mauritius,<br />

France, and Italy, as a colonial emigrant in the Australian bust], and as one of the immortal<br />

hundred thousand in the world war.<br />

Mus<strong>org</strong>skil, Modest Petrovich. 92 M984C<br />

Calvocoressi, Michel D. Mus<strong>org</strong>sky, the Russian musical nationalist;<br />

tr. by A. E. Hull. 1919. Paul. (Library of music and musicians.)<br />

"List of Mus<strong>org</strong>sky's compositions," p.207-215.<br />

"Bibliography," p.216.<br />

An account of the brief life of the composer of "Boris Godunoff. The author<br />

considers him "one of the greatest inventors of musical elements, of melodic curves,<br />

or of new and expressive harmonies, who has ever lived."<br />

Napoleon I, emperor of the French. V 92 Ni2gsh<br />

Schulze, Friedrich Karl Alfred. Die deutsche Napoleon-karikatur;<br />

eine auswahl und wiirdigung der bezeichnendsten blatter. 1916.<br />

Published by the Gesellschaft der Bibliophilen.<br />

Consists of 60 facsimiles, 12 of them colored.<br />

Place, Francis. 9 2 P6 7 8w<br />

Wallas, Graham. The life of Francis Place [1771-1854]. 1919-<br />

Knopf.<br />

Bibliographical foot-notes.<br />

rh-rincr<br />

Originally published in 1898. Place, known as the "radical tailor of Charing<br />

Cro."" was a 7 pioneer in the British labor movement, directed the agnation that ed<br />

to the repeal of the Combination laws, to the passing of the Reform bill, and to the<br />

political overthrow of the Duke of Wellington.


470 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Redmond, John Edward.<br />

92 R276g<br />

Gwynn, Stephen. John Redmond's last 3'ears. 1919. Longmans.<br />

Contents: Introductory.—Redmond as chairman.—The Home rule bill of 1912.—•<br />

The rival volunteer forces.—War in Europe.—The raising of the Irish brigades.—The<br />

rebellion and its sequel.—The convention and the end.<br />

Repington, Charles a Court.<br />

92 R353r<br />

Vestigia. 1919. Constable.<br />

The military expert of the London "Times" tells the story of his soldier life in the<br />

second Afghan war, the Burmese war, the Atbara and Omdurman campaigns, and the<br />

South African war, up to the storm warnings of 1914.<br />

Schurz, Carl.<br />

r 92 S394S<br />

Speeches, correspondence and political papers; selected and edited<br />

by Frederic Bancroft on behalf of the Carl Schurz Memorial Committee.<br />

6v. 1913. Putnam.<br />

V.I. Oct. 20, 1852-NOV. 26, lS70.<br />

v.2. Dec. 13, 1870-Feb. 27, 1874.<br />

v.3. March 4, 1874-June 28, 1880.<br />

v.4. July 20, 1880-Sept. 15, 1888.<br />

v.5. Jan. 30, 1889-Dec. 27, 1898.<br />

v.6. Jan. 1, 1899-April 8, 1906.<br />

Wood, Leonard.<br />

92 W854ha<br />

Hagedorn, Hermann. That human being, Leonard Wood. 1920.<br />

Harcourt.<br />

A campaign document combining a eulogy of General Wood with an arraignment<br />

of the Wilson administration.<br />

Collected Biography<br />

r 923.5 A51<br />

American military biography, containing the lives, characters and anecdotes<br />

of the officers of the Revolution who were most distinguished<br />

in achieving our national independence. 1825. Privately printed.<br />

Contains also "A biography of Gilbert Motier La Fayette. . .also of other officers<br />

from foreign countries, commissioned by Congress."<br />

r 920 B4874<br />

Biographiskt lexicon ofver namnkunnige svenska man. 23V. 1836-57.<br />

v.i. was published in 1842.<br />

A new series was published under title "Svenskt biografiskt lexikon."<br />

[Murray, Eustace Clare Grenville.]<br />

923.2 M97<br />

The men of the third republic; or, The present leaders of France.<br />

1873. Porter.<br />

Reprinted from the "London daily news."<br />

Brief biographies of French statesmen.<br />

r g2o S96<br />

Svenskt biografiskt lexikon. Ny foljd. iov. i85"-[i907].<br />

Continuation of "Biographiskt lexicon ofver namnkunnige svenska man."<br />

Genealogy. Names. Flags<br />

[Avery, Samuel Putnam, comp.]<br />

qr 929.2 A955<br />

Avery, Fairchild & Park families of Massachusetts, Connecticut &<br />

Rhode Island, with a short narration of facts concerning Richard Warren,<br />

Mayflower passenger, and his family connections with Thomas<br />

Little. 1919. Privately printed.<br />

"Authorities cited," pref. p.15-16, 69, 87, 121.


BOOKS ADDED—NOVEMBER 1920 471<br />

Kernick, E. F. Cory, comp. qr 929.4 K21<br />

Register of changes of names during the war by deed poll and enrolment<br />

as announced in the "London gazette." [1919.] British Empire<br />

Union.<br />

Issued as a warning against camouflaged enemies and to emphasize the need of a<br />

reformed naturalization law in Great Britain. Does not include names of persons resident<br />

in Scotland or Ireland.<br />

Koop, Albert J. & Inada, Hogitaro.<br />

qr 929.4 K37<br />

Meiji benran; Japanese names and how to read them; a manual for<br />

art-collectors and students, a concise and comprehensive guide to the<br />

reading and interpretation of Japanese proper names both geographical<br />

and personal, as well as of dates and other formal expressions, [pt.i.]<br />

1920. Eastern Press.<br />

Rood, Hosea W. comp.<br />

929.9 R67<br />

Little flag book; comp. [with the assistance of A. F. Belitz]. 1920.<br />

Privately printed.<br />

Prepared in connection with the author's report as patriotic instructor of the Grand<br />

Army of the Republic for Wisconsin, as a message to coming citizens. It includes flag<br />

laws, customs, and etiquette, as well as patriotic songs and selections for Flag day.<br />

Travel and Description<br />

Europe<br />

Bell, Walter Ge<strong>org</strong>e.<br />

914.21 B41<br />

Unknown London. 1920. Lane.<br />

Consists of eighteen essays written in human and entertaining vein by one who is<br />

both an antiquarian and a journalist.<br />

Boswell, A. Bruce.<br />

914-38 B64<br />

Poland and the Poles. [1919.] Methuen.<br />

Contains maps.<br />

A series of essays describing present day Poland and the regions where Polish civilization<br />

has extended. There are chapters on the Polish co-operative movement, on the<br />

Ukraine question, and on Poland's part in the world war.<br />

United States<br />

qr 917.3 F86<br />

France- Etats-Unis; revue mensuelle du Comite France-Amerique,<br />

1919-date. v.i-date. 1919-date.<br />

Kent, Rockwell. Q 1 ?^8 Kl 9<br />

Wilderness; a journal of quiet adventure in Alaska, with drawings<br />

by the author and an introduction by Dorothy Canfield. 1920. Putnam.<br />

A diary of the life of an artist who, with his nine year old son and a Swedish companion,<br />

spent, a fall and winter on Fox island in Resurrection bay. Illustrated with<br />

symbolic draw'ings and specimens of the child's work.<br />

Michigan—Public domain commission. qr 9 J 7-74 M!66<br />

Michigan; agricultural, horticultural and industrial advantages; immigration<br />

publication, 1918. [1918.]<br />

Partial reprint of former publication "Michigan."<br />

A handbook of information intended chiefly for home seekers and prospective<br />

settlers.


472 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Other Countries<br />

qr 915.6 N26<br />

New Armenia; monthly, 1919-date. v.n-date. 1919-date.<br />

Routledge, Mrs Katherine (Pease). 913.96 R78<br />

Mystery of Easter island; the story of an expedition. 1919. Privately<br />

printed.<br />

Notes of a voyage taken in 1913-14 in the private yacht Mana, to investigate the<br />

antiquities of Easter island. The "mystery" includes numerous great stone statues,<br />

an untranslated script, a bird cult, and the origin of the inhabitants. Illustrated with<br />

photographs, maps, and drawings.<br />

Safroni-Middleton, A. 919-6 S12<br />

South Sea foam; the romantic adventures of a modern Don Quixote<br />

in the southern seas. [1920.] Methuen.<br />

Recounts the vagabond travels of a fiddler in the South Sea islands and retells<br />

several of the old Polynesian legends.<br />

History<br />

Europe<br />

Brown, Peter Hume. 94 1 B79S<br />

Surveys of Scottish history, with an introduction by Viscount Haldane.<br />

1919. Maclehose.<br />

Eleven essays and addresses.<br />

Lipson, Ephraim. 94°-9 L73<br />

Europe in the 19th century; an outline history. 1916. Black.<br />

Contains maps.<br />

Bibliographical foot-notes.<br />

An analytical account of the internal development of the chief European states<br />

after the fall of Napoleon, giving causes and effects rather than a narration of events.<br />

Polybius, pseud. 949.5 P77<br />

Greece before the conference, with a preface by T. P. O'Connor.<br />

[1919.] Methuen.<br />

Contains an ethnological map in pocket.<br />

A statement of Greek claims to Macedonia, Thrace, Northern Epirus, the Greek<br />

isles, and the western coast of Asia Minor, as presented by Venizelos to the Peace<br />

conference following the world war.<br />

Scotus Viator, (pseud, of Robert William Seton-Watson). 940.9 S43<br />

Europe in the melting-pot. 1919. Macmillan.<br />

Contains maps.<br />

The author who is the founder and editor of "The new Europe," a weekly review,<br />

deals with past problems of European policy and with those which face statesmen in<br />

these times of reconstruction, especially those concerning Austria-Hungary and the<br />

Slavic peoples.<br />

Stevens, David Harrison. r 942.07 S84<br />

Party politics and English journalism. 1702-42. 1916.<br />

"Bibliography," p.135-145.<br />

Thesis for Ph. D., University of Chicago.<br />

In an attempt to "present proof of political influence in the literary world of Queen<br />

Anne and the first two Ge<strong>org</strong>es," the author shows how completely tile literary craftsman<br />

in the early 18th century was the creature of his age and how he became a politician<br />

or intriguing journalist instead of a creative genius.


BOOKS ADDED—NOVEMBER 1920<br />

United States<br />

I" Q73 7 A.6T<br />

Annals of the war written by leading participants North and South<br />

1879. Times Pub. Co.<br />

Appeared in the "Philadelphia weekly times."<br />

A series of contributions written with the aim of correcting many of the grave<br />

errors of strongly partisan histories which appeared during or soon after the close of<br />

the Civil war.<br />


474 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Macalister, Robert Alexander Stewart. 93945 Mn<br />

The Philistines; their history and civilization. I9*4- Milford.<br />

(Schweich lectures, 1911.)<br />

Published for the British Academy.<br />

The author "has not solved the great problems involved in his investigation, but<br />

the materials he has collected help us to understand the general life of western Asia<br />

in the fourteenth and thirteenth centuries B. C." Nation, 1914.<br />

European War<br />

Anderson, Benjamin McAlester.<br />

qr 940.923 A54<br />

Effects of the war on money, credit and banking in France and the<br />

United States. 1919. Oxford University Press.<br />

Issued in the series Preliminary economic studies of the war by the Division of<br />

economics and history of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.<br />

A broad outline of the effects in various countries of Europe and the United States,<br />

followed by a detailed discussion of the problems of France and the United States.<br />

Bernstorff, Johann Heinrich Andreas Hermann 940.912 B45<br />

Albrecht, graf von.<br />

My three years in America. 1920. Scribner.<br />

A defense of his conduct as ambassador, laying the blame for America's entrance<br />

into the world war on the Berlin foreign office and on the military chiefs. It includes<br />

many of his cipher telegrams and reports to the German government.<br />

Brownrigg, Sir Douglas Egremont Robert, bart. 940.915 B82<br />

Indiscretions of the naval censor. 1920. Doran.<br />

An intimate account of life at the British admiralty during the world war is interspersed<br />

with amusing anecdotes and with examples of pictures censored or changed to<br />

conceal important facts.<br />

Czernin von und zu Chudenitz, Ottokar Theobald 940.91 C99<br />

Otto Maria, graf.<br />

In the world war. 1919. Cassell.<br />

Memoirs of the foreign minister of Austria-Hungary, intended "to furnish a series<br />

of snap-shots of the great drama." He gives his impressions of the kaiser, of Wilson,<br />

of the U-boat warfare, of the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk, and of the peace of Versailles.<br />

Haig, Sir Douglas. qr 940.913 H14<br />

Sir Douglas Haig's despatches (Dec. 1915-April 1919) ; ed. by Lieut.<br />

Colonel J. H. Boraston, with specially prepared maps, sketch plans &<br />

portraits. 2v. 1919. Dent.<br />

v.2 is portfolio of 10 folded maps.<br />

Summaries of operations for each six months of the world war, containing details<br />

of battalions, commanders' names, and sketch maps for each battle. The larger maps<br />

give nick-names as well as real names of places.<br />

MacVeagh, Ewen Cameron, & Brown, L. D. 940.91 M22<br />

The Yankee in the British zone. 1920. Putnam.<br />

An account of the relations between the British and American troops who fought<br />

side by side in the world war. Contains many humorous anecdotes.<br />

Massey, W. T. 940.913 M45I1<br />

How Jerusalem was won; being the record of Allenby's campaign in<br />

Palestine. 1919. Constable.<br />

Contains maps.<br />

An account of the twenty-third fall of Jerusalem and the work accomplished by<br />

General Allenby's army as far as the capture and occupation of Jericho. A second<br />

volume will describe the overwhelming defeat of the Turkish armies.


BOOKS ADDED—NOVEMBER 1920 475<br />

Mayo, Katherine. 940-9*7 M 54<br />

"That damn Y;" a record of overseas service. 1920. Houghton.<br />

Impressions of the work of the Y. M. C. A. during the European war, justifying<br />

its management and presenting facts in answer to various charges against it.<br />

Oman, Charles William Chadwick. qr 940.911 O24<br />

Outbreak of the war of 1914-18; a narrative based mainly on British<br />

official documents. 1919- H. M. Stationery Off.<br />

Does not give the remote causes of the great war, but sets forth "from a British<br />

standpoint the ascertained facts as to the actual outbreak."<br />

Pollard, Albert Frederick. 940-9" 1*7°<br />

A short history of the great war. [1920.] Methuen.<br />

Contains maps. . , ,. , , , ±,<br />

A condensed account, chronologically complete, including the work of the peace<br />

conference, by a (1920) professor of English history in the University of London.<br />

Rainsfor'd, Walter Kerr. 940.9137 R16<br />

From Upton to the Meuse with the 307th infantry; a brief history of<br />

its life and of the part it played in the great war. 1920. Appleton.<br />

The historian, a graduate of the ficoledes Beaux-arts, Paris, tells the story of "New<br />

York's own" and its part in the Meuse-Argonne battle. Illustrated with sketches and<br />

photographs made by the author.<br />

[Schwink, Otto.]<br />

940.913 S41<br />

Ypres 1914; an official account published by order of the German<br />

general staff; translation by G. C. W., with introduction and notes by<br />

the historical section (military branch) Committee of imperial defence.<br />

1010. Constable.<br />

A monograph intended for the edification of the German people. The argument is<br />

that although the German armies were greatly outnumbered at Ypres yet the battle<br />

was a German victory because it kept the allies from advancing into Belgium and recovering<br />

Lille. „<br />

_ .. „• . T 940.913 S46<br />

Seligman, Vincent J.<br />

^<br />

The Salonica side-show. [191°-] Allen.<br />

Sbes^.iences as supply officer aft, the surrende^and occupation tf<br />

2»^££^^^ ^l^Condensed'from Spectator, 191,<br />

United States—Committee on public information. r 940.916 U253S<br />

Souvenir catalogue, United States and allied governments war exposition,<br />

Pittsburgh, Nov. 28th to Dec 8th 1918; presented by Division<br />

of films, Bureau of expositions. [1918.] Pittsburgh.<br />

[Young Women's Christian Associations, United qr 940.927 Y41<br />

States—War work council.]<br />

tion workers, etc.<br />

Books for the Blind<br />

The Library has a collection of about W^^gi^ % te Mnd<br />

The Pennsylvania Home T w ^ S o ^ ^ * ^ * * ^ ^ection of this<br />

supports in this district a teacher, herself ^fX^dteaXesthem to read. This service<br />

library, visits the adult blind in thetr homes and teacht,•them<br />

m d<br />

and the use of the books are absolutely free to a 11^°


CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

American Braille<br />

Aldrich, Mildred. q E 940.918 A36<br />

A hilltop on the Marne. 4v. 1918. Perkins Institution for the Blind.<br />

Moon Type<br />

Bible—Whole. q E 220 -5 B 4 7ho 3<br />

[Holy Bible, containing the Old and New testaments.] 58V. National<br />

Institute for the Blind.<br />

v.1-2. Genesis.<br />

v.3-4. Exodus.<br />

v.5-6. Leviticus.<br />

v.7-8. Numbers.<br />

v.9-10. Deuteronomy.<br />

v.n. Joshua.<br />

v.12. Judges.<br />

v.i3. Ruth.—Ecclesiastes.—Song of Solomon.—Lamentations.<br />

v.14-17. Samuel.<br />

v.lS-21. Kings.<br />

v.22—25. Chronicles.<br />

v.26. Ezra.—Nehemiah.<br />

v.27. Nehemiah (continued).—Esther.<br />

v.28. Job.<br />

v.29-31. Psalms.<br />

v.32. Proverbs.<br />

v.33-34- Isaiah.<br />

v.35-37- Jeremiah.<br />

V.3S-40. Ezekiel.<br />

v.41. Daniel.<br />

v.42. Hosea.—Joel.—Amos.—Obadiah.<br />

v.43. Jonah.—Micah.—Nahum.—Habakkuk.—Zephaniah.—Haggai.—Zechariah.<br />

—Malachi.<br />

v.44—45- Matthew.<br />

v.46. Mark.<br />

v.47—48. Luke.<br />

v.49-50. John.<br />

v.51—52. Acts.<br />

v.53. Romans.<br />

v.54. Corinthians.<br />

v.55. Galatians.—Ephesians.—Philippians.—Colossians.<br />

v.56. Thessalonians.—Timothy.—Titus.—Philemon.<br />

v.57. Hebrews.—James.—Peter.—John, Epistles.—Jude.<br />

v.58. Revelation.<br />

Revised Braille<br />

Chancellor, William Estabrook. qE 342.7 C36<br />

History and government of the United States; put into Revised<br />

Braille, grade 1Y2, for the special use of the American war-blind by the<br />

National Woman's Christian Temperance Union in cooperation with<br />

the American Library Association. 2v. 1920. Amer. Printing House<br />

for the Blind.<br />

Revised Braille with Contractions<br />

Andrews, Mary Raymond Shipman. E A568C2<br />

Courage of the commonplace. Howe Pub. Soc. for the Blind.<br />

Baldwin, James. qE 904 Bigt<br />

Thirty more famous stories retold. 2v. 1919. Amer. Printing<br />

House for the Blind.


BOOKS ADDED-NOVEMBER 1920 477<br />

Bible—New testament. John. ~ , _<br />

by KiTo^, s s aint John; put imo R — d BJ * "-S "<br />

ay the Mew York Bible Society in cooperation with the American L<br />

brary Association. i 920 . Amer. Printing House for the Blind<br />

Brown, Alice.<br />

The flying Teuton. Perkins Institution for the Blind ^ B783 " £<br />

With this is bound "The price," by D. H. Haines.<br />

Business correspondence; put into Revised Brai.le, grade ^for^h<br />

special use of the American war-blind by A W Shaw C , u<br />

American Red Cross, through the R ^ C ^ ^ ^ ^ B ^<br />

cooperat.on with the American Library Association. 3v. J o Z<br />

Printing House for the Blind.<br />

v 2 lel'ecreH T^"" I ," H ° W to write th = business letter "<br />

Cutting, Mr, Mary Stewart (Doubleday). qE c .<br />

The blossoming rod. Clovernook Printing House for the Blind<br />

Eggleston, Edward, 1837-1902<br />

E<br />

Stories of great Americans for little Americans. 2v. 1 9 t H m e ?<br />

Printing House for the Blind.<br />

Guerber, Helene Marie Adeline. E g G<br />

fStory of the Greeks. 2v. in 4. IQ.9- Amer. Printing House for the<br />

Guerber, Helene Marie Adeline. qE G<br />

the S ^ COl0nieS ' 3V ' hl 6 ' I919 ' Amen Print111^ House "<br />

Haines, Donal Hamilton. qE B<br />

Ihe price. Perkins Institution for the Blind.<br />

Bound with "The flying Teuton," by Alice Brown.<br />

Hall, Eliza Calvert, (pseud, of Mrs Eliza (Calvert)<br />

Obenchain).<br />

qE Hi 7 2g<br />

Gardens of memory, taken from "Aunt Jane of Kentucky." Clovernook<br />

Printing House for the Blind.<br />

Hawthorne, Nathaniel. qE 2g2 Hs6a2<br />

Tanglewood tales. 2 pts. in 2v. 1919. Amer. Printing House for<br />

the Blind.<br />

Lait > J ack - E Li6 4 b<br />

Lars, the useless, was a nuisance, and It wasn't honest, but it was<br />

sweet, from "Beef, iron and wine," put into Revised Braille, grade 1Y2,<br />

for the special use of the American war-blind by the author in cooperation<br />

with the American Library Association. American Printing House<br />

for the Blind.<br />

Leacock, Stephen Butler. E 827 L44an<br />

Anecdotes of Doctor So and So. 1919. Clovernook Printing House<br />

for the Blind.


478 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Leacock, Stephen Butler. E 827 L44W<br />

Weejee, the pet dog. 1919. Clovernook Printing House for the<br />

Blind.<br />

Lee, Mrs Jennette Barbour (Perry).<br />

qE L524a<br />

The air-man and the tramp. 2v. Perkins Institution for the Blind.<br />

Meras, Baptiste, & Meras, E. J.<br />

qE 445 M63<br />

French verbs and verbal idioms in speech. 1919. Pennsylvania Institution<br />

for the Instruction of the Blind.<br />

Tlie same; key. 1919. Pennsylvania Institution for the Instruction<br />

of the Blind<br />

qE 445 M63a<br />

Morley, Christopher Darlington.<br />

qE M8ggh<br />

The haunted bookshop; embossed and printed for the New York<br />

State Library. 3v. Amer. Printing House for the Blind.<br />

Oppenheim, Edward Phillips.<br />

qE 0265g<br />

The great impersonation; embossed and printed for the New York<br />

State Library. 3v. Amer. Printing House for the Blind.<br />

Porter, Harold Everett, (pseud. Holworthy Hall).<br />

qE P836n<br />

New York and return, and What is wasted time? put into Revised<br />

Braille, grade iyi, for the special use of the American war-blind by the<br />

author in cooperation with the American Library Association. Amer.<br />

Printing House for the Blind.<br />

Roosevelt, Theodore.<br />

qE g2 R684r<br />

Theodore Roosevelt's letters to his children; ed. by J. B. Bishop;<br />

embossed and printed for the New York State Library. 2v. 1920.<br />

Amer. Printing House for the Blind.<br />

Snaith, John Collis.<br />

qE S66gt<br />

The time spirit; a romantic tale; embossed and printed for the New<br />

York State Library. 3v. Amer. Printing House for the Blind.<br />

Young People's Books<br />

Chapman, Frank Michler.<br />

j 598.2 C36W<br />

What bird is that? a pocket museum of the land birds of the eastern<br />

United States, arranged according to season, with 301 birds in color by<br />

E. J. Sawyer. 1920. Appleton.<br />

A useful guide to identification of resident and migratory birds. Gives description<br />

and range of each bird and brief notes on its habits. The illustrations, though small,<br />

are drawn to nearly the same scale.<br />

Perkins, Mrs Lucy (Fitch).<br />

The Scotch twins. Houghton.<br />

j P434S<br />

These twins live in a little gray house on the brae and they belong to the canny "Rob<br />

Roy clan." With their resourceful chief they have some adventurous davs trailing a<br />

dishonest gamekeeper and poacher.


Rules for Lending Books<br />

I. Hours. The adult Lending Rooms of the Central and branch<br />

libraries are open daily from 9 a. m to 9 p. m., Sundays and holidays<br />

excepted. The Children's Rooms in the branches are closed after 6 p. m.<br />

The Central Children's Room is open daily except Sundays and holidays<br />

from 9 a. m. to 9 p. m.<br />

2. Borrowers. Any resident or taxpayer of Pittsburgh is entitled<br />

to borrow books from the Library by signing the proper application<br />

and agreement and receiving a borrower's card. In the case of a child<br />

under fourteen years of age the application must also be signed by the<br />

parent or guardian.<br />

Non-residents who can call at the Library for their books may<br />

obtain a borrower's card on payment of one dollar a year in advance.<br />

For non-residents who wish their books sent by mail or express the<br />

annual fee is two dollars. If a non-resident is employed or attending<br />

school in the city the guaranty of a resident tax-payer will be accepted<br />

instead of this fee.<br />

Temporary residents may borrow books on making a deposit of<br />

five dollars, or moreif deemed desirable, this sum to be returned to the<br />

depositor upon surrender of his borrower's card.<br />

3. Borrowers' cards. A borrower's card may be used at the Central<br />

and branch libraries.<br />

Each borrower is responsible for all books charged on his card.<br />

Change of residence must be reported immediately.<br />

Lost cards should be reported at once. Adult cards will be replaced<br />

fourteen days after notice of such loss. Juvenile cards will be replaced<br />

fourteen days after notice of loss is given upon the payment of a fine<br />

of five cents, or replaced without payment six months after notice of<br />

loss is given.<br />

4. Issue of books. Holders of adult cards may borrow as many<br />

books of non-fiction as are needed at one time, together with two books<br />

of fiction, only one of which shall have been published within the current<br />

or the preceding year. Holders of juvenile cards may borrow two<br />

juvenile books at one time.<br />

Books may be kept two weeks, except some new and popular<br />

books, which may be kept but seven days. Magazines are lent for<br />

seven days only.


480 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

5. Renewals. Non-fiction and certain standard fiction may be<br />

once renewed for two weeks from the date on which the request for<br />

renewal is received.<br />

Requests for renewal may be made in person, by mail, or by telephone.<br />

In each case the call number of the book, the number of the<br />

borrower's card, and the date on which the book is due must be given.<br />

In return the borrower will receive a renewal card, which must be<br />

brought with the book when it is returned.<br />

6. Reserves. Books may be reserved at the Library by payment<br />

of one cent for a postal card notice. As soon as the book is returned<br />

to the Library, this postal card will be mailed to the person making<br />

the request, and the book will be reserved two days. Requests for<br />

reserves may be made by telephone, in which case the cost of the postal<br />

card will be collected when the borrower calls for the book.<br />

7. Fines. A fine of two cents a day (including Sundays and holidays)<br />

must be paid on each book kept overtime. The holder of a<br />

juvenile card may forfeit the use of his card for six months from the<br />

date upon which an overdue book is returned in place of payment of<br />

this fine. If a book is not returned within three weeks after the date<br />

on whichit is due, a messenger will be sent for it. This messenger has<br />

authority to collect the fine incurred and an additional fee of twentyfive<br />

cents for messenger service.<br />

A borrower must pay for books lost or injured while charged on<br />

his card. No books may be borrowed until fines and claims for damages<br />

have been paid.<br />

No claim can be established because of the failure of the Post<br />

Office to deliver notices to or from the Library.


Publications of the Library Now in Print<br />

Prices. Where two prices are given, the first is that for which<br />

the publication is sold at the Library only. All prices are strictly net,<br />

except for individual publications ordered in lots of twenty or more.<br />

Remittances must be made in advance, payable to Carnegie Library of<br />

Pittsburgh. All publications not marked * may be had free at the<br />

Library, or will be sent postpaid for 5 cents each.<br />

•Classified Catalogue of the Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh.<br />

FIRST SERIES, 1895-1902. 1907. vol. 1-3. 3,890 pp. $12.00.<br />

SECOND SERIES, 1902-1906. 1908. vol. 4-5. 2,020 pp. $5.00.<br />

THIRD SERIES, 1907-1911. 1914. vol. 6-8. 3,475 pp. $8.00.<br />

Bound in buckram with gilt tops. Include full author and subject indexes.<br />

The same [in pamphlet form].<br />

FIRST SERIES, 1895-1902. 10 parts. 1903-07.<br />

Part 1. General Works. 1907. 67 pp. 10 cents, postpaid.<br />

Part 2. Philosophy and Religion. 1903. 223 pp. Out of print.<br />

Part 3. Sociology and Philology. 1904. 340 pp. 15 cents; postpaid, 25 cents.<br />

Part 4. Natural Science and Useful Arts. 1904. 598 pp. 35 cents; postpaid,<br />

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CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

MONTHLY BULLETIN<br />

VOL. 25 DECEMBER 1920 NO. 10<br />

HOMEWOOD BRANCH<br />

CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

PITTSBURGH<br />

CARNEGIE LIBRARY<br />

1920


Board of Trustees<br />

S. H. CHURCH, President<br />

ANDREW W. MELLON, Vice-President<br />

J. D. HAILMAN, Secretary<br />

JAMES H. REED, Treasurer<br />

E. V. BABCOCK DAVID B. OLIVER<br />

W.W. BLACKBURN<br />

H. K. PORTER<br />

JOHN H. DAILEY<br />

W. H. ROBERTSON<br />

W. Y. ENGLISH CHARLES L. TAYLOR<br />

ROBERT GARLAND<br />

J. J. TURNER<br />

JOHN H. HENDERSON<br />

H. D. WILLIAMS<br />

JOHN S. HERRON DANIEL WINTERS<br />

J. J. TURNER, Chairman<br />

Library Committee<br />

E. V. BABCOCK J. D. HAILMAN<br />

ROBERT GARLAND DANIEL WINTERS<br />

Director<br />

JOHN H. LEETE<br />

Central Library, Schenley Park<br />

Branch Libraries<br />

Lawrenceville Branch, 279 Fisk Street<br />

West End Branch, Wabash and Neptune Streets<br />

Wylie Avenue Branch, Wylie Avenue and Green Street<br />

Mount Washington Branch, 315 Grandview Avenue<br />

Hazelwood Branch, 4748 Monongahela Street<br />

East Liberty Branch, Station Street and Larimer Avenue<br />

South Side Branch, Carson and Twenty-second Streets<br />

Homewood Branch, Hamilton and Lang Avenues


Contents<br />

Page<br />

New Year Customs - - - 489<br />

Slosson's "Creative Chemistry"<br />

as a Factor in the Chemical<br />

Independence of America 494<br />

Marbles Used in the Interior<br />

of the Central Building of<br />

Carnegie Library and Carnegie<br />

Institute - - - - 497<br />

Homewood Branch - - - 498<br />

New Publications of the Library<br />

- - - - - - 499<br />

New Periodicals - - - 499<br />

Prices of Library Publications 500<br />

Apprentice Class - - - 500<br />

Books Added, November 1 to<br />

December 1, 1920<br />

Architecture - - - - - 5 2 3<br />

Biography - - - - - 5 2 7<br />

Blind, Books for the - - 532<br />

Botany - - - - - - 516<br />

Business. Communication - 520<br />

Chemical Technology - - 521<br />

Chemistry - - - - - 5 I S<br />

Commerce - - - - - 5 X 3<br />

Domestic Economy - - 520<br />

Drama. Theatre - - - - 526<br />

Economics - - - - - 509<br />

Education - - - - - " S n<br />

Engineering - SI9<br />

Page<br />

Ethics - - - - - - - 505<br />

European War - 53 1<br />

Fiction - - - - - - 501<br />

Fine Arts - - - - - 522<br />

French Fiction - - - - 504<br />

General Works - - - - 504<br />

Geology - - - - - - 5 J 5<br />

History - - - - - - 530<br />

Humor. Satire - 5 2 6<br />

Immigration - 5o8<br />

Language - - - - - - 513<br />

Law - - - - - - - 5io<br />

Literature - - - - - - 5 2 5<br />

Medicine, Physiology, Hygiene<br />

- - - - - - 5 1 /<br />

Money. Finance - - - S 1 "<br />

Music - - - - - - - 524<br />

Philosophy - - - - - 505<br />

Photography - - - - - 524<br />

Poetry - - - - - - 525<br />

Recreation - - - - - 5 2 5<br />

Religion - - - - - - 505<br />

Science - - - - " " 5 : 4<br />

Sociology - - - - - 506<br />

Travel and Description - - 528<br />

Useful Arts - - - - - 516<br />

Young People's Books - - 533


Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh<br />

Monthly Bulletin<br />

Published monthly, except in August and September, by the Carnegie Library of<br />

Pittsburgh, Forbes Street and Bellefield Avenue, Schenley Park, Pittsburgh, Pa. President,<br />

S. H. Church, Carnegie Library, Forbes Street and Bellefield Avenue; Secretary,<br />

J. D. Hailman; Treasurer, James H. Reed, 1027 Carnegie Building; Director, John H.<br />

Leete, Carnegie Library. Forbes Street and Bellefield Avenue.<br />

Subscription 50 cents a year.<br />

Vol.25 December 1920<br />

No. 10<br />

New Year Customs<br />

From Clement A. Miles's "Christmas in Ritual and Tradition."<br />

The observances of New Year's Day mainly rest... on the principle<br />

that "a good beginning makes a good ending," that as the first<br />

day is so will the rest be. If you would have plenty to eat during the<br />

year, dine lavishly on New Year's Day, if you would be rich see that<br />

your pockets are not empty at this critical season,if you would be<br />

lucky avoid like poison at this of all times everything ofill omen...<br />

The laying of stress on what happens on New Year's Day is by no<br />

means peculiarly European. Hindus, for instance, as Mr. Edgar<br />

Thurston tells us, "are very particular about catching sight of some<br />

auspicious object on the morning of New Year's Day, as the effects<br />

of omens seen on that occasion are believed to last throughout the<br />

year." It is thought that a man's whole prosperity depends upon the<br />

things that he then happens to fix his eyes upon.<br />

Charms, omens, and good wishes are naturally the most prominent<br />

customs of January 1 and its Eve. The New Year in England can<br />

hardly be called a popular festival; there is no public holiday and the<br />

occasion is more associated with penitential Watch Night services and<br />

good resolutions than with rejoicing...<br />

In France January I is a far more festal day than Christmas;it is<br />

then that presents are given, family gatherings held, and calls paid.<br />

In the morning children find their stockings filled with gifts, and then<br />

489


CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

rush off to offer good wishes to their parents. In the afternoon the<br />

younger people call upon their older relations, and in the evening all<br />

meet for dinner at the home of the head of the family. . .<br />

New Year wishes and "compliments of the season" are familiar to<br />

us all, but in England we have not that custom of paying formal calls<br />

which in France is so characteristic of January i, when not only relations<br />

and personal friends, but people whose connection is purely official<br />

are expected to visit one another. In devout Brittany the wish<br />

exchanged takes a beautiful religious form—"I wish you a good year<br />

and Paradise at the end of your days."<br />

New Year calling is by no means confined to France. In the<br />

United States it is one of the few traces left by the early Dutch<br />

settlers on American manners. The custom is now rapidly falling into<br />

disuse, but in New York up to the middle of the nineteenth century<br />

"New Year's Day was devoted to the universal interchange of visits.<br />

Every door was thrown wide open. It was a breach of etiquette to<br />

omit any acquaintance in these annual calls, when old friendships were<br />

renewed and family differences amicably settled. A hearty welcome<br />

was extended even to strangers of presentable appearance." At that<br />

time the day was marked by tremendous eating and drinking, and its<br />

visiting customs sometimes developed into wild riot. Young men in<br />

barouches would rattle from one house to another all day long. "The<br />

ceremony of calling was a burlesque. There was a noisy and hilarious<br />

greeting, a glass of wine was swallowed hurriedly, everybody shook<br />

hands all round, and the callers dashed out and rushed into the carriage<br />

and were driven rapidly to the next house."<br />

The New Year calling to offer good wishes resembles in some respects<br />

the widespread custom of "first-footing," based on the belief<br />

that the character of the first visitor on New Year's Day affects the<br />

welfare of the household during the year.. .<br />

The "first-foot" superstition is found in countries as far apart as<br />

Scotland and Macedonia...<br />

In Scotland, the most Protestant region of Europe, the country in<br />

which Puritanism abolished altogether the celebration of Christmas,<br />

New Year's Day is a great occasion, and is marked by various interesting<br />

usages, its importance being no doubt largely due to the fact that<br />

it has not to compete with the Church feast of the Nativity. Nowadays,<br />

indeed, the example of Anglicanism is affecting the country to<br />

a considerable extent, and Christmas Day is becoming observed in the<br />

churches. The New Year, however, is still the national holiday, and<br />

January I a great day for visiting and feasting, the chief, in fact, of<br />

all festivals. New Year's Day and its Eve are often called the "Daft<br />

Days"; cakes and pastry of all kinds are eaten, healths are drunk, and<br />

calls are paid. . .<br />

"On the approach of twelve o'clock, a hot pint was prepared^that is,<br />

a kettle or flagon full of warm, spiced, and sweetened ale, with an infusion<br />

of spirits. When the clock had struck the knell of the departed<br />

year, each member of the family drank of this mixture 'A good health


NEW YEAR CUSTOMS 491<br />

and a happy New Year and many of them' to all the rest, with a general<br />

hand-shaking." The elders of the family would then sally out to<br />

visit their neighbours, and exchange greetings.<br />

At Biggar in Lanarkshire it was customary to "burn out the old<br />

year" with bonfires, while at Burghead in Morayshire a tar-barrel called<br />

the "Clavie" was set on fire and carried about the village and the fishing<br />

boats. Its embers were scrambled for by the people and carefully<br />

kept as charms against witchcraft. These fire-customs may be compared<br />

with those on Hallowe'en, which...is probably an old New<br />

Year's Eve.<br />

Stewart in his "Popular Superstitions of the Highlands of Scotland"<br />

tells how on the last night of the year the Strathdown Highlanders<br />

used to bring home great loads of juniper, which on New<br />

Year's Day was kindled in the different rooms, all apertures being<br />

closed so that the smoke might produce a thorough fumigation. Not<br />

only human beings had to stand this, but horses and other animals<br />

were treated in the same way to preserve them from harm throughout<br />

the year...To drive away evil spirits is no doubt the object of all<br />

these rites.. .<br />

It is customary for the poorer children to swaddle themselves in a<br />

great sheet, doubled up in front so as to form a vast pocket, and then<br />

go along the streets in little bands, calling out "Hogmanay" at the<br />

doors of the wealthier classes, and expecting a dole of oaten bread.<br />

Each child gets a quadrant of oat-cake (sometimes with cheese), and<br />

this is called the "Hogmanay." Here is one of the rhymes they sing:—<br />

"Get up, goodwife, and shake your feathers,<br />

And dinna think that we are beggars;<br />

For we are bairns come out to play,<br />

Get up and gie's our hogmanay!"<br />

In some parts of Macedonia on New Year's Eve men or boys go<br />

about making a noise with bells. In other districts, early on New<br />

Year's morning, lads run about with sticks or clubs, knock people up,<br />

cry out good wishes, and expect to be rewarded with something to<br />

eat. Elsewhere again they carry green olive- or cornel-boughs, and<br />

touch with them everyone they meet...<br />

In Roumania on New Year's Eve there is a custom known as the<br />

"little plough." Boys and men go about after dark from house to<br />

house, with long greetings, ringing of bells, and cracking of whips.<br />

On New Year's morning Roumanians throw handfuls of corn at one<br />

another with some appropriate greeting, such as:—<br />

"May you live.<br />

May you flourish<br />

Like apple-trees,<br />

Like pear-trees<br />

In springtime,<br />

Like wealthy autumn,<br />

Of all things plentiful."


492 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Generally this greeting is from the young to the old or from the<br />

poor to the rich, and a present in return is expected.<br />

In Athens models of war-ships are carried round by waits, who<br />

make a collection of money in them. "St. Basil's ships" they are<br />

called, and they are supposed to represent the vessel on which St. Basil,<br />

whose feast is kept on January I, sailed from Caesarea.. .The custom<br />

is widespread, and it has been suggested by Mannhardt thatit was originally<br />

intended either to promote the success of navigation or to<br />

carry evil spirits out to sea...<br />

In Lithuania on New Year's Eve nine sorts of things—money,<br />

cradle, bread, ring, death's head, old man, old woman, ladder, and<br />

key—are baked of dough, and laid under nine plates, and every one has<br />

three grabs at them. What he gets will fall to his lot during the<br />

year...<br />

In Brittany it is supposed that the wind which prevails on the<br />

first twelve days of the year will blow during each of the twelve<br />

months, the first day corresponding to January, the second to February,<br />

and so on...<br />

There are curious superstitions about New Year water. At Bromyard<br />

in Herefordshire it was the custom, at midnight on New Year's<br />

Eve, to rush to the nearest spring to snatch the "cream of the well"—<br />

the first pitcherful of water—and with it the prospect of the best luck.<br />

A Highland practice was to send some one on the last night of the<br />

year to draw a pitcherful of water in silence, and without the vessel<br />

touching the ground. The water was drunk on New Year's morning<br />

as a charm against witchcraft and the evil ej'e. A similar belief<br />

about the luckiness of "new water" exists at Canzano Peligno in the<br />

Abruzzi.. .<br />

In some of the Aegean islands when the family return from church<br />

on New Year's Day, the father picks up a stone and leavesit in the<br />

yard, with the wish that the New Year may bring withit "as much gold<br />

as is the weight of the stone"... In Little Russia "corn sheaves are piled<br />

upon a table, and in the midst of them is set a large pie. The father of<br />

the family takes his seat behind them, and asks his children if they<br />

can see him. 'We cannot see you,' the}' reply. On which he proceeds<br />

to express what seems to be a hope that the corn will grow so high in<br />

his fields that he may be invisible to his children when he walks there<br />

at harvest-time."<br />

[In South Wales a curious and beautiful old carol] was formerly<br />

sung before dawn on New Year's Day by poor children who carried<br />

about a jug of water drawn that morning from the well. With a sprig<br />

of box or other evergreen they would sprinkle those they met, wishing<br />

them the compliments of the season. To pay their respects to<br />

those not abroad at so early an hour, they would serenade them with<br />

the following lines, which, while connected with the "new water" tradition,<br />

contain much that is of doubtful interpretation, and are a fascinating<br />

puzzle for folk-lorists:—


NEW YEAR CUSTOMS<br />

"Here we bring new water<br />

From the well so clear,<br />

For to worship God with,<br />

This happy New Year.<br />

Sing levy-dew, sing levy-dew,<br />

The water and the wine;<br />

The seven bright gold wires<br />

And the bugles they do shine.<br />

Sing reign of Fair Maid,<br />

With gold upon her toe,—<br />

Open you the West Door,<br />

And turn the Old Year go:<br />

Sing reign of Fair Maid,<br />

With gold upon her chin,—<br />

Open you the East Door,<br />

And let the New Year in."<br />

From William S. Walsh's "Curiosities of Popular Customs."<br />

In all Christian countries [New Year's Day] is now nominally<br />

celebrated on the 1st of January. But the 1st of January in the Gregorian<br />

calendar occurs twelve days earlier than in the Julian: hence Russia<br />

and Greece, which still retain the latter, celebrate January i on our<br />

January 13. Even this comparative uniformity among civilized nations<br />

was not attained at a bound.<br />

The ancient Egyptians, Phoenicians, and Persians began their<br />

year at the autumnal equinox, September 22, and the Greeks of the<br />

time of Solon at the winter solstice, December 21. But in the time of<br />

Pericles, in B. C. 432, the Greeks changed the date to the summer solstice,<br />

June 21.<br />

The Romans reckoned the beginning of the year from the winter<br />

solstice until Julius Caesar in his reform of the calendar changedit<br />

to the ist of January. The Jews began and still begin their civil year<br />

with the 1st of the month Tisri, which roughly corresponds to our<br />

September. But in their ecclesiastical reckoning the year dates from the<br />

vernal equinox, March 22. As this is astronomically the beginning of<br />

spring, the date is a logical one, and that or the 25th of March<br />

(twenty-five being a more fully rounded number) was accepted generally<br />

by Christian nations in mediaeval times.<br />

In England, December 25 was New Year's Day until the time of<br />

William the Conqueror. His coronation happened to occur on January<br />

1. Hence the year was ordered to commence on that day. But the<br />

English gradually fell into unison with the rest of Christendom and<br />

began the year with the 25th of March. The Gregorian calendar in 1582<br />

restored January 1 as the gateway of the year. Catholic countries<br />

adopted the change immediately. Protestant countries were recalcitrant.<br />

It was not until 1752 that England acquiesced.


404 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Slosson's "Creative Chemistry" as a Factor in the<br />

Chemical Independence of America<br />

Under the stress of war, American chemical industry received<br />

a tremendous impetus. By exhibiting an exceptional<br />

power of quick response in an emergency, by rendering able<br />

and effective service, and by achieving an eminent success, our<br />

chemists merely demonstrated the possibilities of which American<br />

chemical industry is capable.<br />

War time achievement afforded an opportunity of establishing<br />

the foundation for a permanent development of industrial<br />

chemistry in this country; but, in order that past achievements<br />

may be safeguarded and that there may be no possibility of<br />

retrogression, it is essential that there shall be awakened<br />

throughout the United States a general appreciation of these<br />

achievements and a public recognition of the importance of<br />

stabilizing and retaining the chemical independence of America.<br />

A recent writer in "Science" 1 proclaims chemistry as "the<br />

criterion of a country's very existence," and pleads for a<br />

"Declaration of Chemical Independence in this country."<br />

Chemical progress is dependent mainly on the efforts of the<br />

profoundly trained scientist, and for adequate training in the<br />

theory and interpretation of chemical processes we must look<br />

to our educational institutions; but widespread public interest<br />

is a necessary element in leading new disciples to the shrine of<br />

chemistry.<br />

The backing of manufacturing and industrial interests must<br />

be secured and extended, and this must be accomplished mainly<br />

by educating executives to recognize the indispensable nature<br />

of the chemist's services in the revivification and development<br />

of our industries.<br />

Government support is essential, and one of the most effective<br />

guarantees of official support will be to imbue the con-<br />

'I. Newton Kugelmass, Science, v.48, p.608-61;.


SLOSSON'S "CREATIVE CHEMISTRY" 495<br />

stituency of our Federal officials with a lively interest in the<br />

development of chemistry—to counteract official lethargy by<br />

instilling in every community a hearty sentiment in favor of<br />

the chemical independence of America.<br />

That the chemical profession is alive to the importance of<br />

America's chemical development is evidenced by recent literature.<br />

Several new books—some of them by scientists of considerable<br />

eminence—deal in praiseworthy fashion with the<br />

necessity for research in this country.<br />

An added incentive appears in the possibility of foreign<br />

competition. Authorities differ as to the importance of German<br />

endeavor. We have been told that Germany is an Ishmaelite<br />

whose power as a rival need not be considered; but this has<br />

not been proved. In other quarters we are told that the menace<br />

is a grave one. A warning note is sounded by Herbert Hoover,<br />

Vernon Kellogg, and Frederic C. Walcott, who supplied an introduction<br />

to the American translation (in 1918) of a German<br />

book 1 written for German readers.<br />

The Chemical Foundation, in New York City, recognizes<br />

the possibility of German attempts to regain control of the<br />

chemical industry, and feels that one potent factor in combating<br />

these attempts would be the wide distribution and careful reading<br />

of Edwin E. Slosson's "Creative Chemistry." This book is<br />

popular in appeal without loss of scientific accuracy. In a recent<br />

article under the caption "Books I Have Met," Dr. Frank<br />

Crane says:<br />

Recently I have met three real Books. . .<br />

Of the sixty new books on my "new books" shelves in front of me<br />

there are fifty-seven varieties of trash.<br />

But I have met three volumes that were worth almost drowning for.<br />

One of these is a work on economics; another is a history.<br />

The third is Slosson's "Creative Chemistry."<br />

Dr. Crane says:<br />

Of this work<br />

IS. Herzog, The Future of German<br />

Industrial Exports; translated by M. L. Turrentine.<br />

1918. Doubleday.


496 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

When I got away into this book I almost wept for self-pity. To<br />

think I had never had a chance to read such a book when a boy!<br />

And I wanted to shout. To think of the luck of the present generation<br />

of boys who have such a book.<br />

The book is tremendous. It is an epoch. It is knowledge made<br />

beautiful, facts transformed to fairies.<br />

The reason is easy to see. Slosson has imagination. Hence he<br />

does not stupidly write what he knows his reader cannot grasp, as do<br />

most authors of scientific books.<br />

It is a book to own, to mark, to read aloud to the family.<br />

I am getting along, hence harder and harder to please. But thankful<br />

I am that I can still burst into flame at such as these three books.<br />

The work is an important one, for it is seldom that the scientist<br />

possesses either the power or the patience to interpret<br />

his special knowledge in words of one syllable for the layman.<br />

There is no doubt that the book will prove interesting, but a<br />

mere casual reading will probably be productive of little result.<br />

To be efficacious, it should be read thoughtfully with a consciousness<br />

of the function it may fulfill in the counteracting of<br />

German influence.<br />

Through the courtesy of the Chemical Foundation, the Carnegie<br />

Library of Pittsburgh has obtained a generous supply<br />

of Mr. Slosson's book, and copies are now available to Pittsburgh<br />

readers. It is hoped that these may be read seriously<br />

and that many readers may avail themselves of the opportunity<br />

of bringing the book to the attention of definite groups of<br />

thoughtful people. The Chemical Foundation has evidently<br />

distributed its copies judiciously and reached an appreciative<br />

and intelligent clientele, for its reports that "seven out of ten<br />

of the people who read this book become enthusiastic enough<br />

to pass it or its message on to many others."<br />

The Chemical Foundation will send a copy of the book to<br />

anyone who is so situated that he can give definite publicity to<br />

its appeal and who will undertake to secure for the book an<br />

intelligent audience in his community. This privilege should<br />

be exercised with discretion in order that the copies available<br />

may be advantageously placed.


MARBLES USED IN LIBRARY AND INSTITUTE 497<br />

Marbles Used in the Interior of the Central Building of<br />

Carnegie Library and Carnegie Institute<br />

Questions as to the kinds of marble used in the interior of<br />

the building which houses the Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh<br />

and the Carnegie Institute are frequent; therefore, this statement<br />

has been prepared from information furnished by the<br />

architects.<br />

Library Entrance<br />

Tennessee marble from quarries near Knoxville, Tennessee, is<br />

used in the Library Entrance. It is the only American marble used<br />

in the building.<br />

Founder's Room<br />

Istrian marble from Italy is used in this room.<br />

Mantel in the President's Room<br />

This mantel is of red Numidian marble from the Mountain of the<br />

Capes in Algeria, North Africa.<br />

Main Stair Hall<br />

The walls are of Hauteville marble from France.<br />

The columns are of Eschallion marble from France.<br />

Hall of Sculpture<br />

In this hall is used Pentelic marble from Mount Pentelicus in<br />

Greece. It is the same kind of marble of which the Parthenon is built.<br />

s, Carriage Entrance Vestibule<br />

Here the marble is dark Montarenti Siena, also called Old Convent,<br />

which comes from quarries near Siena, Italy.<br />

Vestibules to the Music Hall<br />

Here as in the Carriage Entrance Vestibule, the marble is dark<br />

Montarenti Siena, also called Old Convent, which comes from quarries<br />

near Siena, Italy.<br />

Foyer to the Music Hall<br />

The columns are of green Tinos marble from Greece.<br />

The walls are of Eschallion marble from France.<br />

The inlays are of serpentine, red Verona, Royal Irish green, and<br />

green Tinos marbles. ,<br />

The floor is of English veined white Italian, red Castlepogg.a, and<br />

verd-antique marbles.


498 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Music Hall Staircase<br />

The staircase is of light Siena marble from Siena, Italy.<br />

Room off the Balcony of the Foyer<br />

Here the marble is green Tinos from Greece.<br />

Smoking Room<br />

The marble in this room is red Numidian from the Mountain of<br />

the Capes in Algeria, North Africa.<br />

Homewood Branch<br />

Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh<br />

The Homewood Branch of the Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh,<br />

the last branch library built, was opened to the public<br />

on the tenth of March 191 o. The building is at the corner of<br />

Hamilton and Lang Avenues in the center of a widespread<br />

residence district. The work of this branch is of a general nature,<br />

rather than specialized as is the work of branches situated<br />

in sections of the city given over largely to industrial work and<br />

to foreign-born residents. In the district served by the Homewood<br />

Branch there are some manufacturing plants, but the<br />

district is largely one of homes of people engaged in professions<br />

or trades.<br />

The books called for are of a general character, with ip<br />

particular emphasis on any one kind except, as is true in all<br />

sections of Pittsburgh, that there is a special demand for those<br />

about the sciences and useful arts.<br />

This branch is active in its co-operation with the schools of<br />

the district, both high schools and grade schools, in making<br />

good literature available to boys and girls, and in reference<br />

work in connection with the assigned work in the schools.<br />

The club rooms of the building are much used by clubs and<br />

churches and <strong>org</strong>anizations of many kinds. The relations between<br />

the Library and the Board of Trade, the manufacturing<br />

companies, and the other interests of the district are cordial and<br />

mutually helpful.


LIBRARY NEWS AND NOTICES 499<br />

New Publications of the Library<br />

Fourth Series of the Classified Catalogue<br />

The third part of the fourth series of the "Classified Catalogue,"<br />

which covers the classes Natural Science (500) and<br />

Useful Arts (600), is off the press. It includes the books in<br />

these classes which were added to the Library from January<br />

1912 to January 1917 and is issued in sheet form ready for<br />

binding. This part contains 536 pages. The price is $1.15;<br />

postpaid, $1.30.<br />

Foreign-born Americans<br />

The Library has recently issued a selected list of books and<br />

magazine articles on "Foreign-born Americans; Their Contributor!<br />

to American Life and Culture." This list, which is a<br />

pamphlet of thirty-six pages, can be obtained free at the Library,<br />

or will be mailed on receipt of five cents.<br />

New Periodicals<br />

The following periodicals have recently been added to the<br />

list of those regularly received in the Periodical Room:<br />

American Society of Refrigerating Engineers. Journal. New York.<br />

Daily Telegraph. London.<br />

Dun's International Review. New York.<br />

Dun's Review. New York.<br />

Export American Industries. New York.<br />

Finance and Industry. Cleveland.<br />

Fortnightly Survey of French Economic Conditions. New York.<br />

Genealogy. Pompton Lakes, N. J.<br />

Glass Industry. New York.<br />

Journal of International Relations. Worcester, Mass.<br />

New Russia. London.<br />

Norwegian Trade Review. Christiania, Norway.<br />

Old-Time New England. Boston.<br />

Park International. Washington.<br />

Permanent Builder. Chicago.<br />

Prentice-Hall Business Information Service. New York.<br />

Print Connoisseur. New York.<br />

Socialist Review. New York.<br />

World's Markets. New York.


500 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Prices of Library Publications<br />

The list of "Publications of the Library Now in Print" at<br />

the back of this Bulletin gives the price of each. Any publication<br />

not marked * in that list will be sent postpaid on receipt<br />

of five cents.<br />

Apprentice Class<br />

The Library will offer in February another opportunity<br />

for preparation to do library work. The Apprentice Class<br />

which is to start on the fourteenth of that month is open to<br />

women between eighteen and thirty-five years of age who are<br />

graduates of a four year high school or who have had equivalent<br />

training. The course is three months in length. At the<br />

end of that time, apprentices who have satisfactorily completed<br />

the training are eligible for certain positions on the staff of the<br />

Library. No tuition is charged. Examinations for admittance<br />

to the class will be given on Saturday, February the fifth, in the<br />

Central Library, Schenley Park.<br />

For further information address the Principal, Carnegie<br />

Library School, Pittsburgh, Pa.


Books Added to the Library<br />

November 1 to December 1, 1920<br />

An r or b prefixed to the call number indicates that the book must be<br />

called for and used in the Reference or the Technology Room; j that i<br />

especially suitable for children; and q that it is quarto size or lar<br />

Fiction<br />

Almquist, Carl Jonas Ludvig. A452S<br />

Sara Videbeck, and The chapel; tr. from the Swedish by A. B. Benson.<br />

American-Scandinavian foundation. (Scandinavian classics, v.12.)<br />

Two stories originally published in 1838. The first narrates the travels of a man<br />

and a maid in Sweden in the early 19th century; the second portrays a Christian minister<br />

who chose a congregation of poor fishermen in preference to a more lucrative parish,<br />

Aumonier, Stacy. A9250<br />

One after another. Macmillan.<br />

A story of successive generations, which centers about the lives of a brother and<br />

sister and their families.<br />

Balmer, Edwin. B2i6r<br />

Resurrection Rock. Little.<br />

A story of mystery and adventure in the Michigan woods.<br />

B4665<br />

Best ghost stories; introduction by A. B. Reeve. Boni. (Modern library<br />

of the world's best books.)<br />

• Contents: Introduction: The fascination of the ghost story, by A. B. Reeve.—The<br />

apparition of Mrs Veal, by Daniel De Foe.—Canon Alberic's scrapbook, by M. R.<br />

James.—The haunted and the haunters, by Edward Bulwer-Lytton.—The silent woman,<br />

by Leopold Kompert.—Banshees.—The man who went too far, by E. F. Benson.—The<br />

woman's ghost story, by Algernon Blackwood.—The phanton rickshaw, by Rudyard<br />

Kipling.—The rival ghosts, by Brander Matthews.—The damned thing, by Ambrose<br />

Bierce.—The interval, by Vincent O'Sullivan.—Dey ain't no ghosts, by E. P. Butler.—<br />

Some real American ghosts.<br />

Bindloss, Harold. B 4 8 5 w<br />

The wilderness mine. Stokes.<br />

Also published under the title "Stayward's vindication."<br />

An adventure story about a young English engineer in Canada. His unswerving<br />

determination in the face of great odds leads to his final success and the happy culmination<br />

of his romance.<br />

501


502 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Brown, Mrs Demetra (Vaka), & Phoutrides, A. E. tr. B78sm<br />

Modern Greek stories, with a foreword by Demetra Vaka. Duffield.<br />

(Interpreters' series.)<br />

Contents: Sea, by A. Karkavitsas; tr. by A. E. Phoutrides.—The sin of my mother,<br />

by G. T. Eizyenos; tr. by Mrs Demetra (Vaka) Brown.—The god-father, by Ge<strong>org</strong>e<br />

Drosines; tr. by Mrs Demetra (Vaka) Brown.—Mangalos, by Gregorios Xenopoulos;<br />

tr. by A. E. Phoutrides.—F<strong>org</strong>iveness, by Iakovos Polylas; tr. by A. E. Phoutrides.—<br />

Angelica, by Argyres Eftaliotes; tr. by A. E. Phoutrides.—A man's death, by Kostes<br />

Palamas; tr. by A. E. Phoutrides.—The frightened soul, by Thrasyvoulos Kastanakis;<br />

tr. by A. E. Phoutrides.—She that was homesick, by A. Papadiamanty; tr. by Mrs Demetra<br />

(Vaka) Brown.<br />

Tales of the joys and sorrows, the beliefs and superstitions of the Greek peasant,<br />

picturing clearly the daily home life.<br />

Brussof, Valery. B8382r<br />

Republic of the Southern Cross, and other stories, with an introductory<br />

essay by Stephen Graham. McBride. (Constable's Russian library.)<br />

Other stories: The marble bust.—For herself or for another.—In the mirror.—<br />

Protection.—The "Bemol" shop of stationery.—Rhea Silvia.—Eluli, son of Eluli.—In<br />

the tower.<br />

Short stories "written to show, in various ways, that there is no fixed boundary<br />

line between the world of reality and that of the imagination, between the dreaming and<br />

the waking world, life and fantasy." Introduction.<br />

Cather, Willa Sibert. C2822y<br />

Youth and the bright Medusa. Knopf.<br />

Contents: Coming, Aphrodite!—The diamond mine.—A gold slipper.—Scandal.—<br />

Paul's case.—A Wagner matinee.—The sculptor's funeral.—"A death in the desert."<br />

Unusual short stories, the last four of which are reprinted from the author's<br />

earlier volume, "The troll garden."<br />

Cullum, Ridgwell. C915I1<br />

Heart of Unaga. Putnam.<br />

A story of love and adventure in the Canadian northwest, centering about the fires<br />

of Unaga which guarded a secret known only to the "sleeper" Indians.<br />

Curwood, James Oliver. C936V<br />

Valley of silent men; a story of the Three river country. Cosmopolitan<br />

Book Corporation.<br />

Appeared in "Good housekeeping," v.69-70, Dec. 1010-June 1920.<br />

An adventure story of a sergeant in the Royal Northwest Mounted Police and a<br />

beautiful "mystery girl."<br />

Ge<strong>org</strong>e, Walter Lionel. G312C<br />

Caliban [a novel]. Harper.<br />

A story of English newspaper life, in which the hero, driven bv the demon of<br />

success, rises from middle-class life to a peerage and becomes the owner of a vast chain<br />

of newspapers which mould public opinion and determine the destinies of nations.<br />

Graham, James Chandler. G77isi<br />

It happened at Andover, well, most of it did, anyway. Houghton.<br />

Contents: The unappreciated.—The transformation.—The ringer.—A new boy.—<br />

The infirmary.—The foreign-born.—Fish.—A Napoleon of finance.—The sport.—<br />

Parents.—The spy.—The landlady.—An affaire du coeur.—A relation.—The evolution<br />

of a star.—The manager.—Taking a chance.—The mark.—The vamp.<br />

Short stories of typical incidents and episodes at a boys' preparatory school.<br />

Grozier, Edwin Atkins, ed.<br />

r G9450<br />

One hundred best novels condensed [ed. with the assistance of]<br />

C. E. L. Wingate and C. H. Lincoln. 4v. Harper.<br />

Synopses prepared under the direction of the editor of the Boston Post. They include<br />

the "Iliad," "Pilgrim's progress," and "Alice in Wonderland," as well as famous<br />

translations. There is a biographical sketch and a portrait of each author.


BOOKS ADDED—DECEMBER 1920 503<br />

Hamilton, Cicely Mary.<br />

Higgw<br />

William, an Englishman. Stokes.<br />

A tragic story of two English lovers who were spending their honeymoon in Belgium<br />

when the world war broke out.<br />

King, Basil. K2632t<br />

Thread of flame. Harper.<br />

Appeared in the "Woman's home companion," v.46-47, Dec. 1919-Feb. 1920.<br />

A story of f<strong>org</strong>otten identity and of the part played by a keen sense of beauty in<br />

bringing a man back to himself. The time is from America's entrance into the great<br />

war to the signing of the armistice.<br />

Leadbitter, Eric. I-44gr<br />

Rain before seven. Jacobs.<br />

A well written story which traces the character development of an awkward, inarticulate<br />

English lad through boyhood and early manhood to a condition of achievement<br />

and tranquillity of heart.<br />

London, Jack. L8220<br />

On the Makaloa mat [and other stories]. Macmillan.<br />

Other stories: The bones of Kahelili.—When Alice told her soul.—Shin-bones.—<br />

The water baby.—The tears of Ah Kim.—The Kanaka surf.<br />

Adventure tales of the old Polynesian chiefs and of the early whites in Hawaii.<br />

Lucas, Edward Verrall. Lg6gve<br />

Verena in the midst; a kind of a story. Doran.<br />

A wdiimsical romance told in the form of letters. Some of the characters from<br />

the author's "The vermilion box" are re-introduced.<br />

Mayran, Camille. M543S<br />

Story of Gotton Connixloo, followed by F<strong>org</strong>otten; tr. by Van Wyck<br />

Brooks. Dutton. (Library of French fiction, ed. by B. J. Beyer.)<br />

Two appealing stories of the German invasion of Flanders and of France during<br />

the great war. Both are tragic but are told with great sympathy and artistry.<br />

Merrick, Leonard. M6 3 g 5 wo<br />

The worldlings, with an introduction by Neil Munro. Dutton.<br />

The hero, impersonating a dead acquaintance whom he closely resembles returns<br />

from South Africa to England and claims the fortune and social position of the other.<br />

Nexo, Martin Andersen. N2 9 6d<br />

Ditte: girl alive! tr. from the Danish. Holt.<br />

The story of an illegitimate peasant girl and her struggle with poverty in a small<br />

fishing village of Denmark.<br />

»T T^ tt.i N4523ha<br />

Norris, Kathleen.<br />

Harriet and the piper. Doubleday.<br />

present time.<br />

P238no<br />

Parker, Sir Gilbert.<br />

No defence. Lippincott.<br />

Appeared in "Munsey's magazine," v.69-70, Feb.-Sept. '9*°:<br />

Romance of an Irish gentleman and Ins adventares » £*£* £ g 'r?ren'ch rev0.<br />

Atlantic ocean, and in the West Indies, during the stirring da>s alter<br />

lution.<br />

R2862h<br />

Rees, Arthur John.<br />

The hand in the dark. Lane.<br />

A murder-detective story with an English setting.


504 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Rideout, Henry Milner. R438£<br />

The foot-path way. Duffield.<br />

The adventures of a young American engineer and a member of the secret police<br />

of India.<br />

Sidgwick, Mrs Cecily (Ullmann), & Garstin, Crosbie. Ss68b<br />

The black knight. Holt.<br />

The story of a young Englishman who on account of the financial disgrace of his<br />

father goes to Canada to seek his fortune. He wins success and returns to Paris where<br />

romance awaits him.<br />

Snaith, John Collis. S66gad<br />

The adventurous lady. Appleton.<br />

The wilful daughter of a British peer causes complications by changing places temporarily<br />

with an obscure little governess.<br />

Society of Arts and Sciences, New York city. S6780<br />

O. Henry memorial award; prize stories 1919, with an introduction<br />

by B. C. Williams. Doubleday.<br />

Contents: England to America, by 11. P. Montague.—"For they know not what<br />

they do," by W. D. Steele.—They grind exceeding small, by B. A. Williams.—On strike,<br />

by A. P. Terhune.—The elephant remembers, by Edison Marshall.—Turkey red, by<br />

F. G. Wood.—Five thousand dollars reward, by M. D. Post.—The blood of the dragon,<br />

by T. G. Springer.-—"Humoresque." by Fannie Hurst.—The lubbeny kiss, by Louise<br />

Rice.—The trial in Tom Belcher's store, by S. A. Derieux.—Porcelain cups, by J. B.<br />

Cabell.—The high cost of conscience, by Beatrice Ravenel.—The kitchen gods, by<br />

G. F. Alsop.—April 25th, as usual, by Edna Ferber.<br />

Turner, Ge<strong>org</strong>e Kibbe. T864h<br />

Hagar's hoard. Knopf.<br />

The effect of a yellow fever epidemic in 1878 on the whites and negroes of Memphis,<br />

especially on the lives of the miser Hagar, his daughter, and his adopted nephew,<br />

forms the theme of this tragic romance.<br />

Champol, F.<br />

Les justes.<br />

French Fiction<br />

843 C35<br />

The story of a Russian princess whose life knows happiness and misfortunes at<br />

ihe hands of the just. Work crowned by the French Academy.<br />

General Works<br />

Illinois—Library extension commission. r 021.8 I22I<br />

Laws of Illinois relating to free public libraries. 1919. (Leaflet<br />

no.9.)<br />

Newark, N. J.—Free public library. r 027.4 N26isr<br />

Roseville branch of the [Newark] free public library in the old Bathgate<br />

house, opened July 19, 1917. 1917.<br />

"Books on the history of Newark," p.33-37.<br />

Includes an account of that portion of Newark popularly called Roseville, and a<br />

brief history of the various branches of the public library.<br />

qr 051 R36<br />

Ihe review; a weekly journal of political and general discussion, May<br />

17, 1919-date. v.T-date. 1919-date.


BOOKS ADDED—DECEMBER 1920 505<br />

Rochester, N. Y.—Public library.<br />

r 016.05 R57<br />

Union list of serials in the libraries of Rochester, including periodicals,<br />

newspapers, annuals, publications of societies and other books<br />

published at intervals. 1917.<br />

"Lists and references consulted," p.16.<br />

Philosophy<br />

Moore, Vida Frank. no Lg2zm<br />

The ethical aspect of Lotze's metaphysics. 1901. Macmillan. (Cornell<br />

studies in philosophy, no.4.)<br />

Bibliographical foot-notes.<br />

A discussion of Lotze's idea of the good, his conception of the world, of God, and<br />

of the nature of man, attempting to show that all of his characteristic metaphysical<br />

doctrines grow out of his concept of the good.<br />

Schopenhauer, Arthur. 193 S37e<br />

Essays; tr. by T. B. Saunders.<br />

Ethics<br />

(Burt's home library.)<br />

Faris, John Thomson. 170.4 F23<br />

Book of courage. 1920. Lippincott. (Sunrise inspirational books.)<br />

An attempt to discover the springs of courage by telling of men and women who<br />

have become courageous.<br />

People's Refreshment House Association, Limited. r 178 P41P<br />

P. R. H. A. red book. 1919.<br />

An account of public-house reform in England accomplished by the association,<br />

with a directory of the 250 hotels and inns under its auspices. In these houses, the<br />

managers receive a commission on the sale of food and ncn-intoxicants only.<br />

282 B21<br />

Religion<br />

Barry, William Francis.<br />

The papacy and modern times; a political sketch, 1303-1870. [19H.]<br />

Holt. (Home university library of modern knowledge.)<br />

;hi b au th a o P r h conte P nd 5 s 3 ;hat-the Vatican has played an important role in history as<br />

the champion of the state and of the individual against Gesansm. ...... State<br />

"There are three terms of comparison involved—the Papacy, the Absolute Mate,<br />

and the American1 Constitution, which last, derived from England, owes its principles<br />

to the Great Charter and to Edward the Confessor. Preface.<br />

Clement of Alexandria. a *" ^c<br />

Clement of Alexandria, with an English translation by G. W. Butterworth<br />

1919. Heinemann. (Loeb classical library.)<br />

Contents: The exhortation to the Greeks—The rich man's salvation.-To the<br />

newly baptized.<br />

"Bibliography," pref. p. 19-20.<br />

, „ 225.9 D84<br />

Drummond, James, b. 1835.<br />

-OA-*\. r>r„m<br />

Pauline meditations, with memorial introduction by Edith Drum<br />

mond and G. D. Hicks. 1919- Lindsey Press.<br />

Studies and interpretations of the writings of the apostle Paul.


506 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

McNeile, E. R.<br />

212 M21<br />

From theosophy to Christian faith; a comparison of theosophy with<br />

Christianity, with a preface by Charles Gore. 1919. Longmans.<br />

Bibliography, p.141.<br />

A summary of those elements of theosophy which come under the category of religion,<br />

and a study contrasting theosophy point by point with the Catholic faith.<br />

Pascal, Blaise.<br />

271.5 P27I<br />

Lettres provinciales; ed. by H. F. Stewart. 1920. Manchester University<br />

Press. (Modern language texts.)<br />

"Bibliography," p.335~344-<br />

Peake, Arthur Samuel, ed. r 220.7 P"34<br />

Commentary on the Bible; ed. with the assistance for the New testament<br />

of A. J. Grieve; introduction by M. W. Stryker. 1920. Nelson.<br />

"General bibliographies," p.945-946.<br />

"Based on the text (including, of course, the marginal readings...) of the [Eng.<br />

lish] Revised Version.. .The omission of the Deutero-Canonical Books is a defect."<br />

Spectator, 1919.<br />

Roberts, Charles, 1846-1902.<br />

r 016.2896 R53<br />

Illustrated catalogue of the private library of the late Charles<br />

Roberts of Philadelphia, comprising an extensive collection of noteworthy<br />

Quakeriana, to be sold by order of L. B. Roberts, April 10th,<br />

1918; the sale to be conducted by T. E. Kirby and his assistants of the<br />

American Art Association, managers, New York city. [1918.]<br />

Binder's title reads "Biblioteca Quakeriana."<br />

Tracts by and relating to Ge<strong>org</strong>e Fox, 110.143-218; Tracts by and relating to<br />

Ge<strong>org</strong>e Keith, no.269-360.<br />

United Lutheran Church in America.<br />

r 284.1 U25<br />

Minutes of the convention (ist), Nov.14-18, 1918. [1919.]<br />

Includes minutes of the conventions of the General synod of the Evangelical Lutheran<br />

Church in the United States of America, the General council of the Evangelical<br />

Lutheran Church in North America and the United synod of the Evangelical Lutheran<br />

Church in the South.<br />

Wardle, Addie Grace.<br />

268 W21I1<br />

Handwork in religious education. [1919.] University of Chicago<br />

Press. (Chicago University. Publications in religious education; principles<br />

and methods of religious education.)<br />

"Books for reference," p.136—140.<br />

Presents reasons for the advocacy of expression work in the Sunday school and<br />

gives suggestions for actual problems in handwork.<br />

Weigle, Luther Allan.<br />

268 W44<br />

Talks to Sunday-school teachers. 1920. Doran.<br />

Bibliography at the end of each chapter.<br />

Brief sketches of child psychology applied to methods of Sunday school teaching.<br />

Written popularly for the use of the untrained teacher, but adapted to more intensive<br />

study by chapter questions.<br />

Sociology<br />

Annuaire general de la France et de l'etranger, 1919. 1919. r 314.4 A<br />

Published at the initiative of the Comite du Livre for the purpose of supplying data<br />

about France and foreign countries to the French people.


BOOKS ADDED—DECEMBER 1920 507<br />

Burch, Henry Reed, & Patterson, S. H. 304 B89<br />

American social problems; an introduction to the study of society.<br />

1919. Macmillan.<br />

"References" at the end of each chapter.<br />

"This book has grown out of the attempt to socialize one phase of secondary education<br />

and to bring it into harmony with present day demands. It is designed to meet the<br />

needs of an elementary course in the study of society—especially of American society."<br />

Preface.<br />

Chinese National Welfare Society in America. r 327.51 C441<br />

Shantung question, and other claims as officially presented to the<br />

Peace Conference by the Chinese Peace Commission. 1920.<br />

An appeal to the American people not to confirm the award of territory in Shantung<br />

to Japan, but to insist on having the Treaty of Versailles so modified that the<br />

question may be deferred for future deliberation and action. Includes the secret treaties<br />

of 1915, the 21 demands of Japan on China, and other important documents bearing on<br />

the case.<br />

Evans, Maria Millington (Lathbury), lady. 391 Eg4<br />

Chapters on Greek dress. 1893. Macmillan.<br />

"Works consulted," Introduction, p.16-17.<br />

Describes Homeric dress and the garments of both men and women of Greece in<br />

historic times.<br />

Folwell, William Watts. r 304 F73<br />

Economic addresses. 1918. University of Minnesota. (Minnesota<br />

University. Current problems, no.9.)<br />

Contents: The ethics of business.—Trusts.—The single tax.—Socialism true and<br />

false.—The new economics.<br />

r 314.4 F92<br />

The French year book; statistical and historical annual of France for<br />

the year 1919. 1919.<br />

Published at the initiative of the Comite du Livre for the purpose of supplying data<br />

about France to English-speaking nations.<br />

Greg, William Rathbone. 304 G86m<br />

Miscellaneous essays [ist]-2d ser. 2v. 1882-84. Triibner.<br />

v.i. Rocks ahead and harbours of refuge—Foreign policy of Great Britain—imperial<br />

or economic?—The echo of the antipodes—A grave perplexity before us—Obligations<br />

of the soil—The right use of a surplus; or, Remission of taxes an abuse of<br />

revenue—The great twin brethren—Is the popular judgment in politics more just<br />

than that of the higher orders ?-Harriet Martineau—Verify your compass—The prophetic<br />

element in the gospels—Mr Frederic Harrison on the future life—Can truths<br />

be apprehended which could not have been discovered?<br />

v.2. France since 1848—France in Jan. 1852—England as it is—Sir R. Peels<br />

character and policy—Employment of our Asiatic forces ir. European wars.<br />

Gregory, Augusta (Persse), lady, comp. 398 G86v<br />

Visions and beliefs in the west of Ireland, with two essays and notes<br />

by W.B. Yeats; ist-2d ser. 2v. 1920. Putnam.<br />

v, Sea stories-Seers and healers: Biddy Early; Mrs Sheridan; Mr Saggarton;<br />

"A great JSTrTtketaSn*.;" Old Deruane-The evil eye. the_tou


508 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Hecht, Solomon, & Liebman, Charles. qr 351.1 H3gf<br />

Fireman civil service examination instruction; a complete course for<br />

civil service entrance examinations for the fire department; answers to<br />

all past examination questions, with full instruction covering arithmetic,<br />

the memory test and city, county, state and Federal government; 1,000<br />

questions, answers, specimen questions and review questions. 1919.<br />

Civil Service Chronicle.<br />

Lytle, Ge<strong>org</strong>e Walter.<br />

r 326 Lgg<br />

Facts about "The birth of a new nation." 1919- City Mission Pub.<br />

Co. Pittsburgh.<br />

An account of the negro in the United States, including his service in the world<br />

war.<br />

Mongellaz, Mme Fanny Burnier.<br />

396 M82<br />

De l'influence des femmes sur les moeurs et les destinees des nations,<br />

sur leurs families et la societe, et de l'influence des moeurs sur le bonheur<br />

de la vie. 2v. 1828.<br />

United States—Children's bureau.<br />

Legal series, no.1-4. 1918-19.<br />

For contents see Contents book kept at the reference desk.<br />

r 362.7 U25I<br />

World's Christian Citizenship Conference (3d),<br />

304 W89<br />

Pittsburgh, 1919.<br />

The world's moral problems; addresses at the third World's Christian<br />

Citizenship Conference, held in Pittsburgh, Nov. 9-16, 1919. 1920.<br />

National Reform Assoc. Pittsburgh.<br />

The same<br />

r 304 W89<br />

The addresses cover general problems and principles; specific world problems such<br />

as immigration, Mormonism, public education, social purity, temperance, etc.; moral<br />

and social conditions in various countries; and an international plan of action consisting<br />

of 21 recommendations.<br />

Immigration<br />

California—Immigration and housing, Commission of. r 325.73 C13<br />

Annual report, Jan. 1919. 1919.<br />

325.73 C83<br />

1919. Cleveland Americanization Com­<br />

Coulter, Charles Wellesley.<br />

The Poles of Cleveland.<br />

mittee.<br />

The same<br />

r 325.73 C83P<br />

Tells of the life and customs of the Poles with the object of stimulating appreciation<br />

of their accomplishments and of their contributions to American life.<br />

Rushmore, Elsie Mitchell.<br />

r 016.32573 R8g<br />

Bibliography for social workers among foreign-born residents of the<br />

United States. 1920.<br />

Prepared for the Division of work for foreign-born women of the National board<br />

of the Young Women's Christian Association.<br />

References on the modern country and people of 17 nationalities, with a list on<br />

immigration and emigration in the L'nited States.


BOOKS ADDED—DECEMBER 1920 509<br />

Economics<br />

Brooks, John Graham. „„, D<br />

T u > 1 ,1 . 33i 077<br />

Labors challenge to the social order; democracy its own critic and<br />

educator. 1920. Macmillan.<br />

''The problem here submitted is a study of power rapidly and in part accidentally<br />

acquired by labor. More especially it is a study of what labor is to do with its new<br />

mastership; what fitness it possesses for the work it would take in hand and' how<br />

meantime, other classes are to play their parts." Chapter I<br />

The author concludes that the solution for both capital and labor is to unite in cooperative<br />

effort.<br />

Gompers, Samuel. 33I 88 Gsg<br />

Labor and the employer; comp. and ed. by Hayes Robbins. 1920.<br />

Dutton. (Labor movements and labor problems in America.)<br />

] A compilation of writings, addresses, and testimony by Mr Gompers since 1887<br />

with the emphasis on concrete problems of employment relations.<br />

Interchurch World Movement. 331.89 I24<br />

Report on the steel strike of 1919, by the Commisson of inquiry, the<br />

Interchurch World Movement [written] with the technical assistance<br />

of the Bureau of Industrial Research, New York. 1920. Harcourt.<br />

The same<br />

r 33i.8g I24<br />

A summary of industrial facts gathered from an intensive study of the United<br />

States Steel Corporation plants in the Pittsburgh district, Johnstown, and Youngstown.<br />

Labat, Emmanuel. 330.g Lu<br />

L'ame paysanne; la terre, la race, l'ecole. 1919.<br />

Contents: L'ame paysanne avant la guerre: L'abandon de la terre; A propos du<br />

probleme de la natalite; La vocation paysanne et l'ecole; La culture morale et l'ecole<br />

du village.—L'ame paysanne pendant la guerre: Le devoir paysan pendant l'epreuve;<br />

La vocation paysanne et la guerre.<br />

Appeared in "Revue des deux mondes," Aug. 1, 1910; July 15, 1911; July 15, 1912;<br />

Jan. 15, 1914; Sept. 1, 1917; July 15, 1918.<br />

Litchfield, Paul Weeks. r 331.1 L73<br />

The industrial republic; a study in industrial economics. 1919. Privately<br />

printed.<br />

The vice president and factory manager of the Goodyear Tire & Rubber Company<br />

outlines the evolution of capital and the wage system, and advocates giving labor the<br />

control of industry and guarding the interests of capital. He describes the Goodyear<br />

representation plan as an example.<br />

Meredith, Hugh Owen. 33°-9 M63<br />

Outlines of the economic history of England; a study in social development.<br />

[1908.] Pitman.<br />

"Bibliography," p.353-355-<br />

A compilation covering the period from 1066 to 1900. It is "exact and authoritative<br />

in its information, and concise and handy in form." Athenceum, 1909.<br />

New York (city), Merchants' Association. r 331.2 N26<br />

Industrial pensions; report of Special committee on industrial pensions<br />

and report of a survey of industrial pension systems by the Industrial<br />

bureau. 1920.<br />

Pittsburgh—Taxation study, Committee on. r 336.2 P674<br />

Report to Council of the city of Pittsburgh. [1916? Pittsburgh.]


5io<br />

CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Reade, William Henry Vincent.<br />

Revolt of labour against civilisation. 1919. Blackwell.<br />

331-8 R254<br />

Contends that the great danger to civilization lies in the ideal of Bolshevism and in<br />

the attempt of the working classes to make the satisfaction of the most primitive needs<br />

the only social activity of any value. Condensed from Times (London), 1919.<br />

The author "has no remedy to propose: that indeed is the merit of his essay, which<br />

is intended to make the reader think furiously, and which achieves its purpose." Spectator,<br />

JOJp.<br />

Money. Finance<br />

Cannan, Edwin. 332 C173<br />

Money; its connection with rising and falling prices. 1918. King.<br />

An attempt to make clear what causes changes in the value of money. The writer,<br />

who is (1918) professor of political economy in the University of London, concludes<br />

that the value of money, as of other commodities, depends upon the various influences<br />

that affect demand and supply.<br />

Mitchell, Wesley Clair. r 338.5 M74<br />

International price comparisons [written with the assistance of]<br />

M. L. Goldsmith and F. K. Middaugh. 1919.<br />

"Bibliography," p.384-395.<br />

Published by the Department of commerce in co-operation with the War industries<br />

board.<br />

Forms part of the "History of prices during the war," planned by the War industries<br />

board.<br />

"Aims to show as fully as permitted by the materials available how the rise of<br />

prices from 1013 to 1918 in the United States compares with the rise in other countries."<br />

Raymond, William Lee. 33 2 -6 R24<br />

American and foreign investment bonds. 1916. Houghton.<br />

"References for certain county and municipal defaults," p.301—303.<br />

"Railroad laws; laws forbidding combination and consolidation," p.305-307.<br />

Concerned less with the history of borrowing than with the principles that govern<br />

the intrinsic value of the leading classes of investment bends.<br />

"Treats tlie subject not only from the investor's viewpoint, but also from that of<br />

the student of economics." Springfield republican, 1916.<br />

Law<br />

341.6 N15<br />

The nations and the league, by 10 representative writers of seven nations,<br />

with an introductory chapter by Sir Ge<strong>org</strong>e Paish, [1920.]<br />

Lippincott.<br />

Contents: Introductory chapter: The danger of world breakdown, by Sir Ge<strong>org</strong>e<br />

Paish.—A French view, by Leon Bourgeois.—Another French view, by Andre Mater.—<br />

An American view, by N. M, Butler.—A British view, by Sir Sidney Low.—A Belgian<br />

view, by Louis Strauss.—A Dutch view, by A. Heringa.—A Norwegian view, by<br />

Johan Castberg.-—Another Norwegian view, by Fridtjof Nansen.—A German view, by<br />

Lujo Brentano.<br />

Percy, Eustace Sutherland Campbell, lord. 341-6 P42<br />

Responsibilities of the league. [1920.] Hodder.<br />

The author considers the League of Nations as the potential champion of the idea<br />

of state and commonwealth, the possible medium by wdiich we may come to a spirit of<br />

united Christendom, and the Treaty of Versailles he considers as a complete result of<br />

the two forces of nationalism and democracy. Condensed from Dial, 1920.


BOOKS ADDED—DECEMBER 1920 511<br />

Savidge, Frank Raymond. r 347-I g 26<br />

Formation and management of corporations in Pennsylvania; a<br />

treatise upon the incorporation and regulation of corporations, the<br />

powers and duties thereof and of corporate officers, comprising the full<br />

text of the acts of assembly and the decisions of all the courts in relation<br />

thereto, with table of cases and chronological table of statutes, also<br />

containing in the text forms of procedure. 3v. 1920. Clark-Boardman<br />

Co.<br />

v.3, Supplement, 1905-20.<br />

Education<br />

Barlow, Sir Montague, & Holland, Richard. r 379.14 B24<br />

Education act, 1918, with notes and introductory chapters explanatory<br />

of the act and of the relation of religious bodies to the act; with<br />

notes on some leading decisions under the act of 1902 affecting denominational<br />

schools; also a reprint of the unrepealed sections of that act.<br />

[1918.] National Society's Depository.<br />

Branom, Mendel E.<br />

371.3 B71<br />

Project method in education. 1919. Badger. (Library of educational<br />

methods.)<br />

"References," P.267-27S.<br />

Discusses the term "project" and its different meanings, and describes teaching<br />

by projects as applied to various subjects, in an effort to get away from the "bookish,<br />

theoretical education of former days."<br />

Briggs, Thomas Henry.<br />

379-17 B74<br />

The junior high school. 1920. Houghton. (Riverside textbooks<br />

in education; division of secondary education.)<br />

"Bibliography," p.329-348.<br />

A first hand investigation of junior high schools throughout the country, analysing<br />

facts and setting forth a constructive program for the re<strong>org</strong>anization • of secondary<br />

schools.<br />

[Committee on Friendly Relations among<br />

r 378.7 C73<br />

Foreign Students.]<br />

Directory of foreign students in the United States of America.<br />

1919.<br />

Ge<strong>org</strong>ia—Education department.<br />

r 379.758 G31<br />

Educational survey of Decatur, Ge<strong>org</strong>ia, public school system, by<br />

M. L. Duggan, rural school agent. 1918.<br />

No.26 in a series of educational surveys of the counties of Ge<strong>org</strong>ia.<br />

Shows by charts and graphs the results of educational tests as compared with standard<br />

scores. Finds chief defects due to lack of funds and of sufficient supervision.<br />

Hudson, Jay William.<br />

378-7 H88<br />

The college and new America; foreword by Henry Suzzallo. 1920.<br />

Appleton.<br />

A plea for reconstruction of college education, emphasizing the obligation of the<br />

college to the American social order. . .<br />

"Professor Hudson's analysis of the academic mind is shrewd and incisive; his exposition<br />

of the American social order is instructive; his hortatory utterances are not<br />

without tonic quality; but the remedy that he would administer to college education is<br />

a counsel of perfection." Atlantic monthly, 1920.


512 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Keatinge, Maurice Walter.<br />

37°.i K15<br />

Suggestion in education. 1911. Black.<br />

A study in the psychology of education. The author "adds nothing new to educational<br />

theory, but, by making generous use of the literature of hypnosis and psychometry,<br />

he shows by implication how dull and blundering were the textbooks on 'method'<br />

and 'school management' familiar in training colleges two decades ago." Athcna-um,<br />

190S.<br />

National Education Association—Re<strong>org</strong>anization of 379-17 N15<br />

secondary education, Commission on.<br />

Cardinal principles of secondary education. 1918. (United States—<br />

Education bureau. Bulletin, 1918, no.35.)<br />

The same<br />

r 379.17 N15<br />

The same. (In United States—Education bureau. Bulletin, 1918,<br />

no.35.)<br />

r 370 U25 1918 no.35<br />

An outline of the fundamental principles most helpful in directing secondary education.<br />

New York (state)—Education department. r 379.747 N26i2ru<br />

Report of the survey of the Utica school system. 1919.<br />

Discusses the educational needs of Utica. the <strong>org</strong>anization and administration of<br />

the school plant, supervision, the teaching staff, elementary and high schools, achievements<br />

in fundamental subjects measured by standard tests, comparative school costs,<br />

and health education.<br />

New York (city). Bureau of Municipal Research. r 379.748 N26<br />

Report on a survey of the <strong>org</strong>anization and administration of the<br />

public schools of Harrisburg, Pa. 1917.<br />

Prepared for the Harrisburg Chamber of Commerce.<br />

"Deals with the <strong>org</strong>anization and the procedure followed in administering the<br />

physical and business functions, and in providing for the general regulation and control<br />

over all of the activities of the school district of Harrisburg." Introduction.<br />

Shurter, Edwin DuBois, cd. r 379.13 S56<br />

Constitutional tax for the support of higher educational institutions<br />

iu Texas; bibliography and selected arguments. [1915.] University of<br />

Texas. (Texas University. Bulletin, 1915, no.30.)<br />

"Bibliography," p.46-47.<br />

Strayer, Ge<strong>org</strong>e Drayton, & Engelhardt, N. L. 371 S91C<br />

• The classroom teacher at work in American schools. 1920. Amer.<br />

Book Co. (American education series.)<br />

"Bibliography of tests and scales," p.205-211; "References for reading" at the end<br />

of most of the chapters.<br />

"Treats of the <strong>org</strong>anization and administration of public education, as well as of<br />

the technique employed by the teacher in his daily work." Author's introduction.<br />

Weeks, Ruth Mary. 371.3 W42<br />

Socializing the three R's. 1919. Macmillan.<br />

Bibliography, p.167-182.<br />

A brief survey of some of our outstanding national problems and their relation to<br />

the common branches of grade school instruction.<br />

Willard, Mrs Emma (Hart). r 376 W73<br />

Plan for improving female education. 1918.<br />

Reprint of the second edition of 1S10, published bv Middleburv College on the<br />

100th anniversary of the issue of the first edition.<br />

Contains reproduction of original t.p.: An address to the public, particularly to<br />

the members of the legislature of New-York, proposing a plan for improvng female<br />

education. By Emma Willard. 2d ed. Middlebury. Printed bv T. W. Copeland, 1810.<br />

With this is bound "Mrs Emma Willard's life and work in Middlebury," by Ezra<br />

Brainerd.


BOOKS ADDED-DECEMBER 1920 5, 3<br />

Winship, Albert Edward.<br />

w<br />

Danger signals for teachers. 1919. Forbes.<br />

3?I 1&<br />

A book of advice written with the hope of helping teachers "to m. i ,,<br />

meet the new<br />

expectations [of post-war or rather 'neace-morlified' ,i,,„ .• i<br />

appreciation will forestall public deprec.atioT"<br />

edura "°"l ~ promptly that public<br />

Commerce<br />

American Commerce Association. nr „ 8r .<br />

TV, . j,- , °,r 385 A5i22t<br />

The traffic manual; excerpts of tariffs and classifications; also maps<br />

charts, rules and regulations, shipping forms and traffic data used in<br />

the computation of charges on shipments and the solution of practical<br />

traffic problems, forming a part of the practical traffic management<br />

training service; prepared under the direction of the Advisory traffic<br />

council;_Elvin S. Ketchum, editor in chief, Edward J. Martin, educational<br />

director. 1919.<br />

Colombia (Republic of Colombia, 1886- )—Direccion qr 382 C72<br />

general de estadistica.<br />

Comercio exterior de la Republica de Colombia ano de 1916. 1919.<br />

Lissenden, Ge<strong>org</strong>e Bertie. r 3g s L?3<br />

Industrial traffic management, with a foreword by C E Musgrave<br />

[1915?] Pitman.<br />

"Written primarily to assist aspirants to qualify for bigger and better jobs...But<br />

seeing that the more advanced subjects—e. g.; The Theory and Practice of Railway<br />

Rate-Making, Rebates, Undue Preference, Increased Railway Rates-also are treated exhaustively.<br />

. [the book] will be of some use to those already holding positions of importance<br />

in traffic departments." Preface.<br />

Rush, Thomas Edward.<br />

38 z R8 q<br />

The port of New York. 1920. Doubleday.<br />

"Bibliography," p.357-361.<br />

By the (1920) surveyor of customs of the port of New York. He gives its history<br />

Md attempts to show its importance to the city, the United States, and the world.<br />

"An adequate study of the port from the transportation or engineering point of<br />

view it emphatically is not." Springfield republican, 1920.<br />

United States—Federal trade commission.<br />

Foreign trade series, no.i. 1919.<br />

For contents see Contents book kept at the reference desk.<br />

Language<br />

r 382 U253gf<br />

Classen, Ernest.<br />

420.9 C53<br />

Outlines of the history of the English language. 1919. Macmillan.<br />

"A modest attempt to present the well-known linguistic facts as illustrations of a<br />

consistent theory of the development of language, and in that way to invest them with<br />

a more human interest." Preface.<br />

r 423 D46<br />

Desk standard dictionary of the English language; abridged from the<br />

Funk & Wagnalls New standard dictionary of the English language by<br />

J. C. Fernald. New ed., augmented and carefully revised by F. H.<br />

Vizetelly. 1919. Funk.


514 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Foulkrod, Emily.<br />

r 410 F83<br />

Compounds of the word "horse;" a study in semantics. 1919. Privately<br />

printed.<br />

"Bibliography," p.o.<br />

Thesis for Ph. D., University of Pennsylvania.<br />

Goldberger, Henry Harold, & Brown, S. J. 428.2 G57C<br />

Course of study and syllabus for teaching English to non-English<br />

speaking adults. 1919. Scribner.<br />

"Bibliography," p.50-52.<br />

Nigrin, Jaroslav Victor. 491.896 N33<br />

Bohemian grammar (Bohemian made easy). 1918. [Slavie Pub.<br />

Co.]<br />

Science<br />

Berger (C. L.) & Sons, Boston, Mass. r 526.91 B45<br />

Handbook and catalog; engineering, surveying & mining instruments.<br />

1920.<br />

Contents: A full description of the instruments and concise directions how- to take<br />

care of and adjust them.—Catalog and price-list.<br />

Binder's title reads "Standard instruments of precision, 1920."<br />

Detailed information regarding instruments made by this company.<br />

Eason, Alec Birks. 533 E18<br />

Flow and measurement of air and gases. 1919. Griffin.<br />

Bibliography, p.11-16.<br />

Mainly compilation from books and serials. Material is classified and references<br />

cited.<br />

"The importance of the subject matter of this work to all engineers and especially<br />

to mining engineers is evidently very great... Will be found of use, mainly to the experienced<br />

engineer who wishes to have at hand a tolerably complete collection of formulas<br />

and constants, the discriminating use of which he will have learnt from his own<br />

experience." Henry Louis, in Mining magazine. 1920.<br />

Finch, James Kip. 526.98 F49<br />

Topographic maps and sketch mapping. 1920. Wiley.<br />

"Bibliography," p. 168-170.<br />

Very instructive work on the making and reading of maps. A valuable feature,<br />

added as an appendix, is "A descriptive list of the principal topographic maps of the<br />

world."<br />

Hudson, William Henry, C.M.Z.S. 598.2 H88b<br />

Birds in town & village, with pictures in colour by E. J. Detmold.<br />

1920. Dutton.<br />

Jaeger, Francis Mauritius. 501 J14<br />

Lectures on the principle of symmetry and its applications in all<br />

natural sciences. 1917. Elsevier.<br />

"Purpose is merely to draw the attention of students of mathematics and natural<br />

philosophy in general, to a principle of which the significance in the morphological<br />

description of objects, as well as in the definition of chemical and physical phenomena<br />

is gradually becoming more and more evident in every domain of research." Preface.<br />

Numerous references to literature.<br />

Excellent photo­<br />

Mills, Enos Abijah. S70, 4 M 6 g<br />

Adventures of a nature guide. 1920. Doubleday.<br />

Interesting and thrilling experiences in the wilds of America.<br />

graphic illustrations.


BOOKS ADDED-DECEMBER IG 20<br />

Shull, Aaron Franklin, and others.<br />

^<br />

Principles of animal biology Twrittenl with n, „ ,<br />

5QI Ss6p<br />

LaRue and A. G. Ruthven. S o Mc Gr aw VA C °' ab ° ratl °" ° f G. R.<br />

cal publications; C. V. Piper ed j<br />

(Agricultural and biologi-<br />

"References" at the end of mist o'f the chapters<br />

Snyder, William Henry.<br />

Everyday science. 1919. Allyn<br />

5 °° S675<br />

Contents: The nnpn =v„ r\<br />

The sun's gift of l ^ - ^ ^ J C z ^ T r * ^ a " d ""^p of matterearth.-The<br />

work of running wate-Weather , d r'" f ° ""—The waters of the<br />

taon of the earth's surface for plant life X " l\'" Bte T The «'*-. crust.-Prepara<br />

e<br />

sun's gift of light.—Life on the earth M<br />

and conservation of soils—The<br />

life-Man's inventions fortransfeSL?"" S o " " "'^ °"«»< op"- »*<br />

Chemistry<br />

Association of Official Agricultural Chemists. qr 547 8905 A84<br />

Journal; quarterly, May 15, 1916-May 15, 1917. V.2-V.3, no.i. 1916-<br />

Contams Proceedings of the annual convention.<br />

Publication suspended with v.3, no.i.<br />

Sanford, Fernando. qr ^ J? g 22<br />

Electrical charges of atoms and ions. 1919. (Leland Stanford<br />

Junior University. Publications; university series.)<br />

Geology<br />

Bosworth, Thomas Owen.<br />

553.28 B64<br />

Geology of the mid continent oilfields; Kansas, Oklahoma and north<br />

Texas. 1920. Macmillan.<br />

"Bibliography," p.[3J-6.<br />

The sa! "C r 553.28 B64


5i6<br />

CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Michigan—Geological and biological survey.<br />

r 016.55774 M66c<br />

Catalog and table of contents of the publications of the Michigan<br />

geological and biological survey, with a list of publications of the United<br />

States geological survey relating to Michigan, 1838-1917. [1918?]<br />

Talman, Charles Fitzhugh.<br />

qr 553.2 T16<br />

Story of coal. 1918. (Mentor, v.6, no.6, May I, 1918.)<br />

Brief popular text with illustrations.<br />

Wada, Tsunashiro.<br />

qr 555-2 Wu<br />

Minerals of Japan; tr. by Takudzi Ogawa. 1904.<br />

Description of specimens from a mineralogical viewpoint. Contains some good<br />

plates.<br />

Botany<br />

Bruning, Christian.<br />

r 580.4 B83<br />

Wunder aus dem pflanzenreiche, fiir die jugend herausgegeben.<br />

[1908.]<br />

Reiche, Carlos.<br />

r 581.972 R29<br />

La vegetacion en los alrededores de la capital de Mexico. 1914.<br />

"Literatura consultada," p.[3].<br />

Rydberg, Per Axel.<br />

r 581.978 Rg6k<br />

Key to the Rocky mountain flora; Colorado, Utah, Wyoming, Idaho,<br />

Montana, Saskatchewan, Alberta and parts of Nebraska, South Dakota,<br />

North Dakota and British Columbia. 1919. Privately printed.<br />

Being a reprint of the keys and glossary found in the author's "Flora of the<br />

Rocky mountains and adjacent plains" (r 581.978 R96).<br />

Saunders, Charles Francis.<br />

581.6 S25<br />

Useful wild plants of the United States and Canada; illustrated by<br />

L. H. Aring. 1920. McBride.<br />

Bibliographical foot-notes.<br />

The same<br />

r 581.6 S25<br />

Interesting and instructive work dealing wdth certain plants valuable for edible,<br />

beverage, and medicinal purposes, and as soap substitutes.<br />

Spoehr, Herman Augustus.<br />

Carbohydrate economy of cacti. 1919.<br />

Washington. Publication no.287.)<br />

Contains bibliographical foot-notes.<br />

Useful Arts<br />

qr 583.471 S76<br />

(Carnegie Institution of<br />

American Hardwood Manufacturers' Association. r 634.9 A5122<br />

Inspection rules and sales code, effective September ist. 1919.<br />

[1919.]<br />

Bowsfield, Colvin Cullen.<br />

630 B66<br />

Making the farm pay. Rev. ed. 1919. Forbes.<br />

Consideration of the possibilities of intensive farming—especially the diversified<br />

type. Author is enthusiastic and holds out hope of success beyond that which the<br />

average amateur is likely to attain.<br />

qr 607 Cu<br />

C.I. T. alumnus, Oct. 1914-date. v.i-date. 1914-date. [Pittsburgh.]<br />

Published as a quarterly during the college year by the alumni of Carnegie Institute<br />

of Technology.


BOOKS ADDED—DECEMBER 1920<br />

5I7<br />

Canada—Statistics bureau. 6 c<br />

Directory of the chemical industries in Canada, as of date January<br />

1,1919- 1919- (Census of industry, 1918)<br />

Prepared for the Honorary advisory council for scientific and industrial research.<br />

Griffith, Ira Samuel. ,„<br />

r- , . , 684.07 G89<br />

Correlated courses in woodwork and mechanical drawing. [1019 1<br />

Manual Arts Press.<br />

'<br />

Contents. Organization.—Lesson outlines—Working drawings<br />

cSl^;S "Adtr^St^r^;;- 1 - — -<br />

Harvey, Arthur. , „<br />

Practical leather chemistry; a handbook for laboratory notes and<br />

methods for the use of students and works' chemists. 1920. Lockwood<br />

References" at the end of each chapter<br />

"Although designed... for the student of chemistry specialising in the leather in<br />

dustry, it will...also be of use to the works chemist." Preface.<br />

Mayers, Clayton W. r ^ ^<br />

Estimating concrete buildings. 1920. (Aberthaw texts.)<br />

Published by Aberthaw Construction Company, Boston, Mass.<br />

Portland Cement Association.<br />

r 016.6915 P83<br />

Catalog of books, periodicals and pamphlets in the library of the<br />

Portland Cement Association. 1918.<br />

Procter, Henry Richardson, ed. 6 75 p go i<br />

Leather chemists' pocket-book; a short compendium of analytical<br />

methods; ed. by H. R. Procter, assisted by Edmund Stiasny & Harold<br />

Brumwell. Ed.2. 1919. Spon.<br />

"Intended not as a substitute, but as an adjunct to the Leather Industries Laboratory<br />

Book." Preface.<br />

United States Shipping Board Emergency Fleet r 699.1201 U25<br />

Corporation.<br />

Structural steel for ships; standard practice recommended by American<br />

steel makers, as adopted by the Emergency fleet corporation; revised<br />

Nov. 20, 1918. Ed.2. 1919. Pittsburgh.<br />

Published by the Carnegie Steel Company, Pittsburgh.<br />

Medicine, Physiology, Hygiene<br />

Cady, Bertha Chapman, & Cady, V. M. 612.6 Cn<br />

The way life begins; an introduction to sex education, with foreword<br />

by W. F. Snow. 1917. (American Social Hygiene Association. Serial<br />

publication no.85.)<br />

Camp, Walter. 613.7 C15I1<br />

Handbook on health and how to keep it. 1920. Appleton.<br />

Manual of personal hygiene, containing brief suggestions for gymnastic exercises.<br />

Galloway, Thomas Walton.<br />

Biology of sex for parents and teachers. 1913. Heath.<br />

612.6 G15


518 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Hall, Francis de Havilland.<br />

r 616.07 H17<br />

Differential diagnosis; a manual of the comparative semeiology of<br />

the more important diseases; American edition with extensive additions.<br />

1879. Brinton.<br />

Being an enlarged edition of his "Synopsis of the diseases of the larynx, lungs<br />

and heart."<br />

Hoppe, Carl.<br />

r 616.074 H78<br />

Percussion and auscultation as diagnostic aids; a manual for students<br />

and practitioners of medicine; tr. by L. C. Lane. 1869. Lippincott.<br />

Leftwich, Ralph Wilmington.<br />

r 612.33 L54<br />

On syphonage and hydraulic pressure in the large intestine, with<br />

their bearing upon the treatment of constipation, appendicitis, etc.<br />

1903. Churchill.<br />

National Safety Council.<br />

r 614.805 N15<br />

Proceedings; annual safety congress (ist)-date, 1912-date. [1913?]-<br />

date.<br />

Volume for 1012 title reads "Proceedings of the first Co-operative Safety Congress,<br />

held under the auspices of Ass'n of Iron and Steel Electrical Engineers, Milwaukee,<br />

Wis., Sept. 30th to Oct. 5th, 1912," and for 1913 "Proceedings of the National<br />

Council for Industrial Safety, second safety congress, New York city, September 23 to<br />

25, 1913-"<br />

Overton, Frank, & Denno, W. J.<br />

614.2 O33<br />

The health officer. 1919. Saunders.<br />

Good presentation of the duties of the public health officer and the methods of<br />

discharging these duties. Greatest value is on the medical side. Topics in sanitary engineering<br />

are introduced but necessarily treated in a brief and sketchy manner. References<br />

to legal requirements relate mainly to statutes of New York state.<br />

Payne, E. Ge<strong>org</strong>e.<br />

614.807 P33<br />

Education in accident prevention; a treatise showing how accident<br />

prevention may be made a part of regular school instruction without<br />

the addition of another subject to the curriculum; prepared at the request<br />

and with the approval of the National Safety Council, by a member<br />

of the council's Committee on education. 1919. Lyons.<br />

Illustrated safety lessons based on instruction of children in public schools of St.<br />

Louis.<br />

Peterkin, Guy Shearman.<br />

qr 610 P45<br />

Medical ethics versus ethical economics; or, Efficiency in medical<br />

practice. 1918. Privately printed.<br />

United States—Census bureau.<br />

r 616.014 U25<br />

Standard nomenclature of diseases and pathological conditions, injuries<br />

and poisonings for the United States. 1920.<br />

The Council of national defense began this work but was unable to complete it because<br />

of other pressing problems.<br />

Wootton, A. C.<br />

r 615.09 W88<br />

Chronicles of pharmacy. 2v. 1910. Macmillan.<br />

History of pharmacy, written in non-technical style. Not a systematic treatment of<br />

the entire subject, but a series of more or less detached essays. First effort of its<br />

kind in the English language, and a work of great merit.<br />

"The chronicles have been woven into a wonderful tale, and pharmacy has thereby<br />

been invested with a glamour which few of us ever suspected could have appertained to<br />

it." Pharmaceutical journal and pharmacist, igio.


Engineering<br />

BOOKS ADDED—DECEMBER 1920 519<br />

American Society of Mechanical Engineers. 621.13 A512<br />

Steam locomotives of today; report of the sub-committee on railroads.<br />

1914.<br />

Reprinted from its "Transactions," v.36, p.483-534.<br />

Bridgeport Brass Company, Bridgeport, Conn.<br />

qr 621.762 B74<br />

Seven centuries of brass making; a brief history of the ancient art of<br />

brass making and its early (and even recent) method of production contrasted<br />

with that of the electric furnace process, a twentieth century<br />

achievement of Bridgeport Brass Company. 1920.<br />

High grade trade literature, embodying much interesting information.<br />

Dooley, William Henry.<br />

621.9 D73<br />

Applied science for metal-workers. 1919. Ronald Press Co.<br />

An attempt to teach science in a practical ratlier than an abstract way. Presents,<br />

first, the general principles, and follows this by specific problems and applications to<br />

work in machine shops, steel mills, and foundries and in the plumbing and sheet metal<br />

trades.<br />

International Correspondence Schools, Scranton, Pa. 622.3308 I24<br />

Coal mining handbook; a handy reference book for coal miners, fire<br />

bosses, foremen, superintendents, managers, engineers and all persons<br />

interested in the subject of coal mining. Ed.2. 1920. International<br />

Textbook Co.<br />

Binder's title reads "I. C. S. coal miner's handbook."<br />

Reference material in the form of tables and formulas, with considerable condensed<br />

information on methods.<br />

Jackson, Percy G.<br />

621.186 J12<br />

Boiler feed water; a concise handbook of water for boiler feeding<br />

purposes; its effects, treatment and analysis. 1919. Griffin.<br />

Author was formerly chemist to the National Boiler and General Insurance Company,<br />

Ltd., in England.' The results of his experience are concisely set forth in this<br />

small practical manual.<br />

Knowles, Morris.<br />

r 628.3 K35<br />

Disposal of sewage and refuse in America. 1917. Govt. Print. Off.<br />

Reprinted from the "Proceedings" of the Pan American Scientific Congress (2d),<br />

Washington, D. C. 1915-16.<br />

Luckiesh, M. 628.9 L 97*<br />

Artificial light, its influence upon civilization. 1920. Century. (Century<br />

books of useful science.)<br />

"Reading references," p.357-358- .<br />

Popular work on ancient and modern illumination by various methods.<br />

Martin, Thomas Commerford, & Coles, S. L. ed. qr 621.309 M42<br />

Story of electricity; a popular and practical historical account of the<br />

establishment and wonderful development of the electrical industry,<br />

with engravings and sketches of the pioneers and prominent men, past<br />

and present, v.i. [191°.] Story of Electricity Co.<br />

Page, Victor Wilfred.<br />

V 6*1.43*75 Pi*<br />

Location of airplane power plant troubles made easy; a complete<br />

chart outlining the common derangements that interfere with proper<br />

action of engine and auxiliary systems. 1917- Henley.<br />

Size, 30.V6 x 74fs inches, folded in 4° cover.


520 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Petit, Henri. r 629.1135 P46<br />

Traite elementaire d'automobile, suivi di notes techniques. 1919.<br />

A fairly comprehensive treatise on construction and performance.<br />

Society of Automotive Engineers.<br />

r 629.1 S67<br />

Constitution, by-laws, rules. 1919.<br />

Society of Automotive Engineers.<br />

S. A. E. handbook. 2v. 1918-19.<br />

v.i. S. A. E. standards and recommended practices.<br />

v.2. General engineering data, formulas and tables.<br />

Running title reads "S. A. E. data sheet."<br />

United States—Federal trade commission.<br />

Cost reports; coal, no.l-date. 1919-date.<br />

r 629.108 S67<br />

r 622.33 U25<br />

United States—Railways and canals committee. r 626.9 U25393<br />

Canal connecting Lake Erie and the Ohio river, etc.; hearings before<br />

the Committee on railways and canals, House of representatives, 65th<br />

congress, 2d session, on H. R. 11579, April 3, 1918. 1918.<br />

Virginia—Legislative reference bureau.<br />

r 625.7007 V34<br />

Road laws of the American states; a digest collected by L. H.<br />

Machen, director of the Legislative reference bureau of Virginia. 1919.<br />

Wade, Charles F.<br />

621.18 Wu<br />

Efficient boiler management, with notes on the operations of reheating<br />

furnaces. 1919. Longmans.<br />

Walton, Thomas H.<br />

qr 622.33 W19<br />

Coal mining described and illustrated. 1885. Baird.<br />

Domestic Economy<br />

Cooley, Anna Maria, and others.<br />

640.7 C78t<br />

Teaching home economics, by A. M. Cooley, C. M. Winchell, W. H.<br />

Spohr, J. A. Marshall. 1919. Macmillan.<br />

"References for collateral reading" at the end of each chapter: Bibliography, p.420-<br />

445 ' .<br />

"The object of this book is to offer suggestions for the <strong>org</strong>anization, administration,<br />

and teaching of the home economics studies." Preface.<br />

Manchester, H. H.<br />

r g 44 M32<br />

Evolution of cooking and heating. 1917.<br />

Published by Fuller and Warren Co. Troy, N. Y.<br />

Pamphlet, very fully illustrating early methods and devices.<br />

Business. Communication<br />

American Writing Paper Company, Holyoke, Mass. r 652 A51<br />

Business letter writing; booklet no.I-10. [1919?]<br />

Contents: Beginning of a business letter.—Ending of a business letter.—Clearness<br />

in a business letter.—Conciseness of a business letter.—Good paragraphing makes<br />

letters forceful.—Building good-will through courtesy.—Tone and general make-up of<br />

a , letter —Handling the angry customer.—Faulty expressions in letter-writing —Use of<br />

the dictionary in letter-writing.<br />

Prepared by Albert Highton.<br />

Edited partly from material originally issued bv the B. F. Goodrich Rubber Company<br />

and published especially for the use of employees of the American Writing<br />

er Company.


BOOKS ADDED—DECEMBER 1920<br />

Belt, Robert E.<br />

657.62172 B42<br />

Foundry cost accounting; practice and procedure. 1919. Privately<br />

printed.<br />

Offers a clear presentation of such features of cost accounting as are definitely<br />

applicable to the foundry industry. The necessary forms and records are shown and,<br />

with minor adaptations, the information here given can be satisfactorily applied in any<br />

foundry—ferrous or non-ferrous.<br />

Cole, Arthur B.<br />

654.1 C68<br />

Operation of wireless telegraph apparatus; a practical handbook<br />

fully explaining some of the methods whereby the radio experiments<br />

[sic] and operator may secure the greatest efficiency from his instruments.<br />

Ed.2. 1919. Cole. (Arts and sciences, no.4.)<br />

Mainly a non-technical description of equipment.<br />

but will be useful to the amateur.<br />

5-'i<br />

Lacks systematic arrangement,<br />

Consolidated Gas Company of New York.<br />

qr 657.453 C75<br />

In re theoretical depreciation; a discussion of the subject with an<br />

analysis of a paper by Dr Weber, statistician of the Public service commission<br />

for the first district, state of New York, entitled "Accounting<br />

for depreciation;" presented for the consideration of the Public service<br />

commission for the first district, state of New York; prepared by J. E.<br />

Allison. [1916?]<br />

Sloan, Clifford Alexander, & Mooney, J. D.<br />

659 S63<br />

Advertising the technical product. 1920. McGraw.<br />

"Bibliography," p.349~357-<br />

Information, suggestion, and criticism in a specialized but highly important<br />

field of publicity.<br />

Thompson, Clarence Bertrand.<br />

How to find factory costs. 1920. Shaw.<br />

Illustrated by charts and forms employed in various industries.<br />

Chemical Technology<br />

American Electrochemical Society. r 660.5502 A51<br />

Reference list of the electrochemical industry. 1919.<br />

A<br />

trade directory.<br />

657.524 T37<br />

Andros, Stephen Osgood, comp.<br />

665.5 A57<br />

Petroleum handbook. 1920. Shaw Pub. Co.<br />

Contents: Origin, accumulation and occurrence-Exploration and drilling-Methods<br />

of petroleum refining.-Natural gas and its products.-Shale-o,l industryL-<br />

Marketing of petroleum products.-Gasoline specifications, inspection laws and marketing<br />

prices.—The economic utilization of petroleum.<br />

"Sources of compilation," pref. p.[2-3].<br />

r, r 665.5 A57<br />

1 he sdttie<br />

Compact, judiciously compiled reference volume. Comprehensive in scope and valuable<br />

in content, but loses much of its reference value through lack of an index.<br />

_ . „. r 662.641 E32<br />

Eecke, Ch. van.<br />

Exploitation industrielle de la tourbe. 1918.<br />

ingenieurs tourbiers; principaux constructeurs de machines et installations.<br />

"Bibliographie," p.352-363.


522 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Formanek, Jaroslav.<br />

r 665.54 F77<br />

Benzin, benzinersatzstoffe und mineralschmiermittel; ihre untersuchung,<br />

beurteilung und verwendung. 1918.<br />

"Literaturquellen," p.243-245.<br />

Hart, Richard Newell.<br />

664.642 H31<br />

Leavening agents; yeast, leaven, salt-rising fermentation, baking<br />

powder, aerated bread, milk powder. 1914. Chemical Pub. Co.<br />

A dependable book on a subject on which comparatively little has appeared in<br />

book form. Considers fermentation briefly.<br />

Institute of American Meat Packers.<br />

r 664.9 I24<br />

Summary of testimony against Kenyon and Kendrick bills at the<br />

hearings before the Committee on agriculture and forestry of the United<br />

States Senate, August 18 to September 13, 1919. 1920.<br />

Leduc, E.<br />

r 666.9 L51<br />

Chaux et ciments. Ed.2, rev. & enl. 1919. (Encyclopedie industrielle.)<br />

Masse, Rene.<br />

qr 66s 7 M45<br />

Le gaz. 3v. 1914.<br />

v.i. Historique.—Approvisionnements de houille.<br />

v.2. Distillation de la houille.—Obtention du gaz par fabrications speciales.<br />

v.3. Traitement du gaz.—Services accessoires de la fabrication.—Groupement et<br />

liaison des divers services d'une usine a gaz; dispositions d'ensemble.—Distribution du<br />

gaz sous pression a longue distance.<br />

Comprehensive treatise.<br />

Oil and gas journal. qr 66s5 0lQ5<br />

North American oil and gas. 1919. (Supplement, May 30, 1919.)<br />

Review of resources and geology of the various fields, with information regarding<br />

refining practice.<br />

Reichert - J-<br />

r 669.1 R29<br />

Erz und eisen in Deutschlands zukunft. 1918.<br />

Pamphlet considering economic conditions.<br />

Smith, Ge<strong>org</strong>e Edson Philip.<br />

666.992 S64<br />

Machine-made cement pipe for irrigation systems and other purposes.<br />

1918. (Arizona—Agricultural experiment station Bulletin<br />

no.86.)<br />

The same. (In Arizona—Agricultural experiment station. Bulletin<br />

no86 - ) -<br />

r 630.6 A 7 ib no.86<br />

Valuable monograph written from the standpoint of practical engineering e<br />

Perience and furnishing engineering data on manufacture, installation, tests, and ser.<br />

Tate, Jones & Co. Pittsburgh.<br />

Fuel oil and its use. 1918. Pittsburgh.<br />

Trade literature possessing technical value.<br />

r 662 ?5 T23<br />

Fine Arts<br />

r 'V 7 10 C32<br />

Central heating, lighting and power plant; data relating to the construction<br />

of a central heating, lighting and power plant on the Mall<br />

in Washington, D. C, with supplemental papers thereon. 1916 (United<br />

States. 64th cong. ist sess. Senate. Doc. no.362 v 1- )<br />

Presented by Mr Newlands; referred to the Committee on printing. March 4 I9,6


BOOKS ADDED—DECEMBER 1920 523<br />

Le Brun, Charles.<br />

qb 7I4 L48<br />

Recueil de divers desseins de fontaines et de frises maritimes<br />

[1693?]<br />

Consists entirely of plates of fountains illustrating mythological subjects chiefly.<br />

Omaha, Neb.—City planning commission.<br />

qr 710 O24C<br />

City planning needs of Omaha; street widening and extensions, inner<br />

belt traffic way, river drive. [1919.]<br />

Raemaekers, Louis.<br />

qr 741 Ri3gr<br />

The great war; victory volume; the final phase from the entry of<br />

America to the conclusion of peace; 92 cartoons, with appreciation by<br />

H. P. Robinson and historical and descriptive notes by Cecil Roberts.<br />

1919. Fine Art Soc.<br />

Ricordi (G.) & C, Milan.<br />

qr 741 R43<br />

Gli avvisi delle officine G. Ricordi & C, Milano [plates].<br />

Colored plates of advertisements showing the work of the firm.<br />

Architecture<br />

American Face Brick Association.<br />

r 728 A51<br />

The story of brick; the permanence, beauty and economy of the face<br />

brick house. 1920.<br />

Architectural Corporation, New York city.<br />

q 728 A673<br />

Designs for American homes, [v.l.] 1919.<br />

Presents a number of specially chosen designs for bungalows, small cottages, country<br />

and suburban homes.<br />

Brown, Gerald Baldwin.<br />

b 723.1 B78<br />

From schola to cathedral; a study of early Christian architecture<br />

and its relation to the life of the church. 1886. Douglas.<br />

Considers the general position of the early Christian communities in the Roman<br />

world, and ecclesiastical architecture in the West and in the East during the early<br />

Christian and Byzantine periods. The appendix discusses the relation of the pagan<br />

basilica to the Christian church.<br />

Eberlein, Harold Donaldson.<br />

728 E21<br />

Making and furnishing outdoor rooms and porches. 1913. Mc­<br />

Bride. (House and garden making books.)<br />

Gives practical suggestions regarding both style and construction of porches.<br />

Landrieux, Maurice.<br />

b 726 L22<br />

La cathedrale de Reims; un crime allemand. 1919.<br />

An account of the damage wrought by the Germans during the great war. Illustrated<br />

with 96 plates.<br />

Stein, Henri.<br />

726 S81<br />

Les architectes des cathedrales gothiques; etude critique. [1909.]<br />

(Les grands artistes.)<br />

A study of Gothic architecture in France, with emphasis on the names of the architects.<br />

The Touchstone.<br />

1 728 T64<br />

Touchstone houses; designed by G. E. Fowler, director of Touchstone<br />

architectural dept.; 56 houses planned to solve the servant problem.<br />

[1919-] . , ,, ,<br />

Designs and plans for beautiful, practical, and economical small houses.


5-'4<br />

CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Vitry, Paul.<br />

qb 726 V357<br />

La cathedrale de Reims, architecture et sculpture. 2v. [1915?]<br />

Incomplete. Publication of text and title-pages delayed by the war. Comprises<br />

225 plates.<br />

[Wood, Robert.]<br />

qb 722.3 W8sr<br />

The ruins of Palmyra, otherwise Tedmor, in the desart [sic]. 1753.<br />

An account of a journey undertaken in 1751, describing Palmyra and attempting to<br />

reconstruct a brief history from its inscriptions and ruins. Contains 57 plates.<br />

Photography<br />

Photo-miniature.<br />

771.12 P52le<br />

Lens facts you should know in the choice and use of photographic<br />

lenses for different branches of photography; written from the practical<br />

viewpoint of everyday use. 1915. Tennant.<br />

Being "Photo-miniature," Aug. 1915, v.12, no.140.<br />

Photo-miniature.<br />

778.15 P52P<br />

Photographing the children; a modern handbook to this most interesting<br />

of all fields of photographic work, from every point of view, giving<br />

the fruits of experience and a few good illustrations. 1916. Tennant.<br />

"Books and prints," p.364.<br />

Being "Photo-miniature," Aug. 1916, v.13, no.152.<br />

Photo-miniature.<br />

778.4 P52P<br />

Practical instructions in color photography; an expert's methods in<br />

detail, giving the simplest and surest ways, with formulas, for obtaining<br />

photographs in color by the autochrome, Paget, hicro and kodachrome<br />

processes; by daylight and flashlight. Enlargements on solar<br />

paper. 1916. Tennant.<br />

"Books," p.138.<br />

Being "Photo-miniature," March 1916, v.13, no.147.<br />

United States—Education bureau.<br />

r 778.5 U25<br />

Educational institutions equipped with motion-picture projection<br />

machines. 1920. (Extension leaflet no.i.)<br />

An alphabetical list by state and city or town giving the name of the institution,<br />

the make of the machine owned, and the capacity of the auditorium.<br />

Wendell, Lehman.<br />

778.33 W51<br />

Systematic development of X-ray plates and films. 1919. Mosby Co.<br />

A non-technical treatment of the photographic phase of radiography.<br />

Music<br />

Fischer, Carl. q 7g g p 52<br />

Celebrated tutors; side drum, xylophone, tympanies and castanets.<br />

1891.<br />

A method of instruction, elementary and practical, with exercises, studies, solos.<br />

etc.. progressively arranged.<br />

Spalding, Walter Raymond.<br />

78 0 S73<br />

Music: an art and a language. [1920.] Schmidt.<br />

A study illustrating the basic principles of musical structure in their wider application.<br />

Based on lectures in the appreciation course at Harvard University.


BOOKS ADDED—DECEMBER 1920 525<br />

Wild, Walter. qM 782.9 W71<br />

Victory through conflict; a pageant of striving humanity by M. W.<br />

Brownson and V. E. Kerst; vocal score. 1920. Privately printed.<br />

[Pittsburgh.]<br />

Recreation<br />

M<strong>org</strong>an, Mordecai.<br />

794.! M89<br />

Chess digest, containing the opening moves of over 15,000 games<br />

systematically arranged under the various openings, practically including<br />

all games played in the leading tournaments and matches from the<br />

year 1850 to 1901-02, together with names of players and references to<br />

all the tournament books and periodicals in which the games have been<br />

reported. 3v. 1901-03. Patterson.<br />

Literature<br />

Abrahams, Israel.<br />

892.4 Aisb<br />

By-paths in Hebraic bookland. 1920. Jewish Publication Soc. of<br />

America.<br />

Papers discussing informally the lesser known Jewish writers and their works, as<br />

well as certain types of non-Jewish workers in the Hebraic field.<br />

Aeschines.<br />

885 A25<br />

Speeches, with an English translation by C. D. Adams. 1919. Heinemann.<br />

(Loeb classical library.)<br />

Contents: The speech against Timarchus.—The speech on the embassy.—The<br />

speech against Ctesiphon.<br />

"Bibliography," pref. p.19-21.<br />

Genlis, Stephanie Felicite Ducrest de St. Aubin,<br />

840.9 G29<br />

comtesse de, afterward marquise de Sillery.<br />

De l'influence des femmes sur la litterature frangaise, comme protectrices<br />

des lettres et comme auteurs; ou, Precis de I'histoire des femmes<br />

franchises les plus celebres. 1811.<br />

Perry, Bliss. 808.1 p 44<br />

Study of poetry. 1920. Houghton.<br />

"Bibliography," p.383-390. .<br />

An exposition of the genetic method of studying poetry in general and the lyric in<br />

particular.<br />

r<br />

Willson, Elizabeth.<br />

82I0 9 W 7 6<br />

Middle English legends of visits to the other world and their relation<br />

to the metrical romances. 1917. Privately printed.<br />

Thesis for Ph. D., University of Chicago.<br />

Poetry<br />

Pavicevic, Micun M.<br />

891.892 P32<br />

Mountain roses; selections from the poems of Mitchun M. Pavitchevitch<br />

(one of the foremost Serbian poets from Montenegro), rendered<br />

and edited in English by W. M. Petrovitch. 1918. [Omero.]


526 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

q 821.08 S693<br />

Some British ballads; illustrated by Arthur Rackham. [1919.] Dodd.<br />

The same


BOOKS ADDED—DECEMBER 1920 527<br />

Biography<br />

Bok, Edward William. g 2 Bsg8b<br />

Americanization of Edward Bok; the autobiography of a Dutch boy<br />

50 years after. 1920. Scribner.<br />

Reminiscences of the well known editor'of the "Ladies' home journal," beginning<br />

with his arrival in this country at the age of six. He gives accounts of his meetings<br />

with Longfellow, Emerson, Grant, Mark Twain, Gladstone, Roosevelt, and other prominent<br />

men.<br />

Carnegie, Andrew. 92 C216C<br />

Autobiography. 1920. Houghton.<br />

Edited by J. C. Van Dyke.<br />

"Bibliography," p.375-376.<br />

The same<br />

r 92 C2i6car<br />

Written during his summers in Scotland, up to 1914 when the war broke out. It<br />

is a simple record told in genial style with many anecdotes.<br />

Carnegie, Andrew. r 92 C2i6ca<br />

Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. Manual of the public<br />

benefactions of Andrew Carnegie. 1919.<br />

Describes the many foundations established by Carnegie. Includes the letters setting<br />

forth his beneficent aims for each.<br />

Chapman, John, called Johnny Appleseed. r g2 C368S<br />

Smith, E. R. Johnny Appleseed, a pioneer orchardist. 1916. Privately<br />

printed.<br />

A brief account of John Chapman who planted the first apple seeds in Ohio and<br />

Indiana and taught the settlers to care for the trees and cultivate the orchards.<br />

Frederick the Great. 92 F8gsy<br />

Young, Norwood. Life of Frederick the Great. 1919. Constable.<br />

"List of books," p.419-426.<br />

Material published during the last fifty years—"Politische correspondenz Friedrichs<br />

des Grossen" in 36 volumes, and "The military histories of the Austrian and German<br />

general staffs" in 26 volumes—both of which were unknown to Carlyle and Macaulay,<br />

forms the basis of this short account of the man who raised Prussia to the rank<br />

of a great power.<br />

Huneker, James Gibbons. 92 Hg33h<br />

Steeplejack. 2v. 1920. Scribner.<br />

An autobiography "not only rich in gossip about authors, musicians, surprising<br />

cranks and vagrants: it abounds in personal confessions of likes and dislikes.. .He<br />

has written in an unbuttoned manner, but not foolishly, in his revelations of his own<br />

capricious, discursive, lovable nature." Atlantic monthly, 1920.<br />

Kitchener, Horatio Herbert Kitchener, viscount. 92 K2g7a<br />

Arthur, Sir Ge<strong>org</strong>e Compton Archibald, bart. Life of Lord Kitchener.<br />

3v. 1920. Macmillan.<br />

Contains maps.<br />

The official biography, by Kitchener's private secretary. The first volume covers<br />

his early years, the Sudan campaign, and the period up to 1900; the second inc udes the<br />

Boer War, and his life in India and Egypt; the last volume is devoted to the world<br />

war. •Furnished as [the author]...is with a keen sense of proportion and a wide<br />

knowledge of men and things, possessor of a literary style which is at once graceful<br />

and trenchant, and having at his disposal much documentary matter which few besides<br />

himself have seen, he was equipped with special qualifications for undertaking<br />

this memoir... But the very fact of his intimate association with his late chief has in<br />

certain directions proved a handicap." Saturday review, 1920.


528 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Massenet, Jules fimileFrederic. 92 M456m<br />

My recollections; the authorized translation done at the master's express<br />

desire by his friend, H. V. Barnett. 1919. Small.<br />

This French composer has compiled from his diary the story of his career from the<br />

age of six when he had his first piano lesson.<br />

Roosevelt, Theodore. • 92 R684bi<br />

Bishop, Joseph Bucklin. Theodore Roosevelt and his time, shown<br />

in his own letters. 2v. 1920. Scribner.<br />

The same<br />

r 92 R684b<br />

Planned by Roosevelt before his death and mapped out by him with Mr Bishop<br />

who examined the great accumulation of correspondence. There are letters describing<br />

Roosevelt's childhood, the inside history of his career in the New York legislature, his<br />

life as governor of New York, the Panama Canal project, the Venezuela disputes, the<br />

Progressive campaign, the Barnes trial, and his work during the European war.<br />

Roosevelt, Theodore.<br />

92 R684roo<br />

Roosevelt Memorial Association. Theodore Roosevelt; a biographical<br />

sketch and excerpts from his writings and addresses. [1919.]<br />

"Theodore Roosevelt; a biographical sketch," by Hermann Hagedorn," p.3-18.<br />

"Books by Theodore Roosevelt," p.43; "Books about Roosevelt," p.43-44.<br />

Whiteley, Opal.<br />

92 W6422W<br />

Story of Opal; the journal of an understanding heart. 1920. Atlantic<br />

Monthly Press.<br />

Appeared in "Atlantic monthly," v.125-126, March-Aug. 1920.<br />

The same<br />

r 92 W642W<br />

The diary of a little orphan girl brought up in a lumber camp. Her impressions<br />

of life and its trials show remarkable insight into nature and unusual love for animals,<br />

plants, and people who understood her. Ascribed to her. sixth and seventh years.<br />

Collected Biography-<br />

Burnett, James Jehu.<br />

r 922 B93<br />

Sketches of Tennessee's pioneer Baptist preachers, being, incidentally,<br />

a history of Baptist beginnings in the several associations in the<br />

state, containing, particularly, character and life sketches of the standard-bearers<br />

and leaders of our people, commencing with the oldest<br />

communities of Baptists and covering, substantially, but not in detail,<br />

a period of 100 years (1775-1875) of Baptist effort and achievement in<br />

Tennessee, with an appendix of curious documents and bits and fragments<br />

of church history, v.i. 1919. Marshall.<br />

Travel and Description<br />

Europe<br />

Blake, A. H.<br />

Things seen in London. 1920. Dutton.<br />

914.21 B52<br />

Contents: The greatness of London.—The heart of London.—The city and the<br />

East end.—The greenery of London.—Historic houses.—Historical relics in the streets.<br />

—The life of the streets.—By the river.—London by night.


BOOKS ADDED—DECEMBER 1920 529<br />

United States<br />

Cowan, John Pryor, comp. r 917.4886 C84g<br />

Great men; their esteem for a great city [Pittsburgh]. 1919. Privately<br />

printed. Pittsburgh. ,<br />

Quotations about Pittsburgh from noted men such as Washington, Lafayette, Lincoln,<br />

and Roosevelt.<br />

Hopkins, Albert Allis. 9173 H78<br />

Our country and its resources; what we ought to know about agriculture,<br />

fisheries, forests, Panama canal, railroads, manufactures, automobiles,<br />

industrial preparedness, the new navy, the army, our money,<br />

aeronautics, motion pictures, the weather, astronomy, the nation's capital,<br />

the president, Congress, all about the government. 1918. Munn.<br />

(Scientific American series.)<br />

The same<br />

r 917.3 H78<br />

Lapsley, Gaillard Thomas, ed. 9*7-3 L32<br />

The America of today; lectures delivered at the local lectures summer<br />

meeting of the University of Cambridge, 1918. 1919. Cambridge<br />

University Press.<br />

Contents: Introduction, by Gaillard Lapsley.—English influence on American<br />

ideals of justice and liberty, by H. D. Hazeltine.—State and municipal government in<br />

the United States; Social legislation and administration, by Lord Eustace Percy.—<br />

Characteristics of American industrial conditions; The relation of the American government<br />

to business, by P. B. Kennedy.—Some aspects of recent party history in the<br />

United States, by J. D. Greene.—American universities; their beginnings and development,<br />

by J. W. Cunliffe.—State universities, school systems and colleges in the United<br />

State's of America, by G. E. MacLean.—Literature in contemporary America, by H. S.<br />

Canby.—Two American philosophers, William James and Josiah Royce, by Ge<strong>org</strong>e<br />

Santayana.—The position of women in America, by Mrs Bowlker.<br />

Shipley, Arthur Everett. 917-3 S557<br />

Voyage of a vice-chancellor, with a chapter on university education<br />

in the United States. 1919- Putnam.<br />

Extracts from the diary of a member of the British University Mission, which<br />

toured the United States in 1918. He recounts a number of amusing incidents, records<br />

his impressions of education in this country, and tells of a maze of banquets and<br />

receptions.<br />

Other Countries<br />

Beaver, Wilfred N. 9 19 ' 5 Bss<br />

Unexplored New Guinea; a record of the travels, adventures and experiences<br />

of a resident magistrate amongst the head-hunting savages<br />

and cannibals of the unexplored interior of New Guinea, with an introduction<br />

by A. C. Haddon. 1920. Lippincott.<br />

"Ethnological papers by the author," p.15.<br />

Contains maps.<br />

Franck, Harry Alverson. 9I7 29 F8?<br />

'<br />

Roaming through the West Indies. 1920 Century.<br />

The record of an eight months tour of the Antilles, including Cuba Haiti, San<br />

Donlgo, Porto Rico? the Virgin Islands, the British and French West Indies.<br />

^iZers from the Holy Land; flowers gatheredIn^ssed<br />

in Palestine; introduction by Smith Baker. [,899?] Privately printed.


530 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Lanning, John Francis. 918 L27<br />

Around South America with a sample case. 1920. Williams Printing<br />

Co.<br />

Informal account of a trip, giving data about important South American industries,<br />

Shackleton, Sir Ernest Henry.<br />

q 919.9 S52S<br />

South; the story of Shackleton's last expedition, 1914-17. 1919.<br />

Heinemann.<br />

Appendices: Scientific work; Sea-ice nomenclature, by J. M. Wordie.—Meteorology,<br />

by L. D. A. Hussey.—Physics, by R. W. James.—South Atlantic whales and<br />

whaling, by R. S. Clark.—The expedition huts at McMurdo sound, by Sir E. H. Shackleton.<br />

An account of the explorer's attempt to cross the Antarctic continent after the discovery<br />

of the South pole by Amundsen.<br />

History<br />

General<br />

Cram, Ralph Adams.<br />

901 C86<br />

Walled towns. 1919. Marshall Jones Co.<br />

A criticism of modern civilization, suggesting cities of refuge as a remedy and describing<br />

all phases of life within these "walled towns."<br />

Europe<br />

Chateaubriand, Frangois Auguste, vicomte de.<br />

937 C39<br />

Etudes; ou, Discours historiques sur la chute de l'empire Romain, la<br />

naissance et les progres du Christianisme, et l'invasion des barbares;<br />

suivis d'une analyse raisonnee de I'histoire de France. 4v. 1831.<br />

Escouflaire, Rodolphe C.<br />

941.5 E79<br />

Ireland an enemy of the allies? 1919. Murray.<br />

"After an independent study of Ireland's relations with England. .. [the author]<br />

declares categorically that the whole Irish claim of oppression by England, so far as<br />

the present generation is concerned, is a myth." Review of reviews, 1920.<br />

Murray, Ge<strong>org</strong>e Gilbert Aime.<br />

938 M970<br />

Our great war and the great war of the ancient Greeks. 1920. Seltzer.<br />

(Creighton lecture, 1918.)<br />

First published in England under title "Aristophanes and the war party."<br />

A comparison of the Peloponnesian war and the world war, showing striking similarities.<br />

Based chiefly on the dramas of Aristophanes.<br />

United States<br />

Marble, Mrs Annie (Russell).<br />

974. 4 M36<br />

The women who came in the Mayflower. 1920. Pilgrim Press.<br />

"This little book is intended as a memorial to the women who came in the Mayflower,<br />

and their comrades who came later in the Ann and the Fortune. . .The effort<br />

is to reveal glimpses of the communal life during 1621-1623." Foreword.<br />

Root, Elihu.<br />

973-9132 R68<br />

United States and the war, The mission to Russia, Political addresses;<br />

collected and ed. by Robert Bacon and J. B. Scott. 1918. Harvard<br />

University Press.<br />

Includes speeches on universal military service, and political addresses delivered<br />

trom 1004 to 1916 inclusive.


BOOKS ADDED—DECEMBER 1920 531<br />

Other Countries<br />

Cory, Ge<strong>org</strong>e Edward.<br />

068 C83<br />

Rise of South Africa; a history of the origin of South African colonisation<br />

and of its development towards the east from the earliest times<br />

to 1857. v.1-3. 1910-19. Longmans.<br />

v.i. From the earliest times to the year 1820.<br />

v.2. 1820-1834.<br />

v.3. 1834-1840.<br />

qr 980 H61<br />

Hispanic American historical review; quarterly, Feb. 1918-date. v.idate.<br />

1918-date.<br />

Maunier, Rene. r OI6. 9 6 2 M49<br />

Bibliographie economique, juridique et sociale de l'figypte moderne<br />

(1798-1916). 1918. (Travaux speciaux de la Societe sultanieh d'economie<br />

politique, de statistique et de legislation, no.i.)<br />

European War<br />

Bogart, Ernest Ludlow.<br />

qr 940.923 Bs8d<br />

Direct and indirect costs of the great world war. 1919. Oxford<br />

University Press, Amer. branch.<br />

"Bibliography," p.301-330.<br />

Issued in the series Preliminary economic studies of the war by the Division of<br />

economics and history of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.<br />

Gives tables and estimates for each of the countries concerned.<br />

Bullitt, William C.<br />

940.916 B87<br />

Bullitt mission to Russia; testimony before the Committee on foreign<br />

relations, United States senate. [1920.] Huebsch.<br />

Report of his activities as chief of the Current intelligence section of the Peace Conference<br />

and as special emissary to Russia.<br />

Callwell, Sir Charles Edward.<br />

940.913 C13<br />

The Dardanelles. 1919. Constable. (Campaigns and their lessons.)<br />

"List of authorities consulted," p.348-349.<br />

Contains maps.<br />

Designed as a study of certain phases of the Dardanelles campaign of the world<br />

war rather than as a formal history. Emphasizes strategical aspects and incidents with<br />

special tactical interest.<br />

Grelling, Richard.<br />

940.912 G87b<br />

Belgian documents (Belgische aktenstiicke); a companion volume<br />

to "The crime;" tr. by Alexander Gray. 1919. Hodder.<br />

Contents: Introduction.—The Belgian ambassadorial reports.—The Belgian grey<br />

books.—Baron Beyens' book: "Germany before the war."—Concluding observations.<br />

A study of Belgian-German diplomatic history from 1905 to 1914.<br />

Guyot, Yves.<br />

940.911 G99<br />

Causes and consequences of the war; tr. by F. A. Holt. 1916.<br />

Hutchinson.<br />

An account of the political, economic, and historical causes of the world war.<br />

with a discussion of terms which the author thinks would produce a lasting peace.<br />

Lock, H. O.<br />

940.913 L75<br />

With the British army in the Holy Land. 1919- Scott.<br />

Contains maps.<br />

A personal narrative of the Palestine campaign during the great war.


532 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Malins, Geoffrey H. 940.913 M28<br />

How I filmed the war; a record of the extraordinary experiences of<br />

the man who filmed the great Somme battles, etc., edited by Low Warren.<br />

1920. Jenkins.<br />

An account of the adventures of one of England's official war office cinematographers.<br />

Illustrated with photographs taken at the front by the author.<br />

Pennsylvania—Committee of public safety. r 940.917 P399<br />

Outline of departmental activities. [1918.]<br />

[Pirie-Gordon, Charles Harry Clinton, ed.] qr 940.913 P65<br />

Brief record of the advance of the Egyptian expeditionary force<br />

under the command of Gen. Sir E. H. H. Allenby, July 1917 to Oct.<br />

1918; comp. from official sources. 1919. H. M. Stationery Off.<br />

Includes 56 full-page maps.<br />

Ward, John, b. 1866. 940.913 W21<br />

With the "Die-hards" in Siberia. 1920. Cassell.<br />

A narrative of the expedition undertaken by the English army in behalf of Admiral<br />

Koltchak. Colonel Ward contends that if the allies had united in recognizing Koltchak's<br />

government and in fulfilling their promise to support him, the Bolsheviks would<br />

have disappeared.<br />

Books for the Blind<br />

The Library has a collection of about 3,700 books and 75 periodicals for the blind.<br />

The Pennsylvania Home Teaching Society and Free Circulating Library for the Blind<br />

supports in this district a teacher, herself totally blind, who, under the direction of this<br />

Library, visits the adult blind in their homes and teaches them to read. This service<br />

and the use of the books are absolutely free to all the adult blind in Pittsburgh and western<br />

Pennsylvania and the Director requests that names and addreses of such persons be<br />

sent to him in order that the teacher may call upon them.<br />

American Braille with Contractions<br />

Plato.<br />

qE 888 P68<br />

Selections from the works of Plato. 2 pts. in 2v. 1896. Missouri<br />

School for the Blind.<br />

New York Point<br />

Lippmann, Julie Mathilde. qE L733m<br />

Martha by-the-day. Clovernook Printing House for the Blind.<br />

Revised Braille with Contractions<br />

Baldwin, James. qE g04 Blga<br />

Fifty famous stories retold. 2v. 1919. Amer. Printing House for<br />

the Blind.<br />

Bangs, John Kendrick. qE B226I<br />

Little book of Christmas. Pennsylvania Institution for the Instruction<br />

of the Blind.<br />

Browne, Frances. qE B8lIW<br />

The wonderful chair and the tales it told. 2v. Amer. Printing House<br />

for the Blind.


BOOKS ADDED—DECEMBER 1920 533<br />

Craik, Mrs Dinah Maria (Mulock). qE C863I<br />

Little lame prince. Amer. Printing House for the Blind.<br />

Gatlin, Dana.<br />

qE G234f<br />

Full measure of devotion. Perkins Institution for the Blind.<br />

Hawkes, Clarence.<br />

qE 92 H3642g<br />

The good fight, with a chapter on Pastimes and recreations from<br />

"Hitting the dark trail." 1919. Perkins Institution for the Blind.<br />

Roman Catholic church.<br />

qE 282 R6sa2<br />

Catechism of Christian doctrine; prepared and enjoined by order of<br />

the third Plenary council of Baltimore; pub. with the approbation of<br />

Rev. James Quigley; stereotyped and printed for the Xavier Braille<br />

Publication Society for the Blind. 1918. Xavier Free Publication Soc.<br />

for the Blind.<br />

Ruskin, John.<br />

qE R8g9k2<br />

King of the Golden river; or, The black brothers; a legend of Stiria.<br />

Amer. Printing House for the Blind.<br />

Stockton, Frank Richard.<br />

E S866bo<br />

A borrowed month, from "The Christmas wreck, and other stories."<br />

Pennsylvania School for the Instruction of the Blind.<br />

Young People's Books<br />

Guigou, Paul, & Vimar, Auguste. j 843 G96<br />

L'arche de Noe.<br />

Many pictures in color of the animals in Noah's ark.<br />

Text is in French.<br />

Mother Goose melodies.<br />

J 398.8 Mg 3 nu<br />

Nursery rhymes, with drawings by L. L. Brooke; rhymes and lullabies.<br />

Warne.<br />

A little book for little children, with eight pictures in color and others in black<br />

and White '<br />

Some British ballads; illustrated by Arthur Rackham.<br />

qj 821.08 S69<br />

[1919-] D°


Rules for Lending Books<br />

I. Hours. The adult Lending Rooms of the Central and branch<br />

libraries are open daily from 9 a. m to 9 p. m., Sundays and holidays<br />

excepted. The Children's Rooms in the branches are closed after 6 p. m.<br />

The Central Children's Room is open daily except Sundays and holidays<br />

from 9 a. m. to 9 p. m.<br />

2. Borrowers. Any resident or taxpayer of Pittsburgh is entitled<br />

to borrow books from the Library by signing the proper application<br />

and agreement and receiving a borrower's card. In the case of a child<br />

under fourteen years of age the application must also be signed by the<br />

parent or guardian.<br />

Non-residents who can call at the Library for their books may<br />

obtain a borrower's card on payment of one dollar a year in advance.<br />

For non-residents who wish their books sent by mail or express the<br />

annual fee is two dollars. If a non-resident is employed or attending<br />

school in the city the guaranty of a resident tax-payer will be accepted<br />

instead of this fee.<br />

Temporary residents may borrow books on making a deposit of<br />

five dollars, or moreif deemed desirable, this sum to be returned to the<br />

depositor upon surrender of his borrower's card.<br />

3. Borrowers' cards. A borrower's card may be used at'the Central<br />

and branch libraries.<br />

Each borrower is responsible for all books charged on his card.<br />

Change of residence must be reported immediately.<br />

Lost cards should be reported at once. Adult cards will be replaced<br />

fourteen days after notice of such loss. Juvenile cards will be replaced<br />

fourteen days after notice of loss is given upon the payment of a fine<br />

of five cents, or replaced without payment six months after notice of<br />

loss is given.<br />

4. Issue of books. Holders of adult cards may borrow as many<br />

books of non-fiction as are needed at one time, together with two books<br />

of fiction, only one of which shall have been published within the current<br />

or the preceding year. Holders of juvenile cards may borrow two<br />

juvenile books at one time.<br />

Books may be kept two weeks, except some new and popular<br />

books, which may be kept but seven days. Magazines are lent for<br />

seven days only.<br />

5.14


RULES FOR LENDING BOOKS 535<br />

5. Renewals. Non-fiction and certain standard fiction may be<br />

once renewed for two weeks from the date on which the request for<br />

renewal is received.<br />

Requests for renewal may be made in person, by mail, or by telephone.<br />

In each case the call number of the book, the number of the<br />

borrower's card, and the date on which the book is due must be given.<br />

In return the borrower will receive a renewal card, which must be<br />

brought with the book when it is returned.<br />

6. Reserves. Books may be reserved at the Library by payment<br />

of one cent for a postal card notice. As soon as the book is returned<br />

to the Library, this postal card will be mailed to the person making<br />

the request, and the book will be reserved two days. Requests for<br />

reserves may be made by telephone, in which case the cost of the postal<br />

card will be collected when the borrower calls for the book.<br />

7. Fines. A fine of two cents a day (including Sundays and holidays)<br />

must be paid on each book kept overtime. The holder of a<br />

juvenile card may forfeit the use of his card for six months from the<br />

date upon which an overdue book is returned in place of payment of<br />

this fine. If a book is not returned within three weeks after the date<br />

on which it is due, a messenger will be sent for it. This messenger has<br />

authority to collect the fine incurred and an additional fee of twentyfive<br />

cents for messenger service.<br />

A borrower must pay for books lost or injured while charged on<br />

his card. No books may be borrowed until fines and claims for damages<br />

have been paid.<br />

No claim can be established because of the failure of the Post<br />

Office to deliver notices to or from the Library.


Schedule of Library Hours<br />

Central Library—Reference, Technology and Periodical Rooms<br />

open week days from 9 a. m. to 10 p. m.; Sunday from 2 to 6 p. m. Lending<br />

Room open week days from 9 a. m. to 9 p. m. Childrens Room open<br />

week days from 9 a. m. to 9 p. m. (See schedule of holiday hours below.)<br />

Branch Libraries—Open week days from 9 a. m. to 9 p. m. Childrens<br />

Rooms open from 9 a. m. to 6 p. m. (See schedule of holiday<br />

hours below.)<br />

New Year's Day. Central Library—Reading rooms open from 9 a. m.<br />

to 10 p. m. Lending Room closed. Branch Libraries—Reading rooms<br />

open from 2 to 6 p. m. No books issued for home use.<br />

Washington's Birthday. All departments open as usual.<br />

Good Friday. All departments open as usual.<br />

Memorial Day. All departments closed.<br />

July Fourth. All departments closed.<br />

Labor Day. All departments open as usual.<br />

Thanksgiving Day. Central Library—Reading rooms open from 9<br />

a. m. to 10 p. m. Lending Room closed. Branch Libraries—Reading<br />

rooms open from 2 to 6 p. m. No books issued for home use.<br />

Christmas. All departments closed from 6 p. m. December 24 to<br />

9 a. m. December 26.<br />

536


Publications of the Library Now in Print<br />

Prices. Where two prices are given, the first is that for which<br />

the publication is sold at the Library only. All prices are strictly net,<br />

except for individual publications ordered in lots of twenty or more.<br />

Remittances must be made in advance, payable to Carnegie Library of<br />

Pittsburgh. All publications not marked * may be had free at the<br />

Library, or will be sent postpaid for 5 cents each.<br />

•Classified Catalogue of the Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh.<br />

FIRST SERIES, 1895-1902. 1907. vol. 1-3. 3,890 pp. $12.00.<br />

SECOND SERIES, 1902-1906. 1908. vol. 4-5. 2,020 pp. $5.00.<br />

THIRD SERIES, 1907-1911. 1914. vol. 6-8. 3,475 pp. $8.00.<br />

Bound in buckram with gilt tops. Include full author and subject indexes.<br />

The same [in pamphlet form].<br />

FIRST SERIES, 1895-1902. 10 parts. 1903-07.<br />

Part 1. General Works. 1907. 67 pp. 10 cents, postpaid.<br />

Part 2. Philosophy and Religion. 1903. 223 pp. Out of print.<br />

Part 3. Sociology and Philology. 1904. 340 pp. 15 cents; postpaid, 25 cents.<br />

Part 4. Natural Science and Useful Arts. 1904. 598 pp. 35 cents; postpaid,<br />

50 cents.<br />

Part 5. Fine Arts. 1905. 351 pp. 15 cents; postpaid, 25 cents.<br />

Part 6. Literature. 1905. 308 pp. 15 cents; postpaid, 25 cents.<br />

Part 7. Fiction. 1906. 446 pp. 25 cents; postpaid, 40 cents.<br />

Part 8. History and Travel. 1907- 691 pp. 50 cents; postpaid, 65 cents.<br />

Part 9. Biography. 1907. 381 pp. 20 cents; postpaid, 30 cents.<br />

Part 10. Indexes, Title Pages, Contents, Preface and Synopsis of Classification.<br />

1907. 850 pp. $1.00; postpaid, $1.20.<br />

SECOND SERIES, 1902-1906. 5 parts. 1907-08.<br />

Part 1. General Works, Philosophy, Religion, Sociology and Philology. 1907.<br />

425 pp. Out of print.<br />

Part 2. Natural Science, Useful Arts and Fine Arts. 1907- 477 PP- 45<br />

cents ; postpaid, 60 cents.<br />

Part 3. Literature, English Fiction and Fiction in Foreign Languages. 1908.<br />

342 pp. 40 cents ; postpaid, 50 cents.<br />

Part 4. History and Travel, Collected Biography and Individual Biography.<br />

1908. 465 pp. 45 cents; postpaid, 60 cents.<br />

Part 5. Indexes, Title-Pages, Contents, Preface and Synopsis of Classification.<br />

1908. 460 pp. 80 cents; postpaid, 95 cents.<br />

THIRD SERIES, 1907-1911. 10 parts. 1912-14.<br />

Part 1. General Works, Philosophy, Religion. 1912. 372 PP- 40 cents,<br />

postpaid, 50 cents. ., c ,<br />

Part 2. Sociology, Philology. 1912- 418 PP- 45 cents; postpaid, 60 cents.<br />

Part 3. Natural Science, Useful Arts. 19.3. 623 pp. 60 cents; postpaid,<br />

75 cents. ., , '<br />

Part 4. Fine Arts. .9.3. 237 PP- *5 cents; postpaid, 35 cents.<br />

Part 5. Literature. 1913- 271pp. 30 cents; postpaid, 40 cents.<br />

Part 6. English Fiction, Fiction in Foreign Languages. 1913- *94 PP- 3<br />

cents; postpaid, 40 cents. „„„ t„-;4 ,„ rents<br />

Part 7. History and Travel. .914. 401 PP- 40 cents; postpaid, 50 cents.<br />

Part 8 Biography. 1914. 276 PP- 30 cents; postpaid, 40 cents.<br />

Pa 9! Books for the Blind. „., 44 PP- 5 cents; postpaid, to cents<br />

Part 10 Indexes, Title-Pages, Contents, Preface and Synopsis of Classification.<br />

1914. 816 pp. 80 cents; postpaid, $1.00.<br />

FOURTH SERIES, 1912-1916. 10 parts. 1919-<br />

Part 1 General Works, Philosophy, Religion. .9.9- 208 pp. 50 cents,<br />

Parrr d Sociol C ogy: S p h i.olo g y. .9.9- 360 pp. 80 cents; postpaid ,5cents.<br />

Part 3. Natural Science, Useful Arts. .920. 536 pp. $.-.5, postpaid, $1.30.<br />

537


538 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Monthly Bulletin. 50 cents a year, postpaid.<br />

Not published in August and September.<br />

Annual Reports, ist-24th, 1896-1919. Sent free upon request.<br />

Except the 3d, 6th and 20th, which are out of print.<br />

Books in the Library of the American Philatelic Society. 1910. 20 pp.<br />

Carnegie Institute and Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh (Handbook).<br />

1920. 72 pp. 25 cents; postpaid, 30 cents.<br />

Catalogue of Books in the Children's Department of the Carnegie Library<br />

of Pittsburgh. 2d edition. 1920. Volume I: Author List<br />

and Title List. 465 pp. $1; postpaid, $1.15.<br />

Catalogue of the Carnegie Library School; a school for training in<br />

General Library Work, Library Work with Children and School<br />

Library Work. Sent free upon request.<br />

*Debate Index. 3d edition. 1919. 116 pp. 25 cents; postpaid, 30 cents.<br />

The Function of the Public Library in a Democracy. 1920. 20 pp.<br />

Periodicals and Other Serials Currently Received by the Carnegie<br />

Library of Pittsburgh. 7th edition. 1915. 42 pp.<br />

Rules for Filing Cards in the Dictionary Catalogues of the Carnegie<br />

Library of Pittsburgh. Reprint of 2d edition. 1918. 32 pp.<br />

What a Public Library Finds to Do; by Elisa May Willard. 1917. 18 pp.<br />

Reference Lists<br />

History<br />

Books of Interest in Connection with the European War.<br />

1914. 26 pp.<br />

Braddock's Expedition. 11 pp. (Monthly Bulletin, Nov. 1906.)<br />

England and the English; a Few Suggestions for Reading. 1918. 12 pp.<br />

Expedition of General Forbes against Fort Duquesne. 1908. 20 pp.<br />

Expeditions of General Bouquet to the Ohio Country, 1763 and 1764.<br />

11 pp. (Monthly Bulletin, Dec. 1909.)<br />

Letters of General Forbes; Reprint of 35 Letters Relating to the Expedition<br />

against Fort Duquesne. 63 pp. 20 cents; postpaid,<br />

25 cents. (Monthly Bulletin, Feb.-May 1909.)<br />

•Pennsylvania; a Reading List for the Use of Schools, with Special<br />

Reference to Indian Warfare and the Local History of Pittsburgh,<br />

1911. 83 pp. 20 cents; postpaid, 25 cents.<br />

The Pilgrims; Selected Material for Use in Connection with the Pilgrim<br />

Tercentenary Celebration. 1920. 13 pp.<br />

Pittsburgh in 1816. 1916. 75 pp.<br />

Washington's Visits to Pittsburgh and the Ohio Country. 15 pp.<br />

(Monthly Bulletin, Feb. 1908.)<br />

The Whiskey Insurrection. 9 pp. (Monthly Bulletin, July 1906.)<br />

Biography<br />

Famous Royal Women; a Reading List for Girls. 1908. 11 pp.<br />

Lives and Letters; a Selected and Annotated List. 1910. 36pp.


PUBLICATIONS OF THE LIBRARY 539<br />

*Men of Science and Industry; a Guide to the Biographies of Scientists<br />

Engineers, Inventors and Physicians, in the Carnegie Library of<br />

Pittsburgh. 1915. 189pp. 20 cents; postpaid, 30 cents.<br />

Sociology<br />

Foreign-born Americans; Their Contribution to American Life and<br />

Culture. 1920. 36 pp.<br />

Housing. 1912. 45 pp.<br />

Immigration. 1918. 12 pp.<br />

Vocational Guidance. Supplement. 10 pp. (Monthly Bulletin, Dec.<br />

I9I5-)<br />

Publications of Interest to Engineers<br />

Air-Brakes. 1915. 55 pp.<br />

Air Conditioning. 1914. 58 pp.<br />

Brick Manufacture and Bricklaying. 26 pp. (Monthly Bulletin, Jan.<br />

1912.)<br />

By-Product Coking. 1915. 40 pp.<br />

Case-Hardening. 1918. 10 pp.<br />

Electric Driving in Rolling-Mills and Foundries. 11 pp. (Monthly<br />

Bulletin, Nov. 1907.)<br />

Engineering Ethics. 1917. 17 pp.<br />

Floods and Flood Protection. 48 pp. (Monthly Bulletin, July 1908.)<br />

Floods and Flood Protection. Supplement. 1911. 19 pp.<br />

The Gyroscope. 1917. 23 pp.<br />

*Index to Proceedings of the Engineers' Society of Western Pennsylvania.<br />

Volumes 1 to 20, 1880-1904; Compiled by Harrison W.<br />

Craver. 1906. 144 pp. $1 postpaid.<br />

•Index to the Classified Catalogue of the Technology Department. 2d<br />

edition. 1916. 63 pp. 10 cents; postpaid, 15 cents.<br />

Lampblack. 1919. 8 pp.<br />

List of Technical Indexes and Bibliographies Appearing Serially. 1910.<br />

17 pp.<br />

Market Prices Appearing Currently in Technical and Trade Journals.<br />

1918. 6 pp.<br />

*Men of Science and Industry; a Guide to the Biographies of Scientists,<br />

Engineers, Inventors and Physicians, in the Carnegie Library of<br />

Pittsburgh. 1915. 189 pp. 20 cents; postpaid, 30 cents.<br />

Metal Corrosion and Protection. 2d edition, revised and enlarged.<br />

58 pp. (Monthly Bulletin, July 1909.)<br />

Mica. 12 pp. (Monthly Bulletin, Oct. 1908.)<br />

Refuse and Garbage Disposal. 1909- 39 PP-<br />

Road Dust Preventives. 1916. 39 PP-<br />

*Sand; its Occurrence, Properties and Uses. 1918. 72 pp. 15 cents;<br />

postpaid, 20 cents.<br />

Scientific and Technical Reference Books. 19 PP- (Monthly Bulletin,<br />

Nov. 1916.)


540 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

•Sewage Disposal and Treatment. 1910. 96 pp. 15 cents; postpaid,<br />

20 cents.<br />

Smoke Prevention. 18 pp. (Monthly Bulletin, May 1907.)<br />

Sodium Nitrate Industry of Chile. 7 pp. (Monthly Bulletin, March<br />

1908.)<br />

Steam Turbines. 21 pp. (Monthly Bulletin, Nov. 1904.)<br />

•Technical Book Review Index, v.i-date, March 1917-date. 50 cents<br />

a year, postpaid.<br />

No.1-3, March, April, May, 1917, published in the Monthly Bulletin of those<br />

months, 5 cents each, postpaid.<br />

v.i, no.4-v.4, no.2 (July 1917-June 1920), issued separately, quarterly, 15 cents<br />

each, postpaid.<br />

Trees and Forestry. 1917. 18 pp.<br />

Library Work with Children<br />

•Annotated Catalogue of Books Used in the Home Libraries and<br />

Reading Clubs. 1905. no pp. 20 cents; postpaid, 25 cents.<br />

•Catalogue of Books, Annotated and Arranged, and Provided by the<br />

Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh for the Use of the First Eight<br />

Grades in the Pittsburgh Schools. 1907. 331 pp. 35 cents;<br />

postpaid, 50 cents.<br />

Patriotism Through Literature; by Elva S. Smith. 1919. 17 pp.<br />

(Monthly Bulletin, June 1919.)<br />

Story-Telling<br />

Stories from the Ballads of Robin Hood; Outlines for Story-Telling.<br />

1914. 38 pp.<br />

Stories from the Greek Myths. 1912. 29 pp.<br />

Stories from the Iliad and the Odyssey. 1912. 30 pp.<br />

Stories from the Norse; Outlines for Story-Telling. 1914. 22 pp.<br />

•Stories to Tell to Children. 2d edition. 1918. 72 pp. 25 cents; postpaid,<br />

30 cents.<br />

Story Hour Courses for Children from Greek Myths, the Iliad and the<br />

Odyssey. 1906. 32 pp.<br />

Reading Lists<br />

Famous Royal Women; a Reading List for Girls. 1908. 11 pp.<br />

"Foreign Lands Where Wonders Are." 1911. 14 pp.<br />

•Pennsylvania; a Reading List for the Use of Schools, with Special<br />

Reference to Indian Warfare and the Local History of Pittsburgh.<br />

1911. 83 pp. 20 cents, postpaid, 25 cents.<br />

December 14. 1920.


Index to Authors<br />

With titles for fiction<br />

Call number<br />

Abbott, J. The wonder gate 793.1 A13 ..<br />

Abbott, L. F. Impressions of Roosevelt 92 R684a. .<br />

Abrahams, I. By-paths in Hebraic bookland 892.4 Aisb. .<br />

- -39<br />

•5^5<br />

Academie Royale des Sciences, des Lettres et des<br />

Beaux-arts de Belgique, Brussels. Biographie<br />

nationale r 920 A16.<br />

Achard, A. Le clos-pommier<br />

843 A17C.<br />

Acworth, W. M. Government ownership of railroads<br />

in foreign countries r 385 A18.<br />

Adam, H. P. Paris sees it through 940.918 A19.<br />

Adams, H. Degradation of the democratic dogma...901 A2132.<br />

Adcock, A. St. J. For remembrance 821.09 A22.<br />

Ade, G. Hand-made fables<br />

817 A22I1.<br />

Adriacus, pseud. From Trieste to Valona 943-6 A24.<br />

The adventurous lady. Snaith S66gad .<br />

Aeschines. Speeches 885 A25 .<br />

/Esop. yEsop for children qj 398.91 A25ae .<br />

Affinities. Rinehart R472af f.<br />

After thirty. Street 89153a.<br />

Agate, J. E. Responsibility A263r.<br />

Agricultural index qr 630.5 A27.<br />

Aigueperse, M. Le choix de Maura 843 A28.<br />

Kerdelec doit... Kerdelec veut!<br />

843 A>8k.<br />

Aiken, C. P. Scepticisms 811.09 A29.<br />

Air men o' war. Cable C 1132a.<br />

Aircraft year book r 533.6 A29.<br />

Alabama Power Company. Power development in<br />

Alabama Q r 621.341 A31.<br />

Alcott, L. M. A modern Mephistopheles, and A whisper<br />

in the dark<br />

A3551T1.<br />

Alden, G. I. Study of electricity by the deductive<br />

method 537 A35.<br />

Aldington, Mrs H. (Doolittle). Sea garden 811 A363.<br />

Aldrich, M. When Johnny comes marching home..940.91 A36W.<br />

Alex the Great. Witwer W82 9 a.<br />

Alexander, C. School statistics and publicity 379-73 A37.<br />

Page<br />

.526


542 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Call number<br />

Alexander, C. B. Moral science and academic freedom . . 377 A37.... 280<br />

Alice and a family. Ervine E788a.. .. 111<br />

All roads lead to Calvary. Jerome J28ia .. ..112<br />

Allan Quatermain. Haggard Hi4ial. . . .365<br />

Allem, M. fipigrammes franchises 848 A42 81<br />

Allen, A. W. Handbook of ore dressing 622.7 A42.. . .395<br />

Allen, F. J. Advertising as a vocation 659.07 A42. . .. 179<br />

Allen, G. The cheap cottage and small house 728.6 A42. . . .402<br />

Allen, R. G. Principles & practice of electrical<br />

testing 621.318 A42.. . .396<br />

Aller, C. C. An industrial survey of Seattle r 330.9 A43. . . .449<br />

Allied and Associated Powers (1914- ). Treaty<br />

with German}', June 28, 1919. Treat}' of<br />

peace qr 341.2 A43t 453<br />

Treaty of peace with Germany 341.2 A43 .... 117<br />

The same r 341.2 A43 .... 117<br />

The same<br />

q 341.2 A43a....ii7<br />

Allinson, E. P. & Penrose, B. City government of<br />

Philadelphia 352 A43 .... 448<br />

The same<br />

r 305 J35 v.5....448<br />

Almquist, C. J. L. Sara Videbeck, and The chapel A452S .... 501<br />

Altair, pseud. Chaos<br />

812 A46....241<br />

Althaus, B. Selected violin solos 787.1 A46. . . .403<br />

Altsheler, J. A. Forest of swords .\466fo.... 227<br />

Hosts of the air .\466hs.. . .227<br />

The lost hunters<br />

j A466I....139<br />

Ambush. White W6363a.... 443<br />

American Academy in Rome. Annual report qr 707 A51....336<br />

American Academy of Political and Social Science.<br />

Industries in readjustment<br />

338 A51....168<br />

The same r 306 A51 v.82 168<br />

Railroad problem 385 Asir.. . .385<br />

The same r 306 A51 v.86 385<br />

American Agricultural Chemical Company, Boston—<br />

Agricultural service bureau. Bulletin qr 630.6 A51....335<br />

American Bureau of Engineering. Chicago. Ford<br />

standard electrical equipment 629.11018 A51 78<br />

American Commerce Association. Application of<br />

tariffs r 385 A5122 171<br />

[Classification of property for transportation] . . r 385 .\5122c.... 171<br />

Express and parcel post services r 385 .\5122e .. . .455<br />

Traffic geography r 385 A5I22tr 455<br />

The traffic manual qr 385 A5I22t.. . .513<br />

American Economic Association. Report of the<br />

the Committee on war finance r 940.923 A512 . . . .414<br />

American Electrochemical Society. Reference list<br />

of the electrochemical industry r 660.5502 A51.. . .521<br />

Page


INDEX TO AUTHORS, 1920<br />

Call number Page<br />

American Exchange National Bank, New York city.<br />

Acceptances 332.5 A51. . 21<br />

American exporter. Export trade directory r 382 A5122. •455<br />

American Face Brick Association. The story of<br />

brick r 728 A51. •523<br />

American Federation of Labor. History, encyclopedia,<br />

reference book<br />

r 331.88 Asih. .21<br />

American Friends Service Committee. Bulletin. . .r 940.917 A51 . .414<br />

American Hardwood Manufacturers' Association.<br />

Inspection rules and sales code r 634.9 A5122. .516<br />

American Institute of Electrical Engineers. Proceedings<br />

r 621.305 A512P.<br />

American Institute of Instruction. Annual meeting .. r 370.6 A512 •23<br />

American Jewish Committee. War record of American<br />

Jews<br />

296 A51W. •372<br />

The same r 296 A5123W . •372<br />

American Library Association—War service committee.<br />

Five hundred business books r 016.65 A51. •179<br />

Reconstruction hospital list r 016.6 A51. • 27<br />

American literary yearbook r 928 A51. .136<br />

American Medical Association. Transactions of the<br />

Section on diseases of children r 618.9 A51. • 392<br />

American military biography r 923.5 A51. .470<br />

American Mine Safety Association. Annual transactions<br />

X 622.8 A51. • 396<br />

American Rolling Mill Co. Middletown, Ohio.<br />

Facts for foremen r 33 1 -" A51. • 450<br />

American Society of Mechanical Engineers. Steam<br />

locomotives of today 621.13 A512. •519<br />

American Walnut Manufacturers' Association. American<br />

walnut<br />

r 749 A51. .81<br />

American Writing Paper Company, Holyoke, Mass.<br />

Business letter writing<br />

r 6 S 2 A 5 : •<br />

Ames, E. S. New orthodoxy<br />

20 4 A Si-<br />

El amigo Chirel. Camba<br />

86 3 Cl 4-<br />

The ancient Allan. Haggard<br />

..Hl4ian.<br />

Andersen, H. C. Fairy tales<br />

j A 544ty5 •<br />

Anderson, B. M. Effects of the war on money, credit<br />

and banking in France and the United<br />

qr 94a923<br />

AS4 '<br />

States<br />

Anderson, J. Electric locking .-656.562 A54.<br />

Andronis, N. C. English language for non-English-<br />

1 ... .428.2 A57.<br />

speaking people *><br />

Andros, S. O. Petroleum handbook °°5-:> - -V-<br />

<br />

r 665.5 AS7-<br />

The same .,<br />

. , .. r 973-7 Aoi .<br />

Annals of the war ,<br />

Annuaire general de la France et de l'etranger, 1919. .r 3M-4 A61.<br />

543<br />

.520<br />

• 19<br />

.163<br />

•321<br />

• 139<br />

-474<br />

-•79<br />

-386<br />

• 521<br />

•5-21<br />

• 473<br />

.506


544 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Call number<br />

Annunzio, Gabriele d', pseud. Tales of my native town. .A6i5t... .270<br />

Antonelli, £. Bolshevik Russia 947 A63.. . .138<br />

The Arab of Mesopotamia 9>5-6 A65 85<br />

Aranha, J. P. da Graga. See Graga Aranha.<br />

Arbeau, Thoinot, pseud. See Tabourot, J.<br />

L'arche de Noe. Guigou & Vimar j 843 G96.. . .533<br />

Architectural Association of Boston. Sketch<br />

book qb 720.944 A67 31<br />

Architectural Corporation, New York city. Designs<br />

for American homes q 728 A673 .... 523<br />

Ardel, H. Au retour 843 A67au.... 443<br />

Mon cousin Guy<br />

843 A67....163<br />

Renee Orlis<br />

843 A67r....444<br />

Aristotle. Works r 888 A71W 81<br />

Arizona—Agricultural experiment station, Tucson.<br />

Timely hints to farmers r 630.6 A71L . . .235<br />

Armstrong, A. J. Operatic performances in England<br />

before Handel 782 A73 81<br />

Aronovici, C. Americanization 325.73 A76.... 167<br />

Housing and the housing problem 331-83 A76. . . .277<br />

Art & war qr 759 A78.. .. 181<br />

Arteaga, G. Gomez de Avellaneda y. See Gomez<br />

de Avellaneda y Arteaga, G.<br />

Arthur, Sir G. C. A. bart. Life of Lord Kitchener... .92 K297a....527<br />

Asbestos and Mineral Corporation, New York city.<br />

Asbestos, from mine to finished product qr 677.511 A79.. .. 175<br />

Ashby, A. W. The rural problem r 304 A82 ....115<br />

Ashes to ashes. Ostrander<br />

0297a....272<br />

Ashley, G. H. The McKeesport gas pool qr 557.4885 A82.... 174<br />

Ashley, R. H. Chemical calculations 54L9 A82. . .. 121<br />

Ashton. L. S. The nativity<br />

812 A82....294<br />

Asia qr 915 A83 411<br />

Asian, K. Armenia and the Armenians 956 A83 .. . .414<br />

Asquith, H. H. Victorian age 820 A84.... 240<br />

Associated Metal Lath Manufacturers. As a man<br />

liveth q 728 A84 So<br />

Association Nationale d'Expansion Economique.<br />

Index to French production, 1918 r 670.2 A84.... 284<br />

Association of Life Insurance Medical Directors.<br />

Medico-actuarial mortality investigation qr 614.16 A84 122<br />

Association of Official Agricultural Chemists. Journal;<br />

quarterly q r 547.8905 A84 515<br />

Association of Railway Executives. Remedial railroad<br />

legislation r 385 A84 24<br />

Astruc, M. La metallurgie a la portee de tous r 669.1 A85 126<br />

At a dollar a year. Raymond R2452a.... 227<br />

At fame's gateway. Mix M758a .... 271<br />

Page


INDEX TO AUTHORS, 1920 545<br />

Call number<br />

Athearn, W. S. National system of education 370.1 A86.<br />

Atherton, Mrs G. F. (Horn). Transplanted<br />

A868t.<br />

Atkisson, H. L. B. Readjustment r 330.9 A87.<br />

Atlas Portland Cement Company. Information<br />

for home builders<br />

q 728 A88i.<br />

Atwood, A. W. Putman's investment handbook... .332.6 A88.<br />

Atwood, H. F. Back to the republic 321.8 A88.<br />

Au retour. Ardel 843 A67au .<br />

Aumonier, S. One after another A9250.<br />

The Querrils A925q .<br />

Austin, Mrs M. (Hunter). Outland A93720.<br />

Australia—Advisory council of science and industry.<br />

Bulletin r 605 A93-<br />

Pamphlet r 507 A93-<br />

Avellaneda y Arteaga, G. Gomez de. See Gomez<br />

de Avellaneda y Arteaga, G.<br />

Avery, S. P. Avery, Fairchild & Park families<br />

of Massachusetts, Connecticut & Rhode<br />

Island<br />

qr 929-2 A955<br />

"Avion," pseud. The way to fly 533-052, A95W<br />

Bach, J. S. Christmas oratorio<br />

qM 783.3 B12c<br />

Chromatic fantasy and fugue<br />

qM 786.4 Bi2ch<br />

Complete <strong>org</strong>an works<br />

qM 786.8 Bi2co<br />

English suites<br />

qM 786.4 Bi2e<br />

Magnificat (in D)<br />

qM 783.4 B12<br />

Partitas for the pianoforte<br />

qM 786.4 Bi2p<br />

Passion of our Lord<br />

M 783.3 B i2p<br />

Two and three part inventions for the pianoforte<br />

q. M 786.4 Bi2tw<br />

Bacheller, I. Man for the ages<br />

.Bi27mn<br />

Bachman, F. P. Great inventors and their inventions, .j 609 B12<br />

Baff, W. E. Inventions<br />

6oS Bl 5<br />

Bagg, H. The spoken word<br />

r 793-1 B15<br />

Bailey, C. S. Tell me another story<br />

372-6 Bi5t<br />

Bailey, M. Seven peas in the pod j Bi6is<br />

Bainbridge, F. A. Physiology of muscular exercise. . .613.7 B16<br />

Bairnsfather, B. From mud to mufti<br />

940.918 Bi6f<br />

Bairstow, L. Applied aerodynamics<br />

533-6 B16<br />

T, . .. r 533.6 B16<br />

The same<br />

;,0J<br />

Bajot, fi. Encyclopedie du meuble QR 749 W<br />

Baker, J. T. Art of social letter writing<br />

808.6 B17<br />

Correct business letter writing<br />

652 B17<br />

~ , T- I" t, 425 BI7CO<br />

Correct English "• 3 '<br />

The correct word<br />

428.3 U17<br />

„, r 428.3 B17<br />

^ same .620.7 B17<br />

go8<br />

The literary workshop<br />

Baker, R. P. Engineering education


546 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Call number<br />

Page<br />

Baker, R. S. What Wilson did at Paris 341.6 B17 117<br />

Balderston, J. L. The genius of the Marne 822 B19.. . .342<br />

Baldridge, C. L. "I was there" q 741 B19.... 127<br />

Baldwin, J. The story of liberty 973 B19 473<br />

Baldwin, S. E. The young man and the law 340.7 B19.. . .279<br />

Ballore, R. F. B. vicomte de Montessus de. See<br />

Montessus de Ballore.<br />

Balmer, E. Resurrection Rock B2i6r....5or<br />

Barbe, L. A. Sidelights on the history, industries<br />

& social life of Scotland 941 B23S .... 190<br />

Barber, E. A. Hispano-Moresque pottery r 738 B23h .. .. 181<br />

Mexican maiolica r 738 B23me 29<br />

Spanish glass r 738.2 B23 29<br />

Spanish maiolica r 738 B23SP .. .. 181<br />

Barber, H. L. Making money make money; or, A<br />

primer of investing 332.6 B23 .. .. 168<br />

Barbusse, H. Light B2352I 16<br />

Barham, R. H. Jackdaw of Rheims j 821 B23. . . . 140<br />

Barker, E. Confederation of the nations 341-6 B24 22<br />

Barlow, Sir M. & Holland, R. Education act, 1918. . r 379.14 B24. . . .511<br />

Barnstead, W. G. Filing rules for dictionary catalogues<br />

qr 025.3 B25 .. . .228<br />

Barr, Mrs A. E. Songs in the common chord 811 B259.. .. 133<br />

The barrier. Beach 63422b .... 161<br />

Barron, C. W. War finance 940.91 B26W 42<br />

A world remaking 330.9 B26. . .. 326<br />

Barry, W. F. The papacy and modern times 282 B27. . . . 505<br />

Bartholomew, J. G. School economic atlas qr 910 B27 40<br />

Bartlett, F. W. & Johnson, T. W. Engineering descriptive<br />

geometry and drawing 744 B27e 81<br />

Barton, Sir D. P. Links between Ireland and Shakespeare<br />

822.33 F9.... 404<br />

Barton, G. A. Religions of the world 209 B28. . . . 114<br />

Barton, G. E. Teaching the sick 371.91 B28.. . .383<br />

Barton, W. E. The soul of Abraham Lincoln 92 L7i5bt. . . .295<br />

Basil Everman. Singmaster S6i7b .. . .322<br />

Baskerville, C. & Curtman, L. J. Qualitative chemical<br />

analysis 544 B29. . ..121<br />

Basset, W. R. When the workmen help you manage . .331.1 B29.. ..168<br />

Bassett, J. S. Our war with Germany 973-9132 B29. . .. 138<br />

The same r 973.9132 B29 138<br />

The plain story of American history 973 B29P .. . .473<br />

Bates, E. W. A pageant of the league of free natioils<br />

792.5 B31P....467<br />

Bates, K. L. Sigurd our golden collie 814 B314.. . .340<br />

Bates, S. P. Battle of Gettysburg 9737 B31 .. . .297<br />

Batten, L. W. Good and evil 233 B31 .... 165


INDEX TO AUTHORS, 1920<br />

S47<br />

Call number Page<br />

Baudelaire, C. Poems in prose 844 B^o ,«<br />

Baudrillart, H.J. L. Histoire du luxe prive et public'..319 B32" "449<br />

Bautain, L. E. M. La conscience; ou, La regie des<br />

actions humaines I7I g„g o<br />

Baxter, A. B. The blower ofbubbles..'.'.'.'.'.'.'. ' B3 3 ib""in<br />

Bayley, M.C. The making of modern Italy... . 945 B»<br />

Bayhss, W. M. General physiology..<br />

190<br />

6l, B,,<br />

'73<br />

The Bayonet; weekly<br />

qr'355-52 B33<br />

.22<br />

Bayonne Casting Company, Bayonne, N.J. Monel<br />

' m ' tal ' Qr' 669.2451 B 33 m .... 126<br />

Bazalgette, L. Walt Whitman<br />

.92 W648ba.. ..295<br />

Bazin, R. Le guide de l'empereur<br />

843 B33gu<br />

67<br />

Memoires d'une vieille fille 843 B33me 67<br />

Pierre & Joseph<br />

B3392P.'.'.'.'44,<br />

Beach, Mrs A.M. (Cheney). Festival Jubilate... qM 7834 B34 ,39<br />

Mass in E flat M 7g • B34 M<br />

Beach, RE. The barrier % 342 % ^<br />

The silver horde B3422s!.. .. 161<br />

The spoilers B3422S. . .. 161<br />

Beard, L. & Beard, A. B. Mother Nature's toy-<br />

D , S^° P T; j 790 B 3 43m 89<br />

Beard, M. K. Relation between dependency and retardation<br />

r 37lg g 34 23<br />

Beard, Mrs M. (Ritter). Short history of the American<br />

labor movement<br />

331.87 B34....450<br />

Beauchamp, O. La porcelaine qr 738 B34 336<br />

Beaumont, fi.de. L'epee et les femmes q 396 B353 .... 234<br />

Beaver, W. N. Unexplored New Guinea 919.5 B35 529<br />

Beck, E. G. Structural steelwork 624.2 B36.. . .396<br />

Beck, F. O. The Italian in Chicago r 325.73 B36.. . .276<br />

Bedford, Mrs. See Lehmann, E. N. M. F.<br />

Beer, M. History of British socialism 335 B381 2r<br />

Beers, H. A. Outline sketch of American literature. .810.9 B380....466<br />

Beethoven, L. van. Concertos for the pianoforte<br />

qM 786.4901 B38.... 291<br />

Konzert no.i, C dur qM 785.6 B38.. . .291<br />

Begbie, H. General William Booth 92 B6333b.. . .343<br />

Begule, L. L'eglise Saint-Maurice qb 726 B38.. . .402<br />

Bekker, L. J. de. See De Bekker.<br />

Bell, C. E. Application of tariffs r 385 B39. ... 171<br />

Bell, J. K. Come Michaelmas 822 B412....468<br />

Bell, W. G. Unknown London 914.21 B41... .471<br />

Bell, W. O. Practical short methods in rapid calculation<br />

5n B41....120<br />

The Bellman. The Bellman according to his kindly<br />

friends r 051 B416 163<br />

Belt, R. E. Foundry cost accounting 657.62172 B42.. . .521


548 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Call number<br />

Beltane the smith. Farnol<br />

F245be<br />

Benedict, B. Express companies of the United<br />

States<br />

r 385 B43<br />

Benedict, F. G. Human vitality and efficiency under<br />

prolonged restricted diet<br />

qr 612.391 B43h<br />

Benelli, S. L'amore dei tre re<br />

852 B43am<br />

La cena delle beffe<br />

852 B43C<br />

Benjamin, A. Practical house carpenter<br />

qr 720 B43P<br />

Bennett, A. Frank Swinnerton 92 59783b<br />

The same<br />

r 92 89782b<br />

Judith<br />

822 B43J<br />

Sacred and profane love<br />

822 B43S<br />

Bennett, C. A. Grammar grade problems in mechanical<br />

drawing<br />

744 B43g<br />

The same<br />

j 744 B43g<br />

Problems in mechanical drawing<br />

744 B43<br />

The same<br />

j 744 B43<br />

Bennett, C. E. Latin grammar<br />

475 B43<br />

Bennett, G. V. The junior high school<br />

379-17 B43<br />

Bennett, I. D. The busy woman's garden book 716 643b<br />

Making of a flower garden<br />

716 B431H<br />

Benson, E. F. David Blaize and the blue door B443da<br />

Robin Linnet<br />

B443ro<br />

Up and down<br />

B44311<br />

Benton, E. J. Movement for peace during the Civil<br />

war<br />

qr 973-7 B445<br />

Bentwich, N. de M. Hellenism 933 B445<br />

Bentzon, Th. pseud. Sec Blanc, Mme T. (de Solms).<br />

Bercovici. K. Dust of New York B449d<br />

Berenger, L. P. La morale en action<br />

170.4 B45<br />

Bergengren, R. W. Perfect gentleman 814 B45<br />

Berger (C. L.) & Sons, Boston, Mass. Handbook<br />

and catalog; engineering, surveying & mining<br />

instruments<br />

r 526.91 B45<br />

Berlin, Konigliche Museen. Holzschnitzereien des<br />

iSten und i6ten jahrhunderts<br />

qb 736.1 B45<br />

Bernstorff, J. H. A. H. A. graf von. My three years<br />

in America<br />

940.912 B45<br />

Berry Brothers, Inc. Natural woods & how to finish<br />

them<br />

r 698.3 B45<br />

Bersot, E. Un moraliste<br />

170.4 B46m<br />

Bertrand, A. Call of the soil B465C<br />

Besant, Sir W. & Rice, J. Monks of Thelema<br />

B466mo<br />

Best, H. Men's garment industry of New York<br />

and the strike of 1913<br />

r 331.89 B46<br />

Best ghost stories<br />

B4665<br />

Best short stories of 1919<br />

64675b<br />

Page<br />

. 162<br />

..24<br />

• 175<br />

.294<br />

.294<br />

• 463<br />

• 295<br />

•295<br />

..83<br />

.241<br />

.401<br />

.421<br />

• 338<br />

.348<br />

.172<br />

.170<br />

.463<br />

• .30<br />

..64<br />

.270<br />

..41<br />

.246<br />

. Ill<br />

. 164<br />

..36<br />

• 514<br />

.181<br />

•474<br />

•391<br />

..68<br />

..64<br />

.320<br />

-•72<br />

.501<br />

.161


INDEX TO AUTHORS, 1920 549<br />

Call number Page<br />

Bcttany, L. Edward Jerningham and his friends 826 B46 81<br />

Bevan, E. R. German social democracy during the war..943 B46.. ..345<br />

Bible—Whole. Bible readings r 264 B47 69<br />

Bible—Whole. German. Biblia qr 220.5 B47g 69<br />

Bible—Whole. Welsh. Y Bibl Sanctaidd qr 220.5 B47W 69<br />

Bible—Old testament. Apocrypha. Apocalypse of<br />

Abraham 229 B47apo.... 229<br />

Biddle, N. Correspondence dealing with national affairs<br />

92 B475b.... 469<br />

Bieber, R. P. Lords of trade and plantations,<br />

1675-96 325-3 B476. . . .231<br />

Bigelow, J. The Bible that was lost and is found. . . .289.4 B47.... 165<br />

Bigelow, M. A. & Bigelow, Mrs A. (Neiglich). Applied<br />

biology 570 B47. . . .282<br />

Bigitsukai b 705 B47 .... 337<br />

Bindloss, H. The wilderness mine B485W .... 501<br />

Biographiskt lexicon ofver namnkunnige svenska<br />

man r 920 B4874.... 470<br />

Bird, G. E. & Starling, M. Historical plays for children<br />

793-1 B48 468<br />

Birds of heaven. Korolenko K386bi 365<br />

Birmingham, G. A. pseud. See Hannay, J. O.<br />

Bishop, C. T. Structural drafting and the design of<br />

details 744 B49. . . .462<br />

The same r 744 B49. ...462<br />

Bishop, J. B. Theodore Roosevelt and his time 92 R684bi 528<br />

The same<br />

r 92 R684b...-528<br />

The bishop. Chekhov C4i8bi.. . .364<br />

Bispham, D. S. A Quaker singer's recollections 92 84972b .... 187<br />

Bjerre, P. C. History and practice of psychanalysis. .. 130 B49 67<br />

Black, A. The great desire Bsi3g.. . 162<br />

Black H C Relation of the executive power to legislation<br />

, .22<br />

342.7 B51.<br />

Treatise on Federal taxes<br />

r 336-2 B51.--.452<br />

The black drop. Brown B783bl 64<br />

The black knight. Sidgwick & Garstin Ss68b .... 504<br />

Blackie, J. S. Ideal of humanity in old times and new..204 B5i5---i 6 5<br />

Blacksheep! Blacksheep! Nicholson N319b.--.322<br />

Blake, A. H. Things seen in London<br />

9U-2I B52....528<br />

Blakeslee, F. G. Army uniforms of the world r 355-14 B52.. --453<br />

Blanc, Mme T. (de Solms). La Grande Sauliere, et<br />

Ma tante Hermine<br />

843 B S3B--*£<br />

Blanchard, P. The adolescent girl<br />

136.7 B53----3&8<br />

Blanchet, E. L. En represailles<br />

940-917 B 5 3- • " T<br />

Blancke, W.W. Dramatic values in Plautus r 872 P6 9 zb »3<br />

Blankenhorn, H. Adventures in propaganda 940. 9 i6 B 5 3 42


550 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Call number<br />

Blanton, M. G. & Blanton, S. Speech training for<br />

children<br />

612.78 B53 -78<br />

Blasco Ibaiiez, V. La catedral<br />

863 B54ca .18<br />

Woman triumphant B5412W 320<br />

Bleyer, W. G. How to write special feature articles. ..808 B54 466<br />

Blichfeldt, E. H. A Mexican journey 917-2 B55 297<br />

Blondeaux, C. Le Christianisme<br />

171 B55 18<br />

Bloomfield, D. Modern industrial movements 330.4 B56 .277<br />

The same<br />

r 330.4 B56 .277<br />

Blouet, P. See O'Rell, Max, pseud.<br />

The blower of bubbles. Baxter<br />

6331b<br />

Bode, B. H. Outline of logic<br />

160 B58<br />

Bodenheim, M. Minna and myself 811 B58 37<br />

Bogardus, E. S. Essentials of Americanization 325.73 B58 325<br />

Bogart. E. L. Direct and indirect costs of the great<br />

world war<br />

qr 940.923 Bs8d 53i<br />

Bohme, J. Personal Christianity a science<br />

230 B59 .19<br />

Boileau, C. Le moteur a essence adapte a l'automobile<br />

et a 1'aviation<br />

qr 621.432 B59 285<br />

Boileau-Despreaux, N. CEuvres poetiques 848 B590 404<br />

Boisseree, S. Monuments d'architecture du 7e au<br />

I3e siecle, dans les contrees du Rhin in -<br />

ferieur<br />

qb 726 B597.. .182<br />

Bojer, J. Face of the world B597L . ..64<br />

Power of a lie<br />

B597P.. .441<br />

Treacherous ground B597t. . • 320<br />

Bok, E. W. Americanization of Edward Bok 92 B598I3.. • 527<br />

Bolivar, S. Address of Bolivar at the Congress of<br />

Angostura qr 987 B61 .. •473<br />

Bolshevik aims and ideals, and Russia's revolt against<br />

bolshevism 947 B61. . .246<br />

Bonald, L. A. vicomte de. Recherches philosophiques<br />

sur les premiers objets des connoissances<br />

morales<br />

17! B61.. ..18<br />

Bond, B. W. The quit-rent system in the American<br />

colonies<br />

3 ^3 B62<br />

Bonser, F. G. School work and spare time<br />

790 B629<br />

Book of New Orleans and the industrial South., qr 917.63 N26b<br />

Book of Princeton verse<br />

811.08 B63<br />

The Book-worm; [monthly]<br />

qr 010 B6314<br />

Bordeaux, H. La petite mademoiselle<br />

843 B63P<br />

La robe de laine<br />

843 B63r<br />

Boston—Educational investigation and measurement<br />

department. Intermediate schools in Boston<br />

r 371.29 B64 no.17<br />

Boston—Statistics department. Boston statistics,<br />

t9i6<br />

r 917-446 B64<br />

Page<br />

375<br />

•35<br />

• 40<br />

133<br />

368<br />

.272<br />

.67<br />

•233<br />

..40


INDEX TO AUTHORS, 1920 551<br />

Call number<br />

Boston Woven Hose & Rubber Company. The<br />

story of rubber r 678 B64. .<br />

Bostwick, A. E. Popularizing music through the<br />

library<br />

r 780 B64..<br />

Some principles of business-like conduct in libraries<br />

r 025 B64..<br />

Boswell, A. B. Poland and the Poles 914.38 B64. .<br />

Bosworth, T. O. Geology of the mid continent oilfields<br />

553-28 B64. .<br />

The same r 553.28 B64. .<br />

Boullier, F. C. Morale et progres 171 B654. .<br />

Boulnois, H. P. Modern roads 625.7 B65. .<br />

Boutroux, E. E. M. Relation between thought and<br />

action no B65 . .<br />

Bowden, W. Rise of the great manufacturers in<br />

England 330.9 B66. .<br />

Bowles, O. Rock quarrying for cement manufacture. .622.23 B66. .<br />

The same r 622.009 U25 no. 160. .<br />

Technology of marble quarrying 622.351 B66. .<br />

The same r 622.009 U25 no.106. .<br />

Bown, C. E. Electric rates in Pittsburgh, Pa r 621.32 B66. .<br />

Bowsfield, C. C. Making the farm pay 630 B66. .<br />

Box with broken seals. Oppenheim 0265bo. .<br />

Boyd, A. K. H. Critical essays of a country parson 824 B66c. .<br />

Bradford, G. Portraits of American women 920.7 B68p.<br />

Bradshaw, M. J. The war and religion r 016.261 B68.<br />

Brady, E. J. Australia unlimited qr 919-4 B68.<br />

Brady, J. E. Bank deposits, trust deposits, alternate<br />

deposits, joint deposits r 332.1 B68.<br />

Brahms, J. Concert, fiir das pianoforte qM 785.6 B68.<br />

Brainard, A. M. Organization of public health nursing<br />

610.7 B68.<br />

Braithwaite, W. C. Second period of Quakerism. . . .289.6 B6gs.<br />

Braithwaite, W. S. Book of modern British verse. . . .821.08 B69.<br />

Story of the great war 940.9" B69.<br />

Brakes, J. Analysis of babbitt 546-3 B69.<br />

m, , r 546.3 B69.<br />

The same<br />

34 J v<br />

Branch, Mrs M. L. (Bolles). Guld, the cavern king.. . -j B6 9 6g.<br />

Brandt, C. El fundamento de la moral 170 B69.<br />

Brandt, O. W. Explanation of train rules 656.54 B69.<br />

Branom, M. E. Project method in education - 371-3 B71 •<br />

Brasol, B. L. Socialism vs. civilization 335 B71.<br />

Braymer, D. H. Armature winding and motor repair. . 621.31 B71 -<br />

Breasted', J. H. Survey of the ancient world 930 B 7 is.<br />

Bregy, K. M. C. The little crusaders<br />

812 B72 •<br />

Bridgens, R. Furniture<br />

qb 749<br />

74 '


552 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Call number<br />

Bridgeport Brass Company, Bridgeport, Conn. Seven<br />

centuries of brass making<br />

qr 621.762 B74<br />

Bridges, R. Necessity of poetry<br />

808.1 B74<br />

Bridgham, G. R. Her first assignment<br />

812 B74<br />

Briggs, M. S. Through Egypt in war-time 940.918 B74<br />

Briggs, T. H. The junior high school 379-17 B74<br />

British Columbia—Mines department. Bulletin .. .qr 622.05 B75<br />

Britton, N. L. & Rose, J. N. Cactaceae<br />

qr 583.471 B75<br />

Broadbent, Sir W. H. & Broadbent, J. F. H. Heart<br />

disease<br />

r 616.1 B75<br />

Broadhurst, J. & Rhodes, C. L. Verse for patriots. . .821.08 B75<br />

The same<br />

j 821.08 B75<br />

Broglie, J. V. A. due de. Nouvelles etudes de litterature<br />

et de morale<br />

170.4 B76<br />

Broniewski, W. Introduction a I'etude des alliages<br />

r 669.9135 B76<br />

Brooklyn Vocational Guidance Association, Brooklyn,<br />

N. Y. Accountancy and the business professions<br />

657 B77<br />

Brooks, C. A. Christian Americanization 325.73 B77.<br />

Brooks, J. G. Labor's challenge to the social order 331 B77.<br />

Brotherhood of Locomotive Firemen and Enginemen.<br />

Argument and brief on behalf of locomotive<br />

firemen<br />

r 331.2 B778<br />

Brown, A. The black drop<br />

B783M<br />

Brown, C. N. & Ion, T. P. Persecutions of the<br />

Greeks in Turkey<br />

r 940.924 B78<br />

Brown, Mrs D. (Vaka), & Brown, K. In pawn to a<br />

throne 6785!<br />

& Phoutrides, A. E. Modern Greek stories 6785111<br />

Brown, E. P. The real Billy Sunday<br />

92 S957b<br />

Brown, F. C. C. Yeats-. See Yeats-Brown.<br />

Brown, G. B. From schola to cathedral b 723.1 B78<br />

Brown, H. C. History of E company, 37th U. S.<br />

engineers<br />

940.9137 B78<br />

Brown, H. G. Theory of earned and unearned incomes<br />

330.1 B78<br />

Brown, N. C. Forest products 634.9197 B79<br />

The same<br />

r 634.9197 B79<br />

Brown, P. H. Surveys of Scottish history<br />

941 B79S<br />

Brown, W. H. Stories of the great war for public<br />

speakers<br />

940.91 B79<br />

Brown University—John Carter Brown library. Catalogue<br />

qr 016.97 B79<br />

Browne, C. A. Story of our national ballads j 784.4 B79<br />

Browne, G. F. bp. The venerable Bede<br />

274.2 B81<br />

Page<br />

• 519<br />

•37<br />

.526<br />

.191<br />

•5"<br />

•237<br />

.284<br />

-392<br />

•37<br />

•-45<br />

.288<br />

.287<br />

. .21<br />

• 509<br />

.326<br />

..64<br />

-346<br />

..64<br />

.502<br />

•344<br />

•523<br />

• 415<br />

•375<br />

•235<br />

•235<br />

• 472<br />

••43<br />

•45<br />

.446


INDEX TO AUTHORS, 1920 553<br />

Call number<br />

Browne, G. L. Narratives of state trials in the 19th<br />

century<br />

343-1 B81 •73<br />

Browne, H. J. First lessons in numismatics<br />

r 737 B81 •30<br />

Brownrigg, Sir D. E. R. bart. Indiscretions of the<br />

naval censor<br />

940.915 B82 •474<br />

Brownson, M. W. & Kerst, V. E. Victory through<br />

conflict<br />

792-5 B82 .406<br />

The same<br />

r 792.5 B82 .406<br />

Briining, C. Wunder aus dem pflanzenreiche r 580.4 B83 .516<br />

Brussof, V. Republic of the Southern Cross<br />

B8382r .502<br />

Bryce, J. Worth of ancient literature to the modern<br />

world<br />

r 375.8 B84 .118<br />

Bucher, E. E. Wireless experimenter's manual 654.1 B84W .399<br />

Buck, C. N. The tempering B853t .320<br />

Buck, S. J. Agrarian crusade 363 B8sag • 372<br />

Buel, J. W. The magic city qr 606 C43bu .458<br />

The builders. Glasgow<br />

G465DU ..65<br />

Building Brick Association of America. One hundred<br />

bungalows<br />

Q 728 B860 • 31<br />

The same q r 728 B860 • 31<br />

Buisson, F. E. & Farrington, F. E. French educational<br />

ideals of today<br />

370-9 B86 .170<br />

Bullard, A. The Russian pendulum<br />

947 B87 • .41<br />

The stranger<br />

B8 74s • 441<br />

Buller, A. H. R. Essays on wheat 633.11 B87 • 397<br />

Bullitt, W. C. Bullitt mission to Russia<br />

940.916 B87 •53i<br />

Bunau-Varilla, P. Great adventure of Panama 940.911 B88 .346<br />

Burch H. R. & Patterson, S. H. American social<br />

problems<br />

304 B89<br />

.507<br />

Burchett, B. R. Janus in Roman life and cult qr 292 B89 ..69<br />

Bureau of Applied Economics, Washington, D. C.<br />

Wages in various industries<br />

r 331-2 B89. 132<br />

Bureau of Railway Economics, Washington, D. C.<br />

References on the relation of British railways to<br />

the European war<br />

qr 016 656129 B89I. 399<br />

Burgess, E. W. Function of socialization in social<br />

' . 301 B89. . .275<br />

evolution<br />

p8<br />

• • -30<br />

Burgess F W. Antique jewellery and trinkets 739 B»9an.<br />

Burghardt, H. D. The lathe, bench work and work ^<br />

• 333<br />

at the f<strong>org</strong>e • ' B • 473<br />

Burke, E. Speech on conciliation<br />

n M 7847 Bo* .465<br />

Burlin, Mrs N. (Curtis). Negro folk-songs qM 7*4£*9* .227<br />

Burned bridges. Sinclair ; • • ; ' ; • • '<br />

Burnett, J. J. Sketches of Tennessee s pioneer Baptist^ ^ ^<br />

.528<br />

preachers<br />

Roi6i .162<br />

Burnham, Mrs C. L. 1 ° ^ " . * .7.7. 8lI B^h .241<br />

Burr, A. J. Hearts awake, and The pixy<br />

Page


554 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Call number Page<br />

Burton, T. E. Modern political tendencies<br />

342.7 B95 71<br />

Bush, A. D. Laboratory manual of pharmacology. . .qr 615 B96. . . .122<br />

Business career of Peter Flint. Whitehead W639b 67<br />

Butcher, A. M. (Brandreth), lady. Memories of<br />

Ge<strong>org</strong>e Meredith 92 M635b 409<br />

Butler, E. P. How it feels to be 50 92 6976b 469<br />

Swatty B9762S 270<br />

Butler, F. C. Community Americanization r 32S.73 B97. . . .276<br />

The same r 370 U25 1919, no.76 276<br />

Butler, N. M. Is America worth saving? 304 B97<br />

Butler, R. S. & Burd, H. A. Commercial correspondence<br />

•372<br />

652 B97. . . .287<br />

Butler, W. F. T. Confiscation in Irish history 941-5 B97. . . .190<br />

Butler Brothers. Butler way window trimmer. . . .r 659.133 B97 79<br />

Success in retailing<br />

r 658.612 B97S<br />

•79<br />

Butte, G. C. F. A model oil and gas contract. . ,r 622.338007 B98<br />

459<br />

Butte, Mont.—Survey commission. Survey of the<br />

school system<br />

r 379.786 B98<br />

454<br />

Butterfield, K. L. The farmer and the new day 309.1 B98<br />

373<br />

Buttura, A. I quattro poeti italiani qr 851.08 B98 467<br />

Byne, A. & Stapley, M. Rejeria of the Spanish renaissance<br />

qb 729.97 B99 31<br />

Spanish ironwork b 729.97 B99S. . . .238<br />

C. I. T. alumnus; quarterly qr 607 Q, Sl6<br />

Cable, B. Air men o' war 0132a 64<br />

Cadmus, pseud. & Harmonia, pseud. Island of sheep Cn6i<br />

270<br />

Cady, B. C. & Cady, V. M. The way life begins 612.6 Cn<br />

517<br />

Cajori, F. Modern theory of equations 512.82 C12.<br />

Calderon de la Barca, P. Comedias q 862 C12C 134<br />

Caldwell, G. W. Legends of southern California. .. .398 097 C13 299<br />

Caliban. Ge<strong>org</strong>e G3I2C 5Q2<br />

California—Immigration and housing. Commission<br />

of. Annual report, Jan. 1919 r 325?3 Cl3 5o8<br />

California Redwood Association, San Francisco. California<br />

redwood homes r 6gil C13. . . .391<br />

California redwood on the farm 6 74 Q I3 , QI<br />

How to finish California redwood 698.3 C13 391<br />

Call of the soil. Bertrand B465C 64<br />

Calliat, V Hotel de Ville de Paris '.'. qb' 7 25 iCn'" '.102<br />

Callwell, Sir C. E The Dardanelles ' 940013 S " ' '531<br />

Calvert, A. F. Salt and the salt industry 664.4 C14 . .400<br />

Calvocoressi, M. D. Mus<strong>org</strong>sky Q2 M984C. . . .469<br />

Camba, F. El amigo Chirel 863 C14 163<br />

Camerlynck-Guernier, Mme, & Camerlynck, G. H<br />

France (ire annee de francais) ' 448 Cl5 3g 7<br />

Camm S Aeroplane construction 533.652 Ci S .. . .389<br />

Camp, W. Handbook on health and how to keep it. .613.7 Ci5h. . . .517


INDEX TO AUTHORS, 1920 555<br />

Call number Page<br />

Canaan. Graga Aranha G763C.... 442<br />

Canada—Civil service commission. Report of transmission<br />

to accompany The classification of<br />

the civil service of Canada r 351.1 Ci6r. . . .448<br />

Canada—Conservation commission. Electric generation<br />

and distribution in Canada r 621.31102 C16 28<br />

Canada—Statistics bureau. Directory of the chemical<br />

industries in Canada 670.2 C167. . . .517<br />

Canadian National Reconstruction Groups. Problems<br />

of national reconstruction r 330.9 C16. . . .277<br />

Canby, H. S. Education by violence 940.919 C16. ... 138<br />

Candide. Voltaire 843 V37. . . .367<br />

Candler, E. On the edge of the world 915.4 C17. ... 137<br />

The sepoy 355-954 C17 169<br />

Canfield, Mrs F. A. (Camp). The refugee family j Ci7i2r. . . . 140<br />

Cannan, E. Money; its connection with rising and<br />

falling prices 332 C173 5io<br />

Cannan, G. The release of the soul 128C17... .445<br />

Cantacuzene, J. (Grant), princess. Russian people. . . .947 Ci7r. . . .345<br />

Capek, T. The Cechs (Bohemians) in America 325-73 C179 375<br />

Capes, B. The skeleton key Ci8isk 364<br />

Card, S. F. Air navigation 533-6 C19. . . . 174<br />

Cardelli, P. pseud. Nouveau manuel complet du<br />

confiseur et du chocolatier 642 C19. . . .461<br />

Carey, A. E. & Oliver, F. W. Tidal lauds 627.52 C19.--.123<br />

Carey, T. J. The real estate educator 347-2 C19 193<br />

Carlin, F. The cairn of stars 811 C211C. .. .467<br />

Carnegie, A. Autobiography 92 C216C 527<br />

The same<br />

r 92 C2i6car. . . .527<br />

Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.<br />

Manual of the public benefactions of Andrew<br />

Carnegie<br />

; ; r 92 C2i6ca •527<br />

Carnegie Endowment for International Peace—Division<br />

of intercourse and education. American<br />

foreign policy<br />

r 327-73 C21 •374<br />

Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh. England and the<br />

English r 016.9142 C2ie.... 188<br />

Some facts and opinions concerning public imr<br />

S52 C21 08<br />

provements<br />

OJ<br />

„<br />

War welfare <strong>org</strong>anizations r 016.940927 C21 8 7<br />

Carpenter, E. Pagan & Christian creeds 201 C22. . .291 .,-,<br />

Carpenter, J. A. Gitanjali<br />

qM 784 C22<br />

Carr, E. L. & Lutz, S. G. Construction and inter<br />

r 385 C22....171<br />

pretation of tariffs<br />

400<br />

Carre, P. Precis de chimie industrielle r 660 C22.. . 4,0<br />

Carrick, A. V. Collector's luck ••


550 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Call number Page<br />

Carswell, C. Open the door<br />

C2340 .441<br />

Carter, J. Architecture and ornaments of the cathedral<br />

church at Exeter<br />

qb 726 C23 .238<br />

Carteret, J. Grand-. See Grand-Carteret.<br />

Carthew, Lily, pseud. Sec Heydemann, L. P.<br />

Carver, T. N. Principles of political economy<br />

330 C24 •277<br />

War thrift<br />

qr 940.923 C24 . 192<br />

La casa de la Troya. Perez Lugin<br />

863 P427 •323<br />

Caspari, W. A. India-rubber laboratory practice. -547-78533 C25 •390<br />

Castigliano, A. Elastic stresses in structures r 624.044 C26 .285<br />

Castle, W. E. Studies of heredity in rabbits, rats and<br />

mice<br />

qr 591-157 C27st •174<br />

Cataneo, P. L'architettvra di Pietro Cataneo Senese. .qb 720 C27 .290<br />

La catedral. Blasco Ibaiiez<br />

863 B54ca .18<br />

Cather, W. S. Youth and the bright Medusa<br />

C2822y • 502<br />

Caullery, M. J. G. C. Les universites et la vie scientifique<br />

aux Etats-Unis<br />

378.7 C28 •23<br />

Cayotte, L. Dictionnaire des rimes<br />

r 446 C29 .119<br />

Cazalet, L. Short history of Russia<br />

947 C29 •41<br />

Une centaine de peintres<br />

qr 759 C32 •30<br />

Central heating, lighting and power plant<br />

qr 710 C32 -522<br />

Cervantes Saavedra, M. de. Don Quixote de la<br />

Mancha<br />

r 863 C33i .367<br />

Segvnda parte<br />

r 863 C33i2 •367<br />

Cestre, C. Bernard Shaw et son ceuvre<br />

822 S534ZC .83<br />

Chafee, Z. Freedom of speech in war times r 323.44 C34 •325<br />

Chalmers, T. W. Production and treatment of<br />

vegetable oils<br />

r 665.3 C35 .288<br />

Chamber of Commerce of the United States of America.<br />

War transportation control<br />

qr 385 C35 .385<br />

Chamberlain, J. & Quilter, J. H. Knitted fabrics. . . .677.661 C35 •391<br />

Chamberlain, T. G. Why we fought<br />

341.6 C35 -453<br />

Chambonnaud, L. Les affaires et la methode scientifique<br />

r 658.01 C35. .288<br />

Chambrun, J. A. de P. comte de, & Marenches, C.<br />

comte de. The American army in the European<br />

conflict<br />

973.9132 C35<br />

Chaminade, C. L. S. Vocal album<br />

qM 784 C35<br />

Champol, F. Les justes<br />

843 C35<br />

Chancellor, W. E. Educational sociology<br />

301 C361<br />

Chandler, F. W. Contemporary drama of France. . . .842.09 C36<br />

The chapel. Almquist<br />

A452S<br />

Chapman, C. C. Twenty sacred two-part songs for<br />

women's voices<br />

qM 784.88 C36<br />

Chapman, E. R. Marriage questions in modern fiction. .173 C368<br />

Chapman, F. M. What bird is that?<br />

598.2 C36W<br />

The same<br />

j 598.2 C36W<br />

.412<br />

.184<br />

• 504<br />

.230<br />

• 342<br />

.501<br />

.291<br />

. 164<br />

• 456<br />

-478


INDEX TO AUTHORS, 1920 557<br />

Call number Page<br />

Chapman, R. W. Astronomy for surveyors 522 C36. . . . 173<br />

Chapman, Mrs R. W. How shall I tell my child? 612.6 C36. . . .392<br />

The charm school. Miller M69ich 66<br />

Chase, J. S. Penance of Magdalena C3912P . . . .441<br />

Chase, M.W. Natural laws in piano technic 786.3 C39....131<br />

The chaste wife. Swinnerton S9782C . .•443<br />

Chateaubriand, F. A. vicomte de. Etudes; ou, Discours<br />

historiques sur la chute de I'empire romain. .937 C39. ... 530<br />

Chavannes, E. La sculpture sur pierre en Chine au<br />

temps des deux dynasties Han<br />

r 732 C41....289<br />

Chekhov, A. P. The bishop C4i8bi.... 364<br />

Cheney Brothers, South Manchester, Conn. Silk<br />

and silk manufacture r 677.3 C42S.... 122<br />

Cheng, S. Modern China 951 C42. . . . 191<br />

Chesterton, G. K. Irish impressions 914-15 C42. . . .137<br />

The superstition of divorce 173 C427. . . .370<br />

Chevob-Maurice, W. & Romero-Todesco, E. S. Corrispondenza<br />

commerciale, italiana-inglese 458 C42. ... 119<br />

Chicago Bureau of Public Efficiency. Excess condemnation<br />

r 352.1 C4322C . . .276<br />

Child, R. W. The vanishing men C4362V 441<br />

Chill hours. Mackay Mi753c • • • .271<br />

Chinese National Welfare Society in America. Shantung<br />

question r 327-51 C441 507<br />

Chinese Patriotic Committee, New York city. China<br />

vs. Japan 327-52 C44 20<br />

China's claims at the peace table 3 2 7 51 C44 21<br />

Chipperfield, Robert Orr, pseud. See Ostrander, I. E.<br />

Le choix de Maura. Aigueperse 843 A28 443<br />

Chokecherry island. Hasbrouck H338C 112<br />

The same j H338C.. . . 140<br />

Chopin F F. Concerto, in E minor qM 786.4901 C45ce. . . .291<br />

Concerto, in F minor<br />

qM 786.4901 C45cf.--.291<br />

Churchill, W. Dr Jonathan<br />

8l2 C46d. . 134<br />

Cid. Poem of the Cid .r 861 C 4 7- • 37<br />

Cincinnati, Chamber of Commerce and Merchants'<br />

Exchange—Survey committee. Garment making<br />

industries<br />

r 338.4 C 4 8....375<br />

Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra Association Company<br />

Cincinnati symphony orchestra year<br />

book<br />

r 7 8^C48C --"-t°o<br />

Cirkel, F. Amiante-chrysotile<br />

r 553-67 C 4 9am.<br />

412<br />

Clark (A. H.) Company. United States r 016.973 C51.<br />

408<br />

Clark, C. My quarter century of American politics..92 C5182C.<br />

Clark' F E. Our Italian fellow citizens in their old<br />

v ' 1< " ' x , . r2t, I C52. ... Il6<br />

J J<br />

homes and their new<br />

168<br />

Clark, N. M. Common sense in labor management. . . .331 C524


558 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Call number<br />

Clark C. Griffith Ball and Bat Fund. Final report, .qr 940.917 C52<br />

Page<br />

299<br />

Clarke, I. C. Whose name is legion<br />

C532W .16<br />

Clarke, J. F. The hour which cometh, and now is 252 C53 371<br />

Clarke, T. B. Catalogue of early American portraits, .r 757 C53 237<br />

Classen, E. Outlines of the history of the English<br />

language<br />

420.9 C53 513<br />

Claudel, P. La nuit de Noel de 1914<br />

842 C54n .241<br />

Clemenceau, G. E. B. Les plus belles pages de<br />

Clemenceau<br />

848 C56 132<br />

The strongest<br />

C562S III<br />

Clemens, S. L. See Twain, Mark, pseud.<br />

Clement of Alexandria. Clement of Alexandria 281.1 C56C 505<br />

Clement, M. Selected list of French books for libraries<br />

of high schools and normal schools, .qr 016.84 C56 444<br />

Clerical and Medical Committee of Inquiry into<br />

Spiritual, Faith and Mental Healing. Spiritual<br />

healing<br />

615.851 C57- • • 458<br />

Clerval, J. A. Les ecoles de Chartres au moyen-age. . .370.9 C57. •.<br />

454<br />

Cleveland, C. C. The great revival in the West,<br />

1797-1805 269 C58. . .165<br />

Clifford, E. L. R. De la Pasture, lady. See De la<br />

Pasture, Mrs H.<br />

Clifford, Mrs L. (Lane). Miss Fingal C587mi. . • 05<br />

Clodd, E. Animism 128 C61. . •369<br />

Le clos-pommier. Achard<br />

843 A17C.. •443<br />

Clouston, J. S. Simon C6i9si. . • 65<br />

Coakley, T. F. Spiritism, the modern Satanism 134 C62. . • 273<br />

Coal catalog qr 622.33 C628. . 123<br />

Coal dealers' "blue book" '. .qr 622.3302 C62. .286 .<br />

Coale, A. W. Summer in the girls' camp 796.5 C62. . 186<br />

Cobb, I. S. From place to place C629f. . 162<br />

Cochrane, H. P. Among the Burmans 915.9 C64. . 189<br />

Cody, Mrs L. (Frederici), & Cooper, C. R. Buffalo<br />

Bill 92 C655C. . • 243<br />

Cody, S. Commercial tests<br />

136.8 C65 •323<br />

Cody, W. F. Autobiography of Buffalo Bill 92 C655CO. . .408<br />

Cceurs frangais, consciences anglaises. Henouard 843 H44. .<br />

Coggin. Oldmeadow O2312C. .<br />

Cogswell, H. E. How to <strong>org</strong>anize and conduct the<br />

163<br />

366<br />

school or community band and orchestra 787 C66. . • 403<br />

Cohen, I. Pogroms in Poland r 296 C66. . .69<br />

Cohen, O. R. Gray dusk C668g .270<br />

Cohen, S. S. Jewish Theological Seminary<br />

r 207 C66.. • 372<br />

Colas Breugnon. Rolland<br />

R644C .66<br />

Colas Breugnon [in French], Rolland 843 R64C. . .18<br />

Cole, A. B. Operation of wireless telegraph apparatus<br />

6541 C68.. .521


INDEX TO AUTHORS, 1920<br />

Call number<br />

Cole, G. D. H. Trade unionism 331.88 C68i<br />

Coler, C. S. Character building 170.4 C68<br />

Coles-Finch, W. & Hawks, E. Water in nature 551-49 C68<br />

Collins, A. F. Boys' airplane book<br />

533.652 C69<br />

The<br />

same<br />

j 533.652 C69<br />

Collins, V. H. Poems of action 821.08 C714<br />

The same<br />

j 821.08 C71<br />

Colman, G. T. Certain movements in England and<br />

America<br />

170.9 C71<br />

Colombia (Republic of Colombia, 1886- )—Direccion<br />

general de estadistica. Comercio exterior<br />

de la Republica de Colombia ano de 1916 qr 382 C72<br />

Colour. Allies in art<br />

qr 759 C72<br />

Colton, E. A. The various types of southern colleges<br />

for women<br />

r 378.7 C726<br />

Colum, P. The girl who sat by the ashes<br />

j C727g<br />

Columbia University, New York—Library. Library<br />

rules<br />

r 027.7 C72H<br />

Columbia University, New York—Teachers college.<br />

Festival of the flag of stars<br />

792.5 C72<br />

Colyer, J. F. Dental surgery and pathology r 617.6 C72<br />

Committee on Friendly Relations among Foreign<br />

Students. Directory of foreign students in<br />

the United States<br />

r 378.7 C73<br />

Comstock, W. P. The housing book<br />

qr 331.83 C73<br />

Congress of Women's Clubs of Western Pennsylvania.<br />

[Directory.] r 374.3 C74<br />

Conkling, Mrs G. W. (Hazard). Afternoons of April. . .811 C75<br />

Connecticut—State council of defense. War chest<br />

practice<br />

r 940-917 C75<br />

Connell, F. M. Short grammar of Attic Greek 485 C75<br />

Conrad, J. The rescue<br />

C755re<br />

Consolidated Gas Company of New York. In re<br />

theoretical depreciation<br />

qr 657-453 C75<br />

Continental Insurance Company. American opportunity<br />

r 920 C76<br />

Conyngton, T. Corporate <strong>org</strong>anization and management<br />

347-1 C76<br />

Cooke, M. B. The first Thanksgiving dinner<br />

793-1 C77<br />

Cooley, A. M. Teaching home economics 640.7 C78t<br />

Coolidge, C. Have faith in Massachusetts<br />

974-4 C78<br />

Cope, E. A. Filing systems<br />

651.5 C79<br />

Copplestone, B. Last of the Grenvilles<br />

C7962la<br />

Corazones sin rumbo. Mata<br />

863 M467<br />

Corbin, P. Histoire de la politique exterieure de la<br />

T- 327.44 C8l<br />

France ° ' w<br />

Cork; its trade & commerce<br />

Qr 914-15 C81<br />

559<br />

Page<br />

.326<br />

.228<br />

.. 7 6<br />

. 120<br />

. 140<br />

•294<br />

• 300<br />

.228<br />

•513<br />

.l8l<br />

•454<br />

•194<br />

• 273<br />

•342<br />

.176<br />

511<br />

•377<br />

• 454<br />

• -37<br />

• 139<br />

• •75<br />

• 364<br />

•521<br />

• 344<br />

. .22<br />

.406<br />

.520<br />

.346<br />

.180<br />

.270<br />

..67<br />

• 374<br />

• 344


56o<br />

CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Call number Page<br />

Cornell, L. F. A little sewing book for a little girl. . . .j 646 C82. . . .300<br />

Cornett, W. N. French commercial correspondence. . . .448 C82 24<br />

Corroyer, E. J. Description de I'Abbaye du Mont<br />

Saint-Michel b 726 C82. . . .402<br />

Corrugated Bar Company, Inc. Useful data on reinforced<br />

concrete buildings r 693.5508 C82.... 332<br />

Cory, G. E. Rise of South Africa 968 C83 . . . .531<br />

Cosens, M. Lloyd Ge<strong>org</strong>e's munition girls 940.928 C83 87<br />

Coulter, C. W. The Poles of Cleveland 325.73 C83. . . .508<br />

The same r 325.73 C83P 508<br />

Council of Church Boards of Education. Statistical<br />

survey of Illinois colleges r 378.7 C83. . . .383<br />

Couperus, L. Ecstasy C839e 65<br />

The tour C839to. . . .442<br />

Cousins, F. Gardner-White-Pingree house b 724.9 C84g....402<br />

The Octagon, Washington, D. C r 724.9 C840. . . .463<br />

The old Assembly house in Salem, Mass qb 724.9 C840. . . .403<br />

& Riley, P. M. Colonial architecture of Salem<br />

b 724.9 C84CI.... 183<br />

Les cousins riches. Huzard 843 H987CO 17<br />

Coutel de la Tremblaye, M. See La Tremblaye.<br />

Cowan, J. P. Great men; their esteem for a great<br />

city [Pittsburgh] r 917 4886 C84g 529<br />

Crafts, W. F. Successful men of to-day and what<br />

they say of success 174 C85. .<br />

Craftsman bungalows 728 C85 . ..128<br />

Craig, D. & Lovsey, C. H. An opportunity to make<br />

money qr 691.3 C86. . 235<br />

Craig, E. G. The theatre—advancing 792 C86t. . • 38<br />

Craigen, G.J. Practical methods for appraising<br />

lands, buildings and improvements<br />

336.2 C86.. 380<br />

Cram, R. A. Gold, frankincense and myrrh 204 C86. . 274<br />

Walled towns 901 C86. . 530<br />

Crawford, M. C. In the days of the Pilgrim Fathers. .974.4 C87. . 412<br />

Crippen, H. H. The trial of H. H. Crippen 343.1 C88. .<br />

Crocker, A. A. Modern dentistry<br />

r 617.6 C88..<br />

Cronau, R. Woman triumphant 396 C89. .<br />

Cronyn, G. The sandbar queen 812 C893. .<br />

Crosse, G. The religious drama 809.2 C89. .<br />

279<br />

• 27<br />

167<br />

.83<br />

Crowder, E. H. Spirit of selective service<br />

355-62 C89.. 280<br />

Crowther, J. A. Ions, electrons and ionizing radiations. .539 C89i. .<br />

Manual of physics<br />

530 C89<br />

Molecular physics 539 C89. .<br />

Crump, C. G. Logic of history 907 C89. . 137<br />

Crussell, E. H. Jobbing work for the carpenter 694 C89. . 284<br />

Cubberley, E. P. Organization, scope and finances of the<br />

public school system of Oakland, California.. r 379.794 C91. . . . 383<br />

-38


INDEX TO AUTHORS, 1920 561<br />

Call number<br />

Cuentos de viejas. Lopez Roberts 863 L85 . . . .444<br />

Cullum, R. Heart of Unaga C9i5h-..-502<br />

Culp, J. M. What to do on Hallowe'en 793 C91. . . .239<br />

Culver, L. A. Radio telephony and telegraphy r 654.1 C91. . . .288<br />

Cumberland, S. C. That other world 134 C91.... 445<br />

Cunningham, H. E. Introduction to philosophy 102 C92. . . .369<br />

Curcin, M. Ivan Mestrovic qr 735 M64C 401<br />

Curtis, G. W. Trumps r C934t.... 364<br />

Curtis Publishing Company, Philadelphia. The farm<br />

market 630 C93 • • • • 125<br />

The same<br />

r 630 C93....125<br />

Curtiss Aeroplane and Motor Corporation. Buffalo.<br />

The flight across the Atlantic q 533-652 C93••• 389<br />

The same V 533-652 C93----389<br />

Curwood, J. O. The river's end C936r 16<br />

Valley of silent men C936V. ...502<br />

Cutting, Mrs M.S. (Doubleday). Some of us are<br />

married C955so. . . .271<br />

Cutts, J. C. baron. Life and poetry r 821 C95 • • • -241<br />

Cyclopedia of obstetrics and gynecology r 618 C97- • • -393<br />

Czernin von und zu Chudemtz, O. T. O. M. graf. In<br />

the world war °40. 9 i C 9 9- • 474<br />

D H See Aldington, Mrs Hilda (Doolittle).<br />

Dahlinger, C. W. Old Allegheny r 974-886 D150 «<br />

Daish, J. B. Atlantic port differentials r 385 D15. • • • "<br />

. W832d. . . .163<br />

A damsel in distress. Wodehouse<br />

282<br />

Dana, J. C. New relations of museums and industries.. r 507 D19.<br />

Dana S T What the national forests mean to the<br />

' .qr 551.562 D19. • • .173<br />

water user book 1 . . 7287 -<br />

128<br />

Dana, W. S.B. The Swiss chalet DOOK<br />

D214I....162<br />

D19.<br />

Dane, C. Legend ; '<br />

Dann, J. T. & Courvoisier, F. French commercial D22 IIQ<br />

correspondent • ~<br />

Dardanelle & Cie. Dombre, Roger, pseud R»43W • •••'<br />

Dargan, Mrs O. (Tilford). Semiram.s. . - - - - • •»" ^ • "^<br />

Davenport, C. B. & Scudder, M. T. Naval officers, .r 575-1 D 91 76<br />

David Blaize and the blue door. Benson<br />

^443^- • • • •«<br />

Page<br />

David Vallory. Lynde ' T 667 4 D29....126<br />

Davids, T. History of ink •<br />

Davidson, G. C. The North West Company 97^2 U 9- ^<br />

Davies, E. C. Tales of Serbian life .'.'.'.'.'.'.'.j D31*. . . . 194<br />

The same • glI D31.. . .248<br />

Davies, M. C. A little freckled person J ^ ^ ^<br />

The slave with two faces • • • • • • • • • ;. • • _ • ' D31 •<br />

Davies, T. H. Spiritual voices in modern literature. . . • -240 D 3<br />

Davis, A. & Stratton, A. R. The inward light. . . . •^••••* 3 _ g<br />

Davis C G. Building of a wooden ship V 623.83


562 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Call number<br />

Davis, E. E. Experiments in the elementary sciences<br />

for country schools r 507 D31. . . .456<br />

Davis, K. C. Horticulture 635 D319 286<br />

Davis, M. W. Open gates to Russia 330.9 D32. . . .326<br />

Davis, P. & Schwartz, B. Immigration and Americanization<br />

325-73 D32. . . .375<br />

The same r 325.73 D32.... 375<br />

Davis, W. W. The railroad problem 385 D32 385<br />

Davison, H. P. The American Red Cross in the<br />

great war 940.917 D32 43<br />

Dawson, C. W. Test of scarlet D3324t 65<br />

Dawson, Sir J. W. Fossil men and their modern<br />

representatives r 571 D33.... 387<br />

Dead man's gold. Dunn 09243d . . . .442<br />

Deadham Hard. Harrison H299d 16<br />

Dearmer, Mrs M. (White). Soul of the world 822 D34. . . . 134<br />

Deatrick, E. P. Effect of the manganese compounds<br />

on soils and plants r 631.583 D34 79<br />

De Bekker, L. J. The plot against Mexico 972 D35. . . .246<br />

Debussy, A. C. Nocturnes, partition d'orchestre .. qM 785.3 D35....129<br />

Prelude a "L'apres-midi d'un faune" qM 786.4902 D35 32<br />

Decaen, A. Jacotte et son cousin 843 D35 . . . .444<br />

Decker, W. F. The engine from lever to liberty<br />

motor 621.1 D36. . . .333<br />

De La Mare, W. J. Peacock pie j 821 D38. . . .140<br />

Rupert Brooke and the intellectual imagination. .821 B772zd. . . .466<br />

The three Mulla-mulgars j D388t. . . .248<br />

De la Pasture, Mrs H. Our days on the Gold Coast. . . .916 D38. . . .244<br />

De La Ronciere, C. G. M. B. See La Ronciere.<br />

Delessert, B. baron. Le guide du bonheur 170.8 D39.... 164<br />

Delibes, C. P. L. Coppelia qM 786.45 D39. ... 184<br />

Sylvia qM 786.45 D39S 184<br />

Delisle, L. V. Le cabinet des manuscrits de la Bibliotheque<br />

Nationale r 027.5 P23d. . . .273<br />

Planches r 027.5 P23d2 273<br />

Dell, F. The angel intrudes 812 D41 38<br />

De Mille, W. C. "Food" 812 D42 241<br />

Denmark—Statens statistiske bureau. Statistisk<br />

aarbog qr 314.8 D42 167<br />

Dennett, C. P. Prisoners of the great war 940.917 D43 87<br />

Dennison Manufacturing Company. Dennison's costume<br />

book 39I D43 118<br />

The same r 391 D43 118<br />

Depew, C. M. Orations and after-dinner speeches. . . .815 D430. . . .405<br />

Derby, H. L. Industrial traffic departments r 658.62 D44....461<br />

Derby, R. "Wade in, Sanitary!" 940.917 D44. . . . 139<br />

Page


INDEX TO AUTHORS. 1920 53<br />

Call number Page<br />

Deschard, Mme. Odette g 43 D 457 ...<br />

Le rachat g y.<br />

Desk standard dictionary of the English language r 423 D46 513<br />

Despreaux, N. Boileau-. See Boileau-Despreaux.<br />

Detroit. Charter. Charter of the city of Detroit.... r 352 D483. ... 116<br />

Detroit—Education board. Teaching of patriotism. . r 172.1 D48. . '.'. 68<br />

Deutsches biicherverzeichnis qr 0IS D48 5 228<br />

Devine, E. T. Disabled soldiers and sailors pensions<br />

and training 35I 5 D4g<br />

De Vismes, H. See Vismes.<br />

169<br />

Dickerhoff, S. C. Development of iron ore into iron<br />

and<br />

steel<br />

qr 669.1 D55....400<br />

Dickey, M. Youth of James Whitcomb Riley 92 R458d 84<br />

Dickson, L. E. History of the theory of numbers .. qr 512.81 D55 173<br />

Dieulafoy, M. A. La statuaire polychrome en Es-<br />

TV11. Pagne r 735 D57. • • .462<br />

Dilhstone, G. Planning & planting of little gardens 716 D58. . . .463<br />

Dillon, E. J. The inside story of the Peace conference<br />

940.916 D58. . . .415<br />

Dillon, Mrs M. C. (Johnson). The farmer of Roaring<br />

Run<br />

D5841. ..-.227<br />

Dinsmore, C. A. Life of Dante 92 D237d 39<br />

District of Columbia—Public utilities commission.<br />

Street railways r 625.6 D63 236<br />

Ditte : girl alive! Nexo N296d.... 503<br />

Diver, Mrs K. H. M. (Marshall). The strong hours D646S m<br />

Dix, B. M. & Sutherland, Mrs E. G. pseud. Rose o'<br />

Plymouth-town 812 D64r 468<br />

Dixon (Joseph) Crucible Company, Jersey City, N. J.<br />

Use and abuse of ball and roller bearings r 621.89 D64. . . .236<br />

Dobbs, E. V. Primary handwork 372.5 D65P....118<br />

Dodd, Mrs A. B. Up the Seine to the battlefields 944 D66. . . .412<br />

Dodd, E. L. Comparison of the premiums of the<br />

Teachers Insurance and Annuity Association<br />

with those of other legal reserve companies. . . .r 368 D66. . . .328<br />

Dodge, H. I. Skinner makes it fashionable D669S. . . .364<br />

Dombre, Roger, pseud. Dardanelle & Cie 843 D71. . . .272<br />

Dommett, W. E. Dictionary of aircraft r 533.603 D71. . . .282<br />

Don Qvixote de la Mancha. Cervantes Saavedra. . . . r 863 C331. . . .367<br />

Segvnda parte<br />

r 863 C3312....367<br />

Donne, J. Sermons 252 D72 166<br />

Dooley, W. H. Applied science for metal-workers. . . .621.9 D73. . . .519<br />

Dostoyeffsky, F. M. An honest thief D748I1 271<br />

Doubleday, Page & Company, Garden City, N Y.<br />

The Country Life Press r 655-473 D75- - - .284<br />

Douglas, A. W. Merchandising 658.3 D75- • • 288<br />

Douglas, J. A. Redemption of Saint Sophia 274.9 D75 19


564 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Call number<br />

Page<br />

Dover, A. T. Electric motors and control systems. .r 621.333 D76. ... 124<br />

Downer, H. E. Chats with possible Americans r 325.1 D77. . . .231<br />

Downing, E. R.<br />

Source book of biological naturestudy<br />

570-7 D77 76<br />

Doyle, Sir A. C. The vital message 134 D77V. ... 113<br />

Dozal, P. J. Retaining walls q 627.8 D77. . . .236<br />

The same qr 627.8 D77. . . . 236<br />

Drake, M. History of English glass-painting qb 748 D78. .. .237<br />

Dransfield, J. Sec Stone, Mrs J. (Dransfield).<br />

Dresser, H. W. Living by the spirit 170 D81I. . . .323<br />

New thought movement 615.851 D8ihi. . . .332<br />

The open vision<br />

134 D81....445<br />

Drever, J. Instinct in man 150 D819. . . .273<br />

Drinkwater, J. Loyalties 821 D82 37<br />

Poems 821 D82p 82<br />

Tides 821 D82t 37<br />

Drowned gold. Norton N46sd 66<br />

Drummond, J. Pauline meditations 225.9 D84.. . .505<br />

Drummond, M. Dawn of mind 136.7 D845 18<br />

Drury, A. G. Electrical estimator's tables r 621.3002 D84. . . .334<br />

Dublin, L. I. Mortality statistics of insured wageearners<br />

and their families r 614.16 D85. . . .236<br />

Du Bois, W. E. B. Darkwater 326 D8sd 275<br />

Duff, Mrs S. R. Simple truths used by great singers. .784.9 D87.. ..131<br />

Duffy, F. P. Father Duffy's story 940.918 D877. . . .247<br />

Duggan, S. P. H. The league of nations 341.6 D87 73<br />

Duhamel, G. Compagnons 841 D88.. . .294<br />

Dumas, A. the elder. Histoires d'animaux 448 D89. . . .456<br />

Dunbar, H. W. Little known facts about grinding. . .621.92 D89. . . .333<br />

The same<br />

r 621.92 D89....333<br />

Duncan, C. S. Commercial research 658 D89 79<br />

Dunn, A. W. & Harris, H. M. Citizenship in school<br />

and out I72.i D92. . . .370<br />

Dunn, J. A. E. Dead man's gold 09243d.. . .442<br />

Dunn, T. D. Bengali book of English verse 891.4 D92. . . .241<br />

Dunsany, E. J. M. D. P. baron. Tales of three hemispheres:<br />

D9262tl 65<br />

Unhappy far-off things 940.919 D92 43<br />

Durand, Mme A. M. C. H. (Fleury).<br />

Henry, pseud.<br />

See Greville,<br />

Dushkin, A. M. Jewish education in New York city 296 D94.... 170<br />

Dust of New York. Bercovici B449d. . . . 111<br />

Dutton, W. H. Boots and shoes of our ancestors. . . . qr 391 D95. . . .299<br />

Duval, H. Sec Cardelli, P. pseud.<br />

Dye, F. Hot-water supply 696.12 D98 391<br />

Dyer, G. W. School history of Tennessee 976.8 D98. . . .191


INDEX TO AUTHORS, 1920<br />

Call number Page<br />

Dykema, W. P. Recent developments in the absorption<br />

process for recovering gasoline from<br />

natural gas 665.54 D99. .400<br />

The same r 622.009 U25 no. 176. .400<br />

Eagle, Solomon, pseud. See Squire, J. C.<br />

Eason, A. B. Flow and measurement of air and<br />

gases<br />

533 E18 •514<br />

Eason, J. L. & Weseen, M. H. English, science and<br />

engineering<br />

507 E18 •173<br />

Eastman, F. M. Law of taxation in Pennsylvania. . .r 336.2 E18 •452<br />

Eastman, W. R. The library building<br />

r 022 E185 • 368<br />

Eberlein, H. D. Interior decoration 747 E21 . 127<br />

Making and furnishing outdoor rooms and porches.. 728 E21 •523<br />

Ebersole, J. F. Elementary banking<br />

332.1 E21 • 326<br />

Ecstasy. Couperus C839e ..65<br />

Edgar, Mrs C. M. Whyte-. Wreath of Canadian<br />

song<br />

811.08 E28 ..82<br />

Edgeworth Ladies' Seminary, Sewickley. Notice...r 376.9 E28 •233<br />

Edmunds, C. K. Modern education in China 379-51 E29 .383<br />

The same<br />

r 370 U25 1919 no.44 .383<br />

Edwards, Albert, pseud. See Bullard, A.<br />

Eecke, C. van. Exploitation industrielle de la<br />

tourbe<br />

r 662.641 E32 •521<br />

Efficiency Edgar. Kelland<br />

Ki65e •365<br />

Eglene, L. La chimie du cuir<br />

r 675 E36 •391<br />

Ehrsam, F. The Swiss chalet in America<br />

qr 728.7 E38 • 337<br />

Elder, J. C. & Beatty, J. O. Reformed Presbyterian<br />

Church of New Alexandria. Pa<br />

r 285.5 E43 • 323<br />

The elder's people. Spofford<br />

S762e .272<br />

Elephant stories<br />

J E454e .421<br />

Eliot, C. W. Road to unity among the Christian<br />

churches<br />

280 E47<br />

• • • • • - •371<br />

Ellinger, E. P. Southern war poetry of the Civil<br />

war<br />

r 016.811 E52<br />

.186<br />

Ellis, H. Philosophy of conflict 304 E532 .H5<br />

Ellis, W. W. The metal mixer -r 621.725 E53 .123<br />

Ellison L M. Early romantic drama at the English<br />

court<br />

.294<br />

'°9 ^53<br />

. 172<br />

Ellsworth, E. P. Textiles and costume design<br />

391 E53<br />

Elyot, Sir T. Boke named The governour<br />

370-9 E57 •383<br />

Emerson, H. Comparative study of wage and bonus<br />

, r 3312 E58 ..72<br />

plans<br />

Emery, J. A. & Williams, N. B. Governmental war<br />

.192<br />

agencies affecting business<br />

r 940-923 E58 • 274<br />

Emmott, E. B. Story of Quakerism 289.6 h-59 .166<br />

Enelow, H. G. The war and the Bible<br />

Jf .280<br />

England-Education board. Report<br />

qr 37942 E644<br />

565


566 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Call number Page<br />

England—Ministry of information. Chronology of<br />

the war r 940.911 E64.... 192<br />

Small atlas of the war r 940.911 E64a. . . . 192<br />

England—Reconstruction, Ministry of. Interim report<br />

of the Committee on adult education . . qr 331.8 E6443.... 377<br />

England—Trade board. Reports of the Departmental<br />

committee appointed to consider the<br />

shipping & shipbuilding industries r 387 E644. ... 171<br />

England to America. Montague M846e .... 366<br />

Erichsen, J. E. Science and art of surgery r 617 E74S. . . .393<br />

Ernst, W. Memoirs of the life of Philip Dormer,<br />

fourth earl of Chesterfield 92 C427C . . .469<br />

Ervine, St. J. G. Alice and a family : .E788a. . . .111<br />

The foolish lovers E788f.... 364<br />

Esarey, L. History of Indiana r 977.2 E79. . . .138<br />

Escher, F. Practical investing 332.6 E79. . . .451<br />

Escouflaire. R. C. Ireland an enemy of the allies?. . . .941.5 E79. . . .530<br />

Esterline, J. W. Permanent magnets 538 E85.... 120<br />

Etienne, pseud. A naval lieutenant, 1914-18 940.915 E88. . . .247<br />

Eubank, E. E. Study of family desertion qr 392 E91 70<br />

Evander. Phillpotts P5i8e. . . .442<br />

Evans, E. R. G. R. Keeping the seas 940.915 E94. . . .415<br />

Evans, F. N. Town improvement 710 E94. . . .238<br />

Evans, H. F. The Sunday-school building and its<br />

equipment 726 E94 463<br />

Evans, J. H. One hundred years of Mormonism r 298 E94. . . .371<br />

Evans, J. W. Geology of the British Isles r 554.2 E94 174<br />

Evans, M. M. (Lathbury), lady. Chapters on Greek<br />

dress<br />

391 E94 507<br />

Evarts, W. M. Arguments and speeches 308 E952. . . .373<br />

Ewing, J. Neoplastic diseases r 616.992 E97 393<br />

Exploits and triumphs, in Europe, of Paul Morphy,<br />

the chess champion r 794.1 E98 465<br />

The explorer. Maugham M488e 366<br />

Extract from Captain Stormfield's visit to heaven.<br />

Twain, Mark, pseud T897e ....113<br />

Eye of Zeitoon. Mundy M9662e . .322<br />

Faber, H. B. Military pyrotechnics r 662.11 Fn .400<br />

Fabre, J. H. The glow-worm and other beetles 595-76 Fug. . . .387<br />

Face of the world. Bojer B597f 64<br />

Fairy tales. Andersen j A544fy5. .139<br />

Fales, W. S. Household dictionary 640 F18. .461<br />

Famous Players-Lasky Corporation. New York city.<br />

Story of the Famous Players-Lasky Corporation<br />

qr 778.5 F21....464<br />

Faris, J. T. Book of courage 170.4 F23 505<br />

On the trail of the pioneers g 7 8 F23. . .473


INDEX TO AUTHORS, 1920 567<br />

Call number Page<br />

Farmer of Roaring Run. Dillon Ds84f 227<br />

Farnol, J. Beltane the smith F245be .... 162<br />

Faure, G. Wanderings in Italy 9I4 5 Y27. ... 188<br />

Faust, C. A. Complete card-writer r 744.2 F28. ... 31<br />

Favor, E. H. Successful spraying 632.9 F28. . . .460<br />

Federation of the Jewish Philanthropies of Pittsburgh.<br />

Annual statement r 361 F31 .448<br />

Fellows Gear Shaper Co. Springfield, Vt. Helical<br />

gear<br />

r 621.8323 F34. - - .396<br />

Felt, E. P. Key to American insect galls 595.7 F34 234<br />

Ferber, E. Half portions F371I1 364<br />

Ferguson, J. Thyrea 821 F38 341<br />

Ferguson, J. C. Outlines of Chinese art 709.51 F38. ... 128<br />

Ferguson, O. J. Electric lighting 621.32 F38 334<br />

Fermes et habitations rurales qb 728.6 F39. . . .290<br />

Fernandez-Florez, W. Silencio 863 F399 67<br />

Ferrari, E. Wolf-. See Wolf-Ferrari.<br />

Fess, S. D. Problems of neutrality when the world<br />

is at war r 327.73 F42 71<br />

Feuerbach, L. A. Geschichte der neuern philosophie<br />

von Bacon von Verulam bis Benedict Spinoza. . . . 190 F43. . . .369<br />

Feval, P. H. C. Le poisson d'or 843 F438. ... 163<br />

Fiddler's luck. Schauffler S313L . . .367<br />

Fidel, C. La paix coloniale frangaise 325.3 F45 .... 374<br />

Fierz, H. E. Grundlegende operationen der farbenchemie<br />

r 667.2 F46. . . .461<br />

Figuier, L. Vies des savants illustres depuis l'antiquite<br />

jusqu'au I9e siecle r 925 F47. . . .296<br />

Fillmore, P. R. Czechoslovak fairy tales j 398 F48 89<br />

Finch, J. K. Topographic maps and sketch mapping. .526.98 F49. . . .514<br />

Finch, W. Coles. See Coles-Finch.<br />

Findlay, A. Osmotic pressure 541-8 F49. ... 121<br />

Findlay, M. I. Scott's Ivanhoe . .-793-I F49 38<br />

Scott's Talisman 793.1 F49S 38<br />

Firkins, O. W. Jane Austen 823 A93ZL...405<br />

Fischer, C. Celebrated tutors; side drum, xylophone,<br />

tympanies and castanets q 789 F52. . . .524<br />

Fischer, M. H. & Hooker, M. O. Fats and fatty degeneration<br />

612.397 F52. . . .458<br />

Fisher, B. P. Finding the Mayflowers 793-I F53.. ..406<br />

Fisher, E. F. Resources and industries of the United<br />

States<br />

609.73 F53----332<br />

Fisher, G. P. The Christian religion 239 F53C- • • -446<br />

Fisher, I. Stabilizing the dollar 338-5 F53S-- -277<br />

Fisher, J. A. F. baron. Memories and records 92 F533f 408<br />

Fisk, G. M. International commercial policies 382 F53 329


568 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Call number<br />

Fiske, B. A. The art of fighting 355 F54 453<br />

From midshipman to rear-admiral 92 F54if 39<br />

Fitch, A. P. Can the church survive in the changing<br />

order?<br />

261 F55....324<br />

Fitch, R. L. Madame France 940.928 F55 43<br />

Fitzgerald, T. D. Application of tariffs r 385 F57. ... 171<br />

Fitzsimons, F. W. Natural history of South Africa. .591.96 F58. . . .282<br />

Flack, M. & Hill, L. E. Textbook of physiology r 612 F59.... 176<br />

Fleming, D. J. Devolution in mission administration, .r 266 F62. . . .229<br />

Fletcher, C. B. Problem of the Pacific 990 F63. . . .247<br />

Fletcher, J. G. Goblins and pagodas 811 F63g 37<br />

Irradiations; Sand and spray 811 F63i 82<br />

Fletcher, J. S. The Middle Temple murder F635mi. ... 162<br />

The Paradise mystery<br />

F635P....442<br />

Florez, W. Fernandez. See Fernandez-Florez.<br />

Floyd, F. T. Company "F" overseas, 305 940.918 F67 43<br />

Foerster, N. & Steadman, J. M. Sentences and<br />

thinking 808 F68.... 340<br />

Foerster, R. F. Italian emigration of our times 325.2 F68. ... 116<br />

Folwell, W. W. Economic addresses r 304 F73. . . .507<br />

The foolish lovers. Ervine E788L . . .364<br />

The foot-path way. Rideout R438f.... 504<br />

Foote, Mrs M. (Hallock). The ground-swell F747g in<br />

Forbes, A. California qr 979.4 F75 42<br />

Forbes, R. Unconducted wanderers 910 F75. . . .188<br />

The forbidden trail. Willsie<br />

W762L...322<br />

Ford, G. B. Out of the ruins 940.917 F76. . . .415<br />

Forest of swords. Altsheler A466fo. . . .227<br />

Formanek, J. Benzin, benzinersatzstoffe und mineralschmiermittel<br />

r 665.54 F77. . . .522<br />

Fothergill, J. M. Indigestion, biliousness and gout<br />

in its protean aspects r 616.3 F82. . . .393<br />

Fouillee, A. J. E. Psychologie du peuple frangais 914.4 F82 85<br />

Foulkrod, E. Compounds of the word "horse" r 410 F83. . . .514<br />

The four roads. Smith S659L .322<br />

Foville, J. de, & Le Sourd, A. Les chateaux de<br />

France r 728.8 F84.... 183<br />

Fowler, W. W. Virgil's "Gathering of the clans". . . .873 V34zfo. . . .466<br />

Fox, E. A. Parliamentary usage for women's clubs. . .328.1 F85. . . .276<br />

The same r 328., F85.. ..276<br />

Page<br />

Fox, W. T. & Fox, T. C. Epitome of skin diseases, .r 616.5 F85 393<br />

Franc, M. A. Ibsen in England 839.82 Ii2zf. . . .292<br />

The same<br />

...r 839.82 I12ZL...292<br />

France, Anatole, pseud. The bride of Corinth 842 F86b. . . .468<br />

France—Ministere de la guerre. La France et ses<br />

a,Iie s<br />

r 940.91 F8612....415


INDEX TO AUTHORS, 1920 569<br />

Call number Page<br />

France—Ministere de I'instruction publique et des<br />

beaux-arts. Plan d'etudes et programmes de<br />

l'enseignement secondaire des gargons r 379.44 F86 •383<br />

France- Etats-Unis; revue mensuelle qr 917.3 F86 •471<br />

Franck, A. Moralistes et philosophes<br />

170.9 F87 ..19<br />

Franck, H. A. Roaming through the West Indies. . .917.29 F87 •529<br />

Frank I. Solar Hand Craft Syndicate. Bird houses. . . .598.2 F87 .387<br />

The same<br />

j 598.2 F87 .421<br />

Frank Leslie's illustrated newspaper<br />

qr 071 F87 .368<br />

Franklin, A. L. A. Les anciennes bibliotheques de<br />

Paris<br />

r 027 F87 •273<br />

La Sorbonne<br />

378.4 F87 •454<br />

Fraprie, F. R. Little pilgrimages among Bavarian<br />

inns<br />

9M-3 F88 • 344<br />

Practical retouching - 771-4 F88 .128<br />

Fraser, G. M. Stranger's guide to Aberdeen r 914.1 Ai4f .244<br />

Frederick, Mrs C. Household engineering<br />

640 F89h .398<br />

Frederick, J. G. Modern salesmanagement 658.321 F89 •335<br />

Frederiksen, J. D. Story of milk 637 F89 •397<br />

Free air. Lewis<br />

L675f ..66<br />

Freeborough, E. Chess endings<br />

794-1 F89C .186<br />

French, H. Index of differential diagnosis of main<br />

symptoms<br />

r 616.07 F92 393<br />

French, T. E. & Svensen, C. L. Mechanical drawing<br />

for high schools<br />

744 Fg2m .128<br />

French technical words & phrases<br />

r 443-2 F92 •330<br />

French year book<br />

r 314.4 F92 • 507<br />

Fribourg, A. Croire<br />

940.918 F94C ..87<br />

Friedman, J. Common-sense candy teacher<br />

642 F95 .287<br />

Friese, J. F. Blueprinting<br />

771-53 F9S .238<br />

From place to place. Cobb<br />

C629f<br />

. 162<br />

Frost, H. & Wardlaw, C. D. Basket ball and indoor<br />

' baseball for women<br />

796-34 F96 339<br />

Fujimoto, T. Story of the geisha girl<br />

r 915.2 F97<br />

.189<br />

Furness, H. H. "The gloss of youth"<br />

812 F991<br />

.406<br />

Further chronicles of Avonlea. Montgomery<br />

M864f<br />

.366<br />

Gahagen, W. R. How to conduct the real estate, insurance<br />

and general brokerage business 347-2 G13 .381<br />

Gaines, R. L. Helping France<br />

940.917 Gi 3 h<br />

• 139<br />

Galbraith, A. M. The family and the new democracy.. .392 O14 • 373<br />

. Gi45mi .365<br />

.. .G14SP .320<br />

Gale, Z. Miss Lulu Bett<br />

Peace in Friendship village<br />

Gallagher, O. C. & Moulton, L. B. Practical business<br />

English<br />

Gallatin, A. E. Art and the great war<br />

Gallichan, Mrs W. M. See Hartley, C. G.<br />

.652 Gl4-<br />

qr 759 ^14<br />

• •79<br />

.,181


570 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Call number<br />

Page<br />

Galloway, T. W. Biology of sex for parents and<br />

teachers 612.6 G15. . 517<br />

Galsworthy, J. Plays 822 Gi5pl- • .83<br />

Tatterdemalion Gi57t. . 320<br />

Galvanizing Corporation of America, Brooklyn. Electro<br />

galvanizing<br />

r 669.58 G15.. 289<br />

Gannett, W. C. Blessed be drudgery<br />

179-9 G16.. 323<br />

A garden by the sea. Reid R2992g. . .66<br />

Gardner, F. D. Farm crops 633 G18. . 287<br />

Fruits, vegetables and flowers 634 G18. . 178<br />

Soils and soil cultivation 631 G18. . 286<br />

Gardner, H. A. Tests of moisture resistance of various<br />

coatings on small boat construction r 691 G18. . •235<br />

Gardner, S. J. Autumn leaves 814 G183. . 293<br />

Garner, J. H. & Carmichael, J. F. Recovery of grease<br />

from waste materials qr 628.544 G18. . 36<br />

Garver, F. B. Subvention in the state finances of<br />

Pennsylvania r 336.748 G19. . 379<br />

Garvin, J. W. Canadian poems of the great war 811.08 G19. .<br />

The same r 811.08 G19. .<br />

Gas and electric news; monthly r 665.705 G2122. .<br />

Gate, E. M. Tales from the Secret kingdom qj G23U. .<br />

Gauguin, P. Noa noa 919.62 G23. .<br />

Gaul, A. R. The holy city<br />

qM 783.4 G24..<br />

Gaul, H. B. Nine negro spirituals qM 784.7 G24. .<br />

Gauvain, A. La question yougoslave r 949.7 G24. .<br />

Gazette du bon ton qr 391 G25 . .<br />

Geijsbeek, J. B. Ancient double-entry bookkeeping. . qr 657 G27..<br />

Ge<strong>org</strong>e, W. L. Caliban G312C. .<br />

Ge<strong>org</strong>ia—Agricultural experiment station, Experiment.<br />

Annual report r 630.6 G3ian. .<br />

Ge<strong>org</strong>ia—Agriculture, Department of. Ge<strong>org</strong>ia. . ,r 917.58 G3ig. .<br />

178<br />

411<br />

Ge<strong>org</strong>ia—Education department. Educational survey<br />

of Decatur, Ge<strong>org</strong>ia, public school system., .r 379.758 G31. . 5H<br />

Gerhard, W. P. Gas-lighting and gas-fitting 665.7 G31. . 400<br />

Sanitary drainage of buildings 628.6 G3ir. . 396<br />

Sanitary engineering of buildings q 628.6 G3isa. . 396<br />

Germain, A. La cathedrale de Chartres r 726 G32. . 403<br />

German prisoners in Great Britain. . . . .' q 940.917 G32. .<br />

Gerould, Mrs K. (Fullerton). Modes and morals 814 G32. .<br />

37<br />

37<br />

336<br />

140<br />

297<br />

•239<br />

•32<br />

190<br />

•44<br />

335<br />

22 .<br />

Geiser, K. F. Democracy versus autocracy<br />

342 G28..<br />

General Education Board. Public education in Delaware<br />

r 379-751 G29. . 383<br />

Geniaux, C. La passion d'Armelle Louanais 843 G293. . .67<br />

Genlis, S. F. D. de St. A. comtesse de. De l'influence<br />

des femmes sur la litterature frangaise 840.9 G29. . 525<br />

Genung, J. F. Guidebook to the biblical literature. . . .220.8 G29. •.<br />

19<br />

502<br />

139<br />

240


INDEX TO AUTHORS, 1920<br />

Call number Page<br />

Gorham Company, N. Y. city. Honor rolls in bronze<br />

and mosaic<br />

7 l8 G6? • 336<br />

Gerstenberg, C. W. Principles of business 658 G32 .29<br />

Gibbons, H. A. France and ourselves<br />

940.921 G36 298<br />

Gibbons, Mrs H. D. (Brown). Paris vistas 914.436 G363 188<br />

Gibbs, G. The splendid outcast<br />

G364SP 321<br />

Gibbs, P. Now it can be told<br />

940.91 G36n 346<br />

Gibson, J. Locke's theory of knowledge<br />

151 G37 445<br />

Gide, A. Prometheus illbound G374P 227<br />

Gilbert, A. H. Geographical dictionary of Milton, .r 821 M7izg 405<br />

Gilkey, S. W. A plea for greater unity 280 G39 .70<br />

Gillet, L. Histoire artistique des ordres mendiants. . .r 246 G41 229<br />

Gillin, J. L. Wholesome citizens and spare time 790 G41 •35<br />

Gilmore, G. W. Animism 128 G42 309<br />

Ginisty, P. Les artistes morts pour la patrie r 927 G43 •85<br />

Giolitti, F. II trattamento termico preliminare degli<br />

acciai dolci e semi-duri per costruzioni meccaniche<br />

r 669.17 G43. . .127<br />

The girl who sat by the ashes. Colum j C727g. . .194<br />

Giua, M. & Giua-Lollini, C. Combinazioni chimiche<br />

fra metalli<br />

r 669.9135 G45 - •.127<br />

Glasgow, E. The builders G465bu. . ..65<br />

Glaspell, S. The people, and Close the book 812 G46P. . .242<br />

Plays 812 G46pl. . .406<br />

Glazunov, A. K. Cinquieme symphonie qM 786.4902 G47- • ••32<br />

Quatrieme symphonie<br />

qM 786.4902 G47q- • • -32<br />

Gleichen, A. W. Theory of modern optical instruments<br />

r 535.8 G48 • ••456<br />

Glover, E. H. "Dame Curtsey's" book of party pastimes<br />

793 G51 • • 132<br />

Godfrey, C. E. Mechanics bank, 1834-1919, Trenton<br />

in New Jersey<br />

r 332.11 G55 ••••a/y<br />

Goldberg, I. Studies in Spanish-American literature. .860.9 G57- ••..132<br />

Goldberger, H. H. & Brown, S.J. Course of study<br />

and syllabus for teaching English to non-<br />

English speaking adults<br />

428.2 G57C ....514<br />

The golden scorpion. Ward<br />

W2i32g ....367<br />

Goldstein, D. & Avery, Mrs M. G. (Moore). Bolshevism<br />

335 G 5 8b<br />

....168<br />

Gomez de Avellaneda y Arteaga, G. Obras<br />

q 862 G59 ....406<br />

Gompers, S. Labor and the common welfare<br />

331-8 G59 •••-377<br />

Labor and the employer<br />

331-88 G59 .... 509<br />

Goode, W. T. Bolshevism at work<br />

947 G62<br />

....412<br />

Gordon, C. H. C. Pirie-. See Pirie-Gordon.<br />

Gordon-Smith, G. From Serbia to Jugoslavia 940-913 G65f •••-415<br />

Gordy, W. F. Abraham Lincoln<br />

j 92 L7l5go<br />

....141<br />

Causes and meaning of the great war<br />

j 940.9U G66 422<br />

57i


572 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Call number<br />

Goricar, J. & Stowe, L. B. Inside story of Austro-<br />

German intrigue 940.911 G67. .<br />

Goss, C. F. Redemption of David Corson G698r. .<br />

Goss, W. L. Jed's boy j G698JC .<br />

Goudouneche, L. Manuel de morale & d'economie<br />

populaires 170.4 G73. .<br />

Gould, H. P. Peach-growing 634.1161 G73. .<br />

Page<br />

Gounod, C. F. Messe solennelle<br />

qM 783.21 G74..<br />

Govett, E. Art principles 750 G75 . . •30<br />

Graga Aranha, J. P. da. Canaan G763C. . 442<br />

Graham, J. C. It happened at Andover G77i5i. . 502<br />

Graham, S. A private in the guards 940.918 G77. . 347<br />

Grand-Carteret, J. Les elegances de la toilette 391 G77.. • 74<br />

Le grand escalier de Versailles qb 728.3 G77. . 238<br />

La Grande Sauliere, et Ma tante Hermine. Blanc 843 B53g. . 272<br />

Grant, R. Law and the family 396.2 G78. . 119<br />

Graves, F. P. Education before the middle ages. . . .370.9 G8ihi. 233 .<br />

Education during the middle ages 370.9 G8ih. . •73<br />

What did Jesus teach? 232 G81. .<br />

Gray, C. T. Types of reading ability 3724 G81. .<br />

Gray, J. M. Limitations of the taxing power r 336.2 G81..<br />

Gray, W. D. Life of Hadrian prior to his accession. . .r 937 G81. ..86<br />

Gray, W. S. Studies of elementary-school reading. . .r 372.4 G81.. 384<br />

Gray dusk. Cohen C668g. . 270<br />

The great desire. Black Bsi3g. . 162<br />

The great house. Weyman Ws86gr. . • 17<br />

The great impersonation. Oppenheim 0265g. . .66<br />

The green-pea pirates. Kyne K448g. . .66<br />

Greene, D. Spherical and practical astronomy 522.7 G83. . • 76<br />

Greene, H. B. Pressed flowers from the Holy Land, .r 915.69 G83. .<br />

Greene, J. A. British mineral oil r 665.44 G83. .<br />

Greg, W. R. Miscellaneous essays 304 G86m. .<br />

Gregory. A. (Persse), lady. The dragon 822 G86d. .<br />

Visions and beliefs in the west of Ireland 398 G86v. .<br />

Gregory, J. Ladyfingers G8672I. .<br />

Gregory, O. Meccania, the super-state G8671U. .<br />

Grelling, R. Belgian documents 940.912 087b . .<br />

Grenfell, Mrs A. E. C. (MacClanahan), & Spalding, K.<br />

415<br />

365<br />

300<br />

Le petit Nord 917.19 G875 345<br />

Grenfell, W. T. A Labrador doctor 92 G875gr 84<br />

Greville, Henry, pseud. Le vceu de Nadia 843 G88v 163<br />

Grey, E. G. viscount. Recreation 790 G887 . . . .404<br />

Grey, Z. The man of the forest 08872m.... 162<br />

Grieg, E. Concerto, in A minor qM 786.4901 G89. . . .291<br />

Sonata for piano and violin (no.1-3) qM 787.1 G89. ... 129<br />

Vocal album qM 784 G89V 32<br />

.68<br />

125<br />

129<br />

447<br />

384<br />

380<br />

5-'9<br />

180<br />

507<br />

526<br />

507<br />

365<br />

• 65<br />

53i


INDEX TO AUTHORS, 1920 573<br />

Call number Page<br />

Griffith, I. S. Correlated courses in woodwork and<br />

mechanical drawing 684.07 G89 517<br />

Woodwork and mechanical drawing 744 G89. . . .338<br />

Th e same<br />

j 744 G89....348<br />

Griffith, J. B. Practical bookkeeping 657 G89P....336<br />

Griffith, W. J. Short analysis of Welsh history r 942.9 G89 246<br />

Grisdale, J. H. Preparing land for grain crops on<br />

the prairies r 630.971 G92 460<br />

The ground-swell. Foote F747g.. . .111<br />

Groves, E. R. Moral sanitation 171 G945.... 165<br />

Growing up. Vorse V384g 443<br />

Grozier, E. A. One hundred best novels condensed. . . .r G9450. . . .502<br />

Grubb, E. What is Quakerism ? 289.6 G94 114<br />

Gsell, P. Les gosses dans les ruines 842 G94. . . .242<br />

Guaranty Trust Company of New York. Amortization<br />

r 332 G95am. . . .326<br />

Combining for foreign trade r 338.8 G95 . . . .326<br />

The fabric of civilization qr 338.4 G95 ....116<br />

Federal taxes on income and profits r 336.24 G95 .... 380<br />

How business with foreign countries is financed. . qr 332 G95 21<br />

Solvency of the allies qr 330.9 G95 22<br />

Trading with China qr 382 G95t 24<br />

Guernier, Mme Camerlynck-. See Camerlynck-Guernier.<br />

Guest, E. A. A heap o' livin' 811 G95 • • • -341<br />

Guibour 842 G96. .. .134<br />

Le guide de l'empereur. Bazin 843 B33gu 67<br />

Guigou, P. & Vimar, A. L'arche de Noe j 843 G96 533<br />

Guilbert, Y. Pastourelles of the 15th century qM 784.8 G96....291<br />

Guillet, L. Memoire sur le traitement thermique<br />

des obus qr 623.451 G96 459<br />

Guilly, E. P. La nature et la morale 171 G96. . . .114<br />

Guiterman, A. Ballads of old New York 811 G967b .... 186<br />

Guld, the cavern king. Branch j B696g. . . .140<br />

Gulick, L. H. A philosophy of play 13674 G96. . . .369<br />

Guptill, Mrs E. F. (Ephraim). Complete Hallowe'en<br />

book 793 G97- • • 132<br />

Gurwitsch, L. Wissenschaftliche grundlagen der<br />

erdolbearbeitung<br />

r 665.5 G97 77<br />

Guyot, Y. Causes and consequences of the war 940.911 G99 531<br />

La morale de la concurrence 330-1917 G99-- •- 2 32<br />

Gwynn, S. Irish books and Irish people<br />

824 G991---466<br />

John Redmond's last years<br />

92 R2 7 6g....4/0<br />

Hadley, A. T. Moral basis of democracy 172.1 Hi2m.. ..165<br />

Hadley, J. Greek grammar 485 H12. . . .282<br />

Haferkorn, H. E. Screw threads<br />

r 016.621881 Hi3.--.333<br />

Hagar's hoard. Turner T86 4 h . . . .504


574 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Call number<br />

Page<br />

Hagedorn, H. That human being, Leonard Wood. .92 W854ha. . . .470<br />

Theodore Roosevelt 92 R684ha. .. .343<br />

Hagen, H. J. von. Graphology 652.4 Hi3g.. . .399<br />

Haggard, Sir H. R. Allan Quatermain Hi4ial. . . .365<br />

The ancient Allan Hi4ian. . . .321<br />

Haig, Sir D. Sir Douglas Haig's despatches. . . . qr 940.913 H14. . . .474<br />

Haight, E. H. James Monroe Taylor 92 T2542h. . . . 136<br />

Haldeman, I. M. Morality or immortality? r 232 H15.. . .166<br />

Hale, P. L. Jan Vermeer of Delft qr 759.9 V27h.... 181<br />

Halevy, J. E. F. La Juive qM 782.4 H16.. . .403<br />

Half portions. Ferber F37ih. . . .364<br />

Hall, A. N. & Perkins, D. Handicraft for handy<br />

girls j 790 Hl6hn. . . .140<br />

Hall, F. de H. Differential diagnosis r 616.07 H17. . . .518<br />

Hall, S. R. Writing an advertisement 659 H17; ... .29<br />

Hall, W. S. Life's beginnings 612.6 H17I. . . .393<br />

Ham, A. H. & Robinson, L. G. Credit union primer. . r 334.2 H19. . . .278<br />

Hamer, P. M. Secession movement in South Carolina<br />

975.7 H19 413<br />

Hamilton, C. H. Treatise on the law of taxation by<br />

special assessments r 352.1 H19. . . .448<br />

Hamilton, CM. William, an Englishman H199W. . . .503<br />

Hamilton, Clarence H. Psychological interpretation<br />

of mysticism r 149 H19. . . .228<br />

Hamilton, E. M. Manual of cyanidation 669.2 H21. . . .461<br />

Hamilton, Lord E. W. Elizabethan Ulster 941.6 H21.... 190<br />

Hamilton, S. Essentials of arithmetic 511 H2ie . . . .330<br />

Hamlin, W. A. Low-cost cottage construction in<br />

America r 728.6 H22.... 128<br />

Hammel, V. F. A shell loading plant qr 623.451 H22 27<br />

Hammond (C. S.) & Co. Business atlas of economic<br />

geography 9I0 H22 137<br />

Hammond, E. K. Modern drilling practice 621.951 H22....286<br />

Hammond, J. L. Le B. & Hammond, Mrs B. (Bradby).<br />

The skilled labourer, 1760-1832 330.9 H22S. . . .327<br />

Hammond, M. B. British labor conditions and legislation<br />

during the war qr 331.8 H22. . . .450<br />

Hanausek, T. F. Microscopy of technical products<br />

r 578.7 H2 3 m.... 173<br />

The hand in the dark. Rees R2862h 503<br />

Handyside (A.) & Co. Works in iron r 691.7 H23 122<br />

Hankey, D. W. A. The cross 230 H23C.. . .371<br />

Fetters<br />

02 H236I1....469<br />

Hanna, M. A. Trade of the Delaware district before<br />

the Revolution r 382 H23 234<br />

Hannah Bye. Morris M9l6h 366


INDEX TO AUTHORS, 1920 575<br />

Call number Page<br />

Hannay, J. O. An Irishman looks at his world. . . .914.15 H23ir. . . .244<br />

Our casualty H2370 ....112<br />

Up, the rebels! H237U 271<br />

Hanson, D. Social significance of the motion picture<br />

r 792. 7 H24. . . . 239<br />

Hanson, O. Americanism versus bolshevism 335 H24. . . .277<br />

Happily married. Harris H29ih. . . .321<br />

Harbert, S. C. Surgical and mechanical dentistry. . .r 617.6 H24.. . .393<br />

Hard, W. Raymond Robins' own story 947 H25. . . .246<br />

Hardy, C. O. Negro question in the French revolution<br />

; 326 H26.... 324<br />

Hardy, T. Collected poems 821 H26C. . . .467<br />

Hardy, T. J. Spiritism in the light of the faith 134 H26.... 445<br />

Hare, W. B. Costume monologues 812 H26. . . .342<br />

Harkavy, A. The English alphabet 428.2 H27e . ... 119<br />

English-Jewish pocket dictionary 492.5 H27h. . . .387<br />

Manual dictionary of the English language 492.5 H27ha. . . .387<br />

Harriet and the piper. Norris N4523ha. . . .503<br />

Harrington, C. K. Captain Bickel of the Inland sea. . . .266 H28. . . .447<br />

Harris, Mrs C. M. (White). Happily married H29ih. . . .321<br />

Harris, F. S. The young man and his vocation 174 H29 19<br />

Harris, J. A. & Benedict, F. G. Biometric study of<br />

basal metabolism in man qr 612.0153 H29. . . . 176<br />

Harris, J. R. Return of the "Mayflower" 822 H29 406<br />

Harris, R. S. Practical banking 332.1 H29. . . .278<br />

Harris, W. B. & Cozens-Hardy, W. H. Modern Morocco<br />

' 382 H29 329<br />

Harrison, B. Vida constitucional de los Estados<br />

Unidos<br />

342.7 H29V....381<br />

Harrison, H. S. When I come back 940-91 H298 87<br />

Harrison, Mrs M. St. L. (Kingsley). Deadham Hard. . . .H299d 16<br />

The tall villa H299C . . .321<br />

Harrison, W. Pickett's men 973-7 H31. . . .413<br />

Harrow, B. From Newton to Einstein 53l-i8 H31 389<br />

Harrower, H. R. Practical <strong>org</strong>anotherapy r 616.0836 H31....458<br />

Harry, Myriam, pseud. See Perrault-Harry, Mme.<br />

Harry, P. W. Anecdotas espaiiolas 468 H31 24<br />

Hart, B. Psychology of insanity r 132 H31 67<br />

Hart, H. H. Fluctuations in unemployment in the<br />

United States 1 r 331 H31 /2<br />

Hart, R.N. Leavening agents 664642 H31....522<br />

Hart, W. L. Base hospital number 53 r 940917 H31. - - -347<br />

Hartford Steam Boiler Inspection and Insurance Co.<br />

Hartford, Conn. Economy hints r 621.187 H32. . . .286<br />

Hartley, C. G. Women's wild oats<br />

173 H32W....446<br />

Hartmann, A. Six character sketches, for violin and


576 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Call number<br />

Hartog, P. J. Examinations and their relation to<br />

culture and efficiency<br />

35I.I H33..<br />

Hartshorne, H. Conspectus of the medical sciences, .r 610 H33. .<br />

Hartung, G. Die geologischen verhaltnisse der inseln<br />

Lanzarote und Fuertaventura qr 554.68 H33. .<br />

Harvard Endowment Fund. Harvard and the future<br />

qr 378.7 H334..<br />

Harvard register qr 378.7 H3342. .<br />

Harvey, A. Practical leather chemistry 675 H335. . .<br />

Harvey, L. S. Food facts for the home-maker 613.2 H33. . .<br />

Hasbrouck, L. S. Chokecherry island H338C. . .<br />

The same j H338C. . .<br />

Haughton, W. Englishmen for my money r 822 H352C . .<br />

Haussmann, C. F. Kunze's Seminarium r 370.9 H35 . . .<br />

Havens, C. E. Diary of a little girl in old New York. .92 H358I1. . .<br />

Haverly, J. Negro minstrels 793-1 H35. . .<br />

Haviland & Co. Haviland china r 738 H36. . .<br />

Hawaiian phrase book r 499 H36. . .<br />

Hawkins, A. H. See Hope, Anthony, pseud.<br />

Hawtrey, R. G. Currency and credit 332 H36. . .<br />

Haydn, F. J. Complete pianoforte works qM 786.4 H37C0. . .<br />

Hayes, L. D. Empirical design 621 H37. . .<br />

Hays, A. Life and letters 92 H376h . . .<br />

The same r 92 H376h . . .<br />

Hays, H. M. Notes on the works and days of<br />

Hesiod r 883 H48ZI1. . .<br />

Hayward, P. R. Compensation for injuries to Canadian<br />

workmen qr 331.823 H37.<br />

Hazeltine, M. W. Orations, from Homer to William<br />

McKinley 808.5 H38. . .<br />

Head, J. Everyday mouth hygiene 617.6 H38. . .<br />

Heart of Unaga. Cullum C9i5h.<br />

Hecht, S. Post office dept. examination instruction<br />

-<br />

qr 3Si. 1 H39...<br />

& Liebman, C. Fireman civil service examination<br />

instruction qr 351.1 H391.. .<br />

Hedrick, U. P. Manual of American grape-growing. .634.6 H39. . .<br />

Hegner, R. W. College zoology 590 H41. . .<br />

Heidenstam, C. G. V. von. The soothsayer 839.72 H41.<br />

Sweden's laureate; selected poems<br />

839.71 H41<br />

Heine, H. Book of songs 831 H4ibo. . .<br />

Heinemann, P. G Milk 614.32 H41<br />

Helburn, T. Enter the hero 812 H42.<br />

Helena. Ward W2i4hl.<br />

Help to the devastated churches of France r 940.924 H43.<br />

Henderson, H. W. A loiterer in New England 917.44 H44.<br />

Henius, F. ABC of foreign trade 382 H44.<br />

Page


INDEX TO AUTHORS. 1920 577<br />

Call number<br />

Henouard, J. Coeurs frangais, consciences anglaises. .843 H44<br />

Henry, D. F. Geneaology [sic] of the Henry family, .r 92 H45i5h<br />

Henry, O. pseud. Rolling stones H4522ro<br />

Henry Street Settlement, N. Y. Opportunities for<br />

vocational training in New York<br />

r 607 H450<br />

Hercules Powder Co. Pittsburgh. Progressive cultivation<br />

r 631.9 H46<br />

Herford, O. This giddy globe<br />

817 H46t<br />

Hergesheimer, J. Hugh Walpole<br />

r 823 Wi8zh<br />

Herrick, C. Trust companies<br />

332.14 H47<br />

Hewlett, M. H. The light heart<br />

H499lg<br />

The outlaw<br />

H499011<br />

Heydemann, L. P. Lily Carthew's monologues 812 H51<br />

Hichens, R. S. Mrs Marden<br />

H52221T1<br />

Snake-bite<br />

H5222S<br />

Hight, J. & Bamford, H. D. Constitutional history<br />

and law of New Zealand<br />

342.931 H53<br />

Hill, C. W. Design of toothed gear 621.83 H55<br />

Hill, T. Postulates of revelation and of ethics 210 H55<br />

Hill, W. A. Ten million photoplay plots<br />

808.27 H55<br />

Hillis, N. D. Rebuilding Europe in the face of worldwide<br />

bolshevism<br />

940.921 H56<br />

Hills, E. C. & Ford, J. D. M. Spanish grammar 465 H56<br />

& Morley, S. G. Modern Spanish lyrics 861.08 H56<br />

Hills of Han. Merwin<br />

M6394IU<br />

The Hilltop troop. Pier<br />

j P556hi<br />

Hines, W. D. Extension of tenure of government<br />

and control of railroads<br />

r 385 Hs6e<br />

Hinkson, Mrs K. (Tynan). Years of the shadow. . . .92 H567hn<br />

Hirst, E. W. Self and neighbour 171 H612<br />

Hispanic American historical review; quarterly qr 980 H61<br />

Hobbs, W. H. Leonard Wood 92 W854"<br />

Hobson, E. G. Educational legislation and administration<br />

in New York from 1777 to 1850 r 379-M H65<br />

Hobson, J. A. Taxation in the new state<br />

336.2 H65<br />

Hodge, G. B. Association data visualized<br />

r 267.3 H66<br />

Hodgson (E. F.) Co. Portable houses<br />

q 728.6 H66<br />

Wigwarm portable houses for poultry<br />

q 636.5 H66<br />

Hoekstra, P. Holland-American relations, 1803 to<br />

1840<br />

r 3 2 7v3 H67<br />

Hoerle, H. C. & Saltzberg, F. B. The girl and the job. .396.5 H67<br />

Hoffman F. L. Facts and fallacies of compulsory<br />

health insurance<br />

r i6& J A %<br />

Failure of German compulsory health insurance. . .368 H67«<br />

Papers and addresses<br />

r 6l + J ^67<br />

Hoffman, H. A. Everyday Greek<br />

422 H67<br />

Holbrook, F. M. Skunk culture for profit<br />

r 636.9 H69


578 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Call number<br />

Holcomb, W. P. Pennsylvania boroughs 352 H69.. . .449<br />

The same r 305 J35 v.4 449<br />

Holding, E. S. Invincible Minnie H715K . . .442<br />

Holland, B. H. Memoir of Kenelm Henry Digby. . . .92 D5773I1 39<br />

Holland, F. Seneca<br />

92 S475I-1....409<br />

Holland, H. S. Forty years' friendship 92 H7232b 84<br />

Hollander, J. H. War borrowing 336.3 H72.. . .451<br />

Holliday, C. The cavalier poets 821.08 H72. . . .466<br />

Holliday, R. C. Walking-stick papers 814 H72 36<br />

HoUingsworth, W. W. Woodrow Wilson's political<br />

ideals 320.4 H72. . . .231<br />

Holme, C. G. Modern woodcuts and lithographs by<br />

British and French artists qr 760 H73. . . .401<br />

Holme, J. G. Life of Leonard Wood 92 W854ho. . . .410<br />

Holmes, E. Commercial rose culture 716.2 H73. .. .290<br />

Holmes, G. E. Federal income tax, war-profits and<br />

excess-profits taxes r 336.24 H73. . . .380<br />

Holmes, J. H. & Olf, Mrs L. (Browne). Grail of<br />

life 237 H73. ... 166<br />

Holt Manufacturing Company. Care and operation<br />

of the "caterpillar" 45 tractor r 621.143 H74. . . .459<br />

Holtz, A. A. Moral and religious elements in<br />

American secondary education up to 1800 377 H74. ... 118<br />

Holyoake, G. J. Among the Americans, and A<br />

stranger in America 917-3 H75. . . .297<br />

Hommon, H. B. Purification of tannery wastes. . . .r 628.54 H75. . . .333<br />

Honaga, S. National spirit of Japan 915-2 H76 40<br />

An honest thief. Dostoyeffsky D748h. . . .271<br />

Honline, M. A. & Athearn, W. S. Reference library<br />

for community training schools r 016.377 H76. . . .118<br />

Hope, Anthony, pseud. Secret of the tower H78ise 17<br />

Hopkins, A. A. Our country and its resources 917.3 H78. . . .529<br />

The same r 917.3 H78 529<br />

Hopkins, A. B. & Hughes, H. S. The English novel<br />

before the 19th century 823 H78. . . .132<br />

Hopkins, N. M. The outlook for research and invention<br />

607 H78 458<br />

Hoppe, C. Percussion and auscultation as diagnostic<br />

aids r 616.074 H78 518<br />

Hoppin, J. C. Attic red-figured vases r 738.1 H78 30<br />

Hornblow, A. History of the theatre in America 792 H79I1 83<br />

Horton, C. M. Opportunities in engineering r 620.7 H81. . . .459<br />

Hosts of the air. Altsheler A466hs. . . .227<br />

Houdoy, J. Histoire artistique de la cathedrale de<br />

Cambrai qb 726 H83 129<br />

Houghton, S. Five one act plays 822 H835f 407<br />

House of Baltazar. Locke L759I1. . . .321<br />

Page


INDEX TO AUTHORS, 1920 579<br />

Call number<br />

Housman, L. Lord of the harvest 822 H83I. '4 •<br />

Nazareth<br />

822 H83.1. . '. '242<br />

& Barker, H. G. Prunella 822 H83p. . . .407<br />

Houstoun, R. A. Elements of physics 530 H83. .389<br />

Howard, H. H. Control of hookworm disease by the<br />

intensive method r 616.962 H84. . . .394<br />

Howard, Keble, pseud. See Bell, J. K.<br />

Howe, M. A. De W. Ge<strong>org</strong>e von Lengerke Meyer. . . .92 M654h 136<br />

Hoyt, S. L. Metallography 669.042 H86 462<br />

The same<br />

r 669.042 H86....462<br />

Hubbard, H. V. & Kimball, T. Landscape architecture<br />

qr 025.4 H87. . . .444<br />

Hubbard, P. Highway inspectors' handbook 625.7 H87 396<br />

Hudson, J. W. The college and new America 378.7 H88 511<br />

Hudson, W. H. Birds in town & village 598.2 H88b 514<br />

Book of a naturalist 590.4 H88. . . . 175<br />

Hudson, W. H. 1862-1918. Short history of French<br />

literature 840.9 H88 405<br />

Huff, C. H. Mississippi waterway system as a war<br />

transportation factor r 656.9 H89. . . .399<br />

Hughes, R. Songs by 30 Americans qM 784.8 H89 33<br />

Hugo's Language Publishing Company, London.<br />

French commercial correspondent 448 H89 25<br />

Hulbert, A. B. Paths of inland commerce 386 H91. . . .385<br />

Huneker, J. G. Bedouins 814 H93b . . . .240<br />

Steeplejack 92 H933I1. . . .527<br />

Hunt, H. E. Self-training 150 H93. . . .273<br />

Hunter, F. T. Beatty, Jellicoe, Sims and Rodman. .940.915 H942. . . .192<br />

Hunter, G. W. Civic biology 570 H94C 76<br />

Laboratory problems in civic biology 570 H941 76<br />

Hunter, M. A. & Sebast, F. M. Electrical properties<br />

of some high resistance alloys r 669.9125 H94. . . .462<br />

Hurd, A. S. & Bashford, H. H. Sons of admiralty. .940.915 H94S. ... 192<br />

Hurd, P. A. Canada, past, present and future 917-1 H94. • • 245<br />

Husband, J. B. Americans by adoption 920 H95 . . . .410<br />

Hutchins, B. L. Women in industry after the war. .r 331.4 H96 74<br />

Hutchinson, E. J. Women's wages 331-4 H969. . . .281<br />

The same r 330 C72 v.89, no.i 281<br />

Huzard, Mme A. (de Bergevin). Les cousins<br />

riches 843 H987C0 17<br />

Mirabelle of Pampeluna H987111.... 162<br />

Hvem er hvem? " r 920 H987. - - -4<br />

Hyde, M. K. Girls' book of the Red Cross 361 H99 70<br />

The same j 361 H99 89<br />

Ibaiiez, V. Blasco. See Blasco Ibaiiez.<br />

Ignatius, M. B. Financing of public service corporations<br />

r 352.8 I17 24


580 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Call number<br />

Page<br />

Illinois—Library extension commission. Laws of<br />

Illinois relating to free public libraries r 021.8 I22I. . . .504<br />

Illinois—Mines and minerals department. Directory<br />

of Illinois coal operators of shipping<br />

mines r 622.3302 I22. . . . 396<br />

Illinois—State council of defense. Farm craft lessons<br />

for reserve volunteers r 630.6 I2262. . . . 178<br />

Illinois—Uniformity of legislation in the United<br />

States, Commission on. Report. . . .- r 345 I227.. . .452<br />

Illinois University—United States school of military<br />

aeronautics. Technical notes qr 623.74 I22. . . .331<br />

In apple-blossom time. Burnham B936L . . .162<br />

In Lincoln's chair. Tarbell T1962L . . .272<br />

In loving memory of Lieutenant Lee Wade II r 92 Wn8i. . . .410<br />

In pawn to a throne. Brown B79i3i 64<br />

In the days of the comet. Wells W494iin. . . .443<br />

Indiana—Education board. War service text-book, .r 940.919 I24. . . .298<br />

Indiana Limestone Quarrymen's Association. Indiana<br />

limestone qr 728 I242.... 337<br />

Indy, V. d'. Wallenstein; partition d'orchestre qM 785.4 I24. . . .339<br />

Wallenstein; piano a 4 mains qM 786.4902 I24. . . .339<br />

Inexpensive homes of individuality q 728 I24 31<br />

Inge, W. R. Philosophy of Plotinus 186 P7izi 18<br />

Ingoldsby, Thomas, pseud. Sec Barham, R. H.<br />

Inman, S. G. Intervention in Mexico 972 I24 42<br />

The inscrutable lovers. Macfarlan M1572L . . .366<br />

Institute for Government Research. The U. S. reclamation<br />

service r 631.8 I24. . . . 179<br />

Institute of American Meat Packers. Summary of<br />

testimony against Kenyon and Kendrick bills<br />

at the hearings before the Committee on agriculture<br />

and forestry of the United States Senate, .r 664.9 I 2 4- • - .522<br />

Interchurch World Movement. Report on the steel<br />

strike of 1919 331.89 I24. . . .509<br />

The same r 331.89 I24. . . .509<br />

International Correspondence Schools, Scranton, Pa.<br />

Coal mining handbook 622.3308 I24. . . .519<br />

Elements of mechanical and electrical engineering<br />

r 510.8 I24 457<br />

Ingenieria civil 510 I24.. . .331<br />

International High Commission. Appendix to the<br />

report of the U. S. section of the commission. . .r 380 I248 74<br />

International Railway Fuel Association. Proceedings<br />

r 621.1331 I24 177<br />

Invincible Minnie. Holding H715L . . .442<br />

Ionescu, T. Personal impressions 940.911 I25. . . .298


INDEX TO AUTHORS, 1920 581<br />

Call number Page<br />

Iowa—Agricultural experiment station, Ames. Complete<br />

list of publications r 016.63 I25 . . . .335<br />

Irene Kaufmann Settlement, Pittsburgh. Synopsis<br />

of social studies of the neighborhood r 331.85 I28S. . . .378<br />

The iron heel. London L822i.... 442<br />

Irving, W. Journals 92 l288ir.. . .295<br />

Old Christmas, and Bracebridge hall 817 I280I. . . . 186<br />

Isaia, C. Torino e dintorni r 914.51 I29. . . .296<br />

Island of sheep. Cadmus, pseud. & Harmonia, pseud C1161.. . .270<br />

It happened at Andover. Graham G77i5i. . . .502<br />

Ives, H. E. Airplane photography 778-35 I33. . . .182<br />

Jackson, H. E. A community church 261 J12. . . .324<br />

Jackson, P. G. Boiler feed water 621.186 J12. . . .519<br />

Jackson's Philadelphia year book for 1919 r 917.4811 P49Ja 85<br />

Jacobs, F. B. Abrasives & abrasive wheels r 621.92 J13. . . . 124<br />

Jacobsen, J. P. Niels Lyhne Ji342n. . . .365<br />

Jacotte et son cousin. Decaen 843 D35. . . .444<br />

Jaeger, F. M. Lectures on the principle of symmetry<br />

and its applications in all natural sciences 501 J14. . . .514<br />

James, H. A landscape painter Ji64la. . . .321<br />

Letters 92 J164JI.. . .343<br />

Within the rim 940-919 J16 43<br />

James, H. D. Controllers for electric motors 621.3117 J16. . . . 125<br />

The same r 621.3117 J16.. . .125<br />

Jammes, F. Monsieur le cure d'Ozeron 843 J17. .. .163<br />

Japan—Special finance and economic commission to<br />

the U. S. 1917-18. Imperial Japanese government's<br />

special finance and economic commission<br />

to the United States r 330.9 J18. . 3/"6<br />

Jastrow, M. The Eastern question<br />

949-6 J21.. 345<br />

Jed's boy. Goss j G6 9 8je. .<br />

300<br />

Jenkins, M. Literature with a large L, and Fellow<br />

240<br />

travelers<br />

824 J25 . •<br />

Jenkins, V. C. Our industrial problems r 338 J25. . 232<br />

Jenks, E. The state and the nation 320.1 J25 . . 231<br />

Jeremy. Walpole W1862J.. • 17<br />

112<br />

Jerome, J. K. All roads lead to Calvary J28ia. .<br />

John Crerar Library, Chicago. List of books, pamphlets<br />

and articles on cremation r 016.61462 J35. . 394<br />

John Stuyvesant Ancestor. Johnson J359J • • -65<br />

Johnson, A. S. John Stuyvesant Ancestor<br />

- • • • J359J •-65•<br />

Johnson, C. Successful auctioneering 658.326 J35- • 336<br />

Johnson, D. S. Fruit of Opuntia fulgida<br />

qr 583471 J35- •<br />

Johnson, D. W. Shore processes and shoreline de<br />

25<br />

velopment 551-35 J35-<br />

Johnson E. A. Furniture upholstery for schools 0S4.7 J3°-<br />

-'7<br />

82<br />

Johnson, Mrs G. (Douglas). The heart of a woman. .811 J3612.


582 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Call number Page<br />

Johnson, J. F. Practical shop mechanics and mathematics<br />

621 J36 78<br />

Johnston, M. Michael Forth J3692m. ... 112<br />

Johnston, W. A. Mystery in the Ritsmore J37im. . . .365<br />

Jones, B. E. Gilding, silvering and bronzing r 686.41 J39. . . .284<br />

Jones, E. Papers on psycho-analysis 130 J39. ... 164<br />

Jones, H. A. The lie 822 J41I1.... 134<br />

Jones, H. F. Samuel Butler 92 B978J.... 135<br />

Jones, P. V. The household of a Tudor nobleman. . . .914.2 J41. . . .411<br />

The same r 305 I22 v.6 411<br />

Jones, R. M. Story of Ge<strong>org</strong>e Fox 92 F852J0 84<br />

J<strong>org</strong>ensen, I. & Stiles, W. Carbon assimilation.. ..r 581.13 J43....121<br />

Joseph, H. H. Book of marionettes 793-1 J44- • • -407<br />

Josephson, A. G. S. Bibliographical notes on some<br />

books about reconstruction qr 016.3 J44- • • -373<br />

Journal de chimie physique r 541.105 J46. . . .234<br />

Judith, J. B. called Mile. My autobiography 92 J494J. . . .409<br />

Jung, C. G. Papers on analytical psychology 130 J52C . .. 164<br />

Jusserand, J. J. La vie nomade et les routes d'Angleterre<br />

au i4e siecle 448 J53 25<br />

Les justes. Champol 843 C35.... 504<br />

Kadomtzeff, B. The Russian collapse 947 Kn 41<br />

Kaler, J. O. Sec Otis, James, pseud.<br />

Kamman, W. F. Socialism in German American<br />

literature r 830.9 K12 240<br />

Kansas City Testing Laboratory, Kansas City, Mo.<br />

Petroleum and its products r 665.5 K12. . . .289<br />

Kappey, J. A. Songs of eastern Europe qM 784.4 K13. . . .465<br />

Karajian, H. A. Mineral resources of Armenia and<br />

Anat olia<br />

r 555.6 Ki3.--.390<br />

Katani, H. Mon-zukushi b 929 K13....337<br />

Kathleen. Morley M899k 321<br />

Kato, K. Psychology of oriental religious experience. . 248 K13 229<br />

Kauffman, G. B. Laboratory practice in applied<br />

pharmacy 615.4 K14. ... 122<br />

Kaufman, H. The clock that had no hands 659 K14 125<br />

Kaupp, B. F. Poultry culture, sanitation and hygiene . .636.5 K14 460<br />

Kawaguchi, U. Bearing of the evolutionary theory<br />

on the conception of God r 201 K14. . . .229<br />

Kay, D. L. The glamour of Dublin 914.15 D8sk 188<br />

Kaye-Smith, S. See Smith.<br />

Keating, J. M. Cyclopaedia of the diseases of children<br />

qr 618.9 K15 - - - -394<br />

Keatinge, M. W. Suggestion in education 370.1 K15 512<br />

Keeler, H. L. Our northern autumn<br />

580 K150U 457<br />

Keeling, F. H. Keeling letters & recollections 92 Kis6k .84<br />

Keeling, H. V. Bolshevism 947 K15 246


INDEX TO AUTHORS, i<br />

Call number Page<br />

I T ^ A l t ^ " soldier 's-eye-view" of our armies. .355.942 K16. . . .382<br />

Keith, A. Menders of the maimed r6i 73 Ki6 \*<br />

Keith, A. B. Belgian Congo and the Berlin act. . ' ' 967 K16 " if,<br />

Keith, ML. How to buildit . . \ ^ £j " "'<br />

Keiths 38 designs of duplexes<br />

a -28 Krfi<br />

Kelland, C. B. Efficiency Edgar<br />

' Klg e ' " ^<br />

Kelley, R. E. Book of Hallowe'en 394 K16 " 24<br />

Kellner, L. American literature 810.9 Ki6~ " ' 340<br />

Kellogg, Mrs C. (Hoffman). Bobbins of Belgium 746 K16 401<br />

Mercier, the fighting cardinal of Belgium<br />

92 M63 3 k<br />

409<br />

Kellogg, J. H. The art of massage<br />

615.82 K16<br />

332<br />

Rational hydrotherapy<br />

r 615.853 K16<br />

394<br />

Kellogg, V. L. Herbert Hoover<br />

92 H779k.<br />

408<br />

Kelly, A. A. Expert calciminer 698 22 K17<br />

332<br />

Kelly, F. C. Human nature in business 658.01 K17 235<br />

Kelly, T. H. What outfit, Buddy? Ki722w' '. ''365<br />

Kelman, J. The war and preaching 251 K17 20<br />

Kemp, H. The prodigal son 812 K17 38<br />

Kendall, C. W. The truth about Korea 951.9 K17 86<br />

Kent, R. Wilderness 9I7. o8 K19. . . .471<br />

Kenyon, C. F. Set down in malice 824 K19 36<br />

Kerdelec doit. . .Kerdelec veut! Aigueperse 843 A28k 443<br />

Kernick, E. F. C. Register of changes of names during<br />

the war qr 929.4 K21.<br />

Keyes, Sir R. J. B. Ostend and Zeebrugge, April 23,<br />

•471<br />

May 10, 1918 940.915 K23. . . .87<br />

Keynes, J. M. Economic consequences of the peace. . 330.9 K23. . . . 169<br />

Keyser, L. S. A system of general ethics 170 K23 68<br />

The killer. White W6362k.. . .367<br />

Kimball, D. Composing room management qr 655.25 K25 .... 126<br />

Kimble, E. J. Kimble's commercial, industrial and<br />

technical vocabularies 653.042 K25 . ... 180<br />

The same r 653.042 K25. . . .180<br />

Kindred of the dust. Kyne K448k. . . .366<br />

King, A. G. Progressive furnace heating 697.3 K26. . . .391<br />

King, B. Abolishing of death 134 K26 18<br />

Thread of flame K2632t.... 503<br />

King, H. C. It's all in the day's work 171 K26.... 228<br />

Kinne, H. & Cooley, A. M. Clothing and health j 646 K27. . . .248<br />

Food and health 641 K27f. ... 125<br />

Kino, E. F. Kino's historical memoir of Pimeria<br />

Alta r 979 K27. ... 191<br />

Kipling, R. Verse 821 K27ve 37<br />

The same r 821 K27V 37<br />

Kitch, E. M. Origin of subjectivity in Hindu thought, .qr 181 K29. . .. 113<br />

Kittson, E. C. Language teaching 407 K31 25<br />

Kleber, Mrs L. O. Suffrage cook book 641 K31 398<br />

58 3


584 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Call number<br />

Page<br />

Klooster, H. S. van. Lecture demonstrations in<br />

physical chemistry 54I.I K32. . . .283<br />

Knibbs, H. H. The ridin' kid from Powder river K34ir 17<br />

Kniffin, W. H. The savings bank and its practical<br />

work<br />

332.1 K34S. .279<br />

Knight, W. G. Practical questions on locomotive<br />

operating 621.13 K34.<br />

Knoeppel, C. E. Graphic production control 658.7 K34g.<br />

The same r 658.7 K34.<br />

Women in industry r 331.4 K34.<br />

.177<br />

.461<br />

.461<br />

•74<br />

Knowles, M. Disposal of sewage and refuse in<br />

America r 628.3 K35. . . .519<br />

Koch, T. W. Books in the war 027.6 K36b<br />

Koebel, W. H. The great south land 918.1 K36. . . .345<br />

Koerner, K. Sec Korner.<br />

Koop, A.J. & Inada, H. Meiji benran; Japanese<br />

names and how to read them qr 929.4 K37. . . .471<br />

Korner, K. Der bau des Dieselmotors qr 621.434 K38. . . .459<br />

Korolenko, V. Birds of heaven K386bi. . . .365<br />

Korsakov, N. A. Rimsky-. Sec Rimsky-Korsakov.<br />

Korts, G. French commercial correspondence 448 K387 25<br />

Kottcamp, J. P. Strength of materials 620.1 K39. . . . 124<br />

Kotzschmar, Mrs M. A. (Torrey). Half-hour lessons<br />

in music 786.3 K39. . . .131<br />

Krause, L. B. The business library 026 K41. . . .444<br />

The same r 026 K41.... 444<br />

Krehbiel, H. E. More chapters of opera 782 K411T1. . . .403<br />

Kudalkar, J. S. The Baroda [India] library movement<br />

qr 027.4 B25k. . . .228<br />

Kyne, P. B. The green-pea pirates K448g 66<br />

Kindred of the dust<br />

K448k....366<br />

Webster—man's man K448W. . . .366<br />

Labacco, A. Libro appartenente a l'architettura nel<br />

qual si figurano alcune notabili antiquita di<br />

Roma qb 722.7 Ln 238<br />

Labat, E. L'ame paysanne 330.9 Li 1. . . . 509<br />

Labbe, E. La morale enseignee par les grandes ecrivains<br />

170.8 Li 1 229<br />

Laboulaye, E. Etudes morales et politiques 170.4 Ln 68<br />

Lackowitz, W. Das buch der tierwelt r 590.4 L12. . . .387<br />

Ladoo, R. B. Talc mining in Vermont qr 622.355 L13. . . .459<br />

Ladyfingers. Gregory G8672I 365<br />

La Guardia, R. D. New English system for new<br />

American citizens 428.2 L15. . . .387<br />

New English system for new American citizens;<br />

a beginner's textbook 428.2 Li5n. . . .387<br />

The same; Ladies' edition 428.2 L15112. . . .387


INDEX TO AUTHORS, 1920 585<br />

Call number Page<br />

Lambert, C. Le systeme du monde moral 171 L18 68<br />

Lambert, H. Pax economica 337 L18. . ~. 376<br />

Lamborn, E. A. G. The rudiments of criticism 809.1 L18....133<br />

Lamme, B. G. Electrical engineering papers r 621.304 L19 28<br />

Landrieux, M. La cathedrale de Reims b 726 L22. . . .523<br />

A landscape painter. James J164U.. . .321<br />

Lang, E. & West, G. Musical accompaniment of<br />

moving pictures<br />

781.6 L23....404<br />

Langer, W. L. & MacMullin, R. B. With "E" of the<br />

First gas 940.913 L25 .... 139<br />

Langridge, A. K. & Paton, F. H. L. John G. Paton. . . .92 P296I. . . .409<br />

Langsdorf, A. S. Principles of direct-current machines<br />

621.312 L26 78<br />

Lanning, J. F. Around South America with a sample<br />

case 918 L27.. . .530<br />

Lanson, G. Manuel bibliographique de la litterature<br />

frangaise moderne, 1500-1900 r 016.84 L28 82<br />

Lante, L. M. Costumes des femmes frangaises du<br />

I2e au i8e siecle qr 391 L29. . . .118<br />

Laplaigne, H. La morale en maximes 170 L31 68<br />

Lapsley, G. T. The America of today 917-3 L32 529<br />

Larcher, L. J. La femme jugee par les grands ecrivains<br />

des deux sexes qr 396 L32 119<br />

La Rochelle, P. de. Modern French grammar 445 L32. . 25<br />

La Ronciere, C. G. M. B. de. Histoire de la marine<br />

frangaise<br />

r 359-944 L32 .280<br />

Larson, C. D. Business inspirations 174 L33 19<br />

La Sizeranne, R. de. L'art pendant la guerre 709 L34.. . .289<br />

Last of the Grenvilles. Copplestone C/962la.. . .270<br />

Lathrop, H. B. The art of the novelist 808.3 L35 82<br />

La Tremblaye, M. C. de. Solesmes qr 726 L35 • • • • 183<br />

Lattimore, E. L. & Trent, R. S. Legal recognition<br />

of industrial women 331-4 L36. . . .378<br />

The same<br />

r 331-4 L36. . . .378<br />

Laucks, I. F. Commercial oils 665 L36..127<br />

Lauder, Sir H. Between you and me 92 L364I. . . .135<br />

Lauer H. & Brown, H. L. Radio engineering princiles<br />

654-1 L366....399<br />

„, '" r 654-1 L36. . ..399<br />

The same<br />

•"<br />

La Villesbrunne, J. de. Le francais des frangais de<br />

T, 448 L33- • • -234<br />

France<br />

Lavollee, R. Etudes de morale sociale 331 L39 7<br />

La morale dans I'histoire<br />

* 7 o.9 ^9- • • • •«<br />

Lawrence, D. Sapper Dorothy Lawrence 940.918 L42. . . -415<br />

Lawrence, H. C. Cash discount piracy 658.521 E42. - - .40<br />

Leacock, S. B. The unsolved riddle of social justice... .301 M4----i°7<br />

Leadbitt'er, E. Rain before seven<br />

L449r----503


586 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Call number Page<br />

Lear, E. The jumblies j 827 L45J.... 348<br />

The pelican chorus j 827 L45P. . . .249<br />

Leberecht Huhnchen. Seidel 833 S45I.... 163<br />

Le Brun, C. Recueil de divers desseins de fontaines<br />

et de frises maritimes qb 714 L48. . . .523<br />

Leduc, E. Chaux et ciments r 666.9 L51. . . .522<br />

Ledwidge, F. Complete poems 821 L51C. . . .405<br />

Lee, Sir S. Perspective of biography qr 920.09 L52. . . .186<br />

Lefevre-Pontalis, E. A. L'architecture religieuse<br />

dans l'ancien diocese de Soissons qb 726 L53.... 464<br />

Leftwich, R. W. On syphonage and hydraulic pressure<br />

in the large intestine r 612.33 L54.. . .518<br />

Legend. Dane D214I.... 162<br />

Le Glay, A. J. G. Recherches sur l'Eglise Metropolitaine<br />

de Cambrai qb 726 L54.. . .337<br />

Lehmann, E. N. M. F. In a Persian garden qM 784 L55. . . . 130<br />

Lehmann, F. J. Analysis of form in music 780 L55 35<br />

Leon, P. La renaissance des ruines b 720.944 L62. . . .129<br />

Leonard, R. M. Poetry of peace 821.08 L62p. . . .294<br />

Leonardo da Vinci. Quaderni d'anatomia qr 611 L62. ... 122<br />

Leroy, A. Ce qu'il faut savoir de la question d'Alsace-Lorraine<br />

943.44 L63. . . . 138<br />

Le Roy, J. D. Les ruines des plus beaux monuments<br />

de la Grece qb 722.8 L63.... 183<br />

Lescohier, D. D. The labor market 331-8 L63.. . .378<br />

Lettres d'un vieil Americain a un Fraugais 330.9 L65 . . . .327<br />

Leverhulme, W. H. L. baron. The six-hour day 331 L665 22<br />

Leviathan (ship). History of the U. S. S. Leviathan<br />

940.915 L66 416<br />

Levine. L. Taxation of mines in Montana 336.2 L667. . . .452<br />

Lewis, H.J. Thrift 331-84 L67. . ..378<br />

Lewis (H. K.) & Co. London. Catalogue of Lewis's<br />

medical & scientific circulating library r 016.6 L67. . . .458<br />

Lewis, Mrs I. E. (Martin). • Splendors of the sky 523 L67 120<br />

Lewis, S. Free air L675f 66<br />

Lewis, W. D. & Holmes, M. D. Knowing and using<br />

words<br />

420.7 L67. . . .456<br />

Library Bureau. Filing as a profession for women. .651.507 L68 126<br />

The<br />

same<br />

r 651.507 L68....126<br />

Lichnowsky, K. M. fiirst von. Le memoire Lichnowsky<br />

et les documents Muehlon r 940.912 L68m 298<br />

Life can never be the same. Maxwell M525I. .271<br />

Light. Barbusse B2352I 16<br />

The light heart. Hewlett H499lg. .365<br />

Lincoln, A. T. Textbook of physical chemistry 541.1 L71 390<br />

Lincoln, J. C. The Portygee L7162P0 . . . .271


INDEX TO AUTHORS, 1920 587<br />

Call number Page<br />

Lincoln, Mrs M. J. (Bailey). What to have for<br />

luncheon 641 L71W 398<br />

Lincoln, N. S. The red seal L7i63r.. . .321<br />

Lindsay, N. V. Golden whales of California 811 L72g. . . .405<br />

Lindsey, B. B. & O'Higgins, H. J. The doughboy's<br />

religion 940.922 L72. . . .347<br />

Lingle, Mrs C. S. (Souther). Course on Americanization<br />

r 325.73 L72 21<br />

Linville, H. R. & Kelly, H. A. General zoology 590 L729.. . .330<br />

Lippincott, H. M. University of Pennsylvania 378.7 L73 23<br />

Lippincott, I. Problems of reconstruction 330.9 L733 72<br />

Lippincott, J. W. Red Ben, the fox of Oak ridge j L733r.... 141<br />

Lippmann, W. Liberty and the news 323 L73. . . .449<br />

Lipson, E. Europe in the 19th century 940.9 L73. . . .472<br />

Lissenden, G. B. Industrial traffic management r 385 L73.. . .513<br />

Lister, C. A. Letters and recollections 92 L7372I. ... 187<br />

Liszt, F. Ce qu'on entend sur la montagne (nach<br />

V. Hugo) qM 785.4 L73C 292<br />

Fest-klange, partitur qM 785.4 L73f 404<br />

Die ideale<br />

qM 785.4 L73i....292<br />

Litchfield, P. W. The industrial republic r 331.1 L73. . . .509<br />

Little Curly Head. Spyri j S772I.... 141<br />

Little daughter of Jerusalem. Perrault-Harry P4381 17<br />

Lochhead, W. Class book of economic entomology. .632.6 L75 397<br />

Lock, H. O. With the British army in the Holy<br />

Land 940.913 L75. .. .531<br />

Locke, W. J. House of Baltazar L759h. - • .321<br />

Lodge, Sir O.J. Continuity SOI L76....120<br />

The same r 506 B7S v.83. ... 120<br />

Lofberg, J. O. Sycophancy in Athens r 91338 L76 137<br />

Lomax, J. A. Songs of the cattle trail and cow<br />

camp 811.08 L79S 133<br />

London, J. ' The iron heel L822L . . .442<br />

On the Makaloa mat<br />

L82 2o... • 503<br />

Lopez Roberts, M. Cuentos de viejas 863 L85 . . . -444<br />

Loreburn, R. T. R. earl. How the war came 940.911 L86. .. -347<br />

Lorentz, H. A. Einstein theory of relativity 53i-i8 L86 389<br />

Lorenz R Die entwicklung der deutschen chemischen<br />

Industrie<br />

r 660.9 L87. - - .401<br />

Lorenzoni, G. Cesare Battisti and the Trentino r 943-6 L87 190<br />

Los Angeles, Municipal League. Social survey report<br />

on library facilities in Los Angeles r 027.4 L892<br />

368<br />

The lost hunters. Altsheler J A466I. - • .J39<br />

Loti, Pierre, pseud. Madame Prune<br />

Lgibma..<br />

Loubens, fi.Recueil alphabetique de citations morales<br />

des meilleurs ecrivains, prosateurs et poetes,<br />

historiens et philosophes<br />

0 r 170.3 L92


588 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Call number<br />

Louisville, Ky. — Park commissioners, Board of.<br />

Year book r 711 L92 402<br />

Louvre, Paris. Catalogue de la collection Arconati<br />

Visconti<br />

r 708.4 L93....402<br />

Lovejoy, Mrs E. (Clayson) P. The House of the<br />

Good Neighbor 940.917 L94 347<br />

Lowell, G. More small Italian villas and farm<br />

houses qb 728.8 L95m. . . .403<br />

Lucas, E. V. Verena in the midst L969ve 503<br />

Luckiesh, M. Artificial light, its influence upon<br />

civilization 628.9 L97a 519<br />

Luehrmann, A. The triple mystery L975t 366<br />

Lugin, A. Perez. Sec Perez Lugin.<br />

Lutz, E. G. Animated cartoons 778.5 L98.... 338<br />

Lyall, Sir C. J. Ancient Arabic poetry qr 892.7 L98 294<br />

Lynd, R. Old and new masters 804 L99 240<br />

Lynde, F. David Vallory L992d 17<br />

Lyon, T. L. Soils and fertilizers 631 L99S 460<br />

The same r 631 L99 460<br />

Lyon, W. H. Corporation finance 338.8 L99C. . . .451<br />

Lytle, G. W. Facts about "The birth of a new nation"<br />

r 326 L99.... 508<br />

Macalister, R. A. S. The Philistines 93945 Mil. . . .474<br />

Macara, Sir C. W. Social and industrial reform 330.9 Mil. . . .232<br />

McCall, Anne Bryan, pseud. The larger vision 170.4 M126. . . .114<br />

McCarron. Stewart & Co. Sydney, New South Wales.<br />

Stewart's hand book of the Pacific islands r 919 M12. . . . 189<br />

MacCaughey, V. Natural history of Chautauqua<br />

570-974795 M12. . . .457<br />

The same r 570-974795 M12 457<br />

MacClintock, L. Contemporary drama of Italy 852.09 M13.... 134<br />

McComb, S. The future life 218 M138 20<br />

McCord, J. N. Textbook of filing 651.5 M14. . . .399<br />

McCoy, H. N. & Terry, E. M. General chemistry 540 M14. . . .283<br />

McCutcheon, G. B. Sherry M143S .... 162<br />

MacDowell, E. A. Eight songs qM 784 Mi4e 33<br />

Erste moderne suite qM 786.4 Mi4e 33<br />

Fireside tales qM 786.4 Mi4f 33<br />

Four little poems for the pianoforte qM 786.4 Mi4fo 33<br />

Four songs qM 784 Mi4f 33<br />

From an old garden qM 784 M14 33<br />

Hamlet, and Ophelia qM 786.4902 M14I1. . . .130<br />

Hamlet; Ophelia;fiir grosses orchester qM 785.4 M14I1....130<br />

Lamia;fiir grosses orchester, clavierauszug zu 4<br />

handen vom componisten qM 786.4902 M14 33<br />

Lamia;fiir grosses orchester, partitur qM 785.4 M14 33<br />

Marionettes qM 786.4 Ml4m 33<br />

Page


INDEX TO AUTHORS, 1920 589<br />

Call number<br />

MacDowell, E. A.—continued.<br />

New England idyls qM 786.4 M 1411 • -34<br />

Die Sarazenen; Die schone Alda<br />

qM 786.4902 M14S .130<br />

Sea pieces<br />

qM 786.4 M 14s • -34<br />

Woodland sketches<br />

qM 786.4 M14W • -34<br />

Zweites konzert<br />

qM 786.4901 M14 .292<br />

McDowell, F. M. The junior college 379.171 M14 •384<br />

The same r 370 U25 1919, 110.35 .384<br />

McEwen, G. F. Ocean temperatures<br />

551.47 M15 -3.88<br />

McFadden, E. A. Why the chimes rang<br />

793-1 M15 .407<br />

The same<br />

j 793.1 M15W .422<br />

Macfarlan, A. The inscrutable lovers<br />

Mi572i • 366<br />

McFee, Mrs I. N. (Canfield). Peep at the front. . . .j 940.91 M15 ..89<br />

Tree book<br />

582 M159 ..76<br />

The same<br />

j 582 M15 ..89<br />

MacGill, P. Maureen<br />

M 1624m • 442<br />

McGlynn, E. Cross of a new crusade<br />

r 336.2. M16 .380<br />

MacGrath, H. The man with three names<br />

Mi62ma .271<br />

McGraw electric railway directory<br />

r 621.3302 M16 .177<br />

Mackay, Mrs H. G. (Edwards). Chill hours M1753C .271<br />

Mackaye, P. W. Rip Van Winkle 812 Mi7r .242<br />

The will of song<br />

792-5 M17W .187<br />

Mackellar, Sir C. K. & Welsh, D. A. Mental deficiency<br />

r 132 M17 ..67<br />

McKenna, S. Sheila intervenes<br />

M178SI1 .321<br />

Sonia married<br />

M178S0 ..66<br />

Mackenzie, A. St. C. History of English literature. . . .820.9 M17 -.36<br />

McKenzie, F. A. Korea's fight for freedom 951-9 Ml7k .191<br />

Mackenzie, Sir J. Future of medicine<br />

610 M18 •394<br />

Mackenzie, J. S. F. A night raid into space<br />

523 M18 • 457<br />

Mackenzie, W. D. Christian ethics in the world<br />

war<br />

940.922 M18 ..87<br />

Mackie, R. A. Education during adolescence 379-17 M18 .384<br />

McKinley, A. E. School history of the great war. .j 940.QH M18 .249<br />

McLean, H. A. Historical address r 285.1 M19 .166<br />

McLennan, J. S. Louisbourg<br />

qr 971-6 M19 .298<br />

MacLeod, J. Quantitative method in biology r 570 M19 ..76<br />

McMahon, T. S. Women and economic evolution r 396 M21 .281<br />

McMichael, C. B. Short stories from the Spanish M213S • 442<br />

McMurtrie, D. C. Rehabilitation of the war cripple<br />

r 37I-9I M2ir ••73<br />

McNeile, E. R. From theosophy to Christian faith 212 M21 .506<br />

McNicol, D. Telegraph operators' penmanship 652.4 M21<br />

.180<br />

.247<br />

Macphail, J. M. Asoka 954 M22<br />

.416<br />

McPherson, W. L. The strategy of the great war. . .940.913 M22<br />

MacVeagh, E. C. & Brown, L. D. The Yankee in<br />

the British zone<br />

940-91 M22<br />

• 474


S90<br />

CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Call number<br />

Madame Prune. Loti, Pierre, pseud L9i6ma.. ..112<br />

Maday, Mme M. (Hentzelt). L'amour maternel 173 M23 274<br />

Madden, M. W. Women of the Meiji era 920.7 M23 39<br />

Madison [Wis.] Board of Commerce. Madison<br />

recreational survey qr 790 M23 239<br />

Maeterlinck, M. Children's life of the bee j 595-79 M24....249<br />

Mountain paths 844 M24mo 36<br />

The same r 844 M241110 36<br />

Magnes, J. L. Russia and Germany at Brest-Litovsk<br />

940.916 M25 139<br />

Mahin's advertising data book r 659 M25 .... 288<br />

Mais, S. P. B. English course for schools<br />

808 M26....466<br />

Malet, Lucas, pseud. See Harrison, Mrs M. St. L. (Kingsley).<br />

Malins, G. H. How I filmed the war 940.913 M28. . . .532<br />

Man, H de. Remaking of a mind 940.919 M32.. ..192<br />

Man for the ages. Bacheller , . ... Bi27mn .... 161<br />

A man four.-square. Raine." Ri6i2m 66<br />

The man of the forest. Grey G8872m . . .. 162<br />

The man who understood women. Merrick M63951T1. . .. 112<br />

The man with three names. MacGrath Mi62ma . . . .271<br />

Manchester, H. H. Evolution of cooking and heating..r 644 M32. ...520<br />

Mann. A. W. Walks & talks about historic Boston<br />

917.446 B64m 85<br />

Manning, W. H. City plan of Birmingham [Ala.] . . qr 710 6489m. . . .462<br />

Maps. See p. 245, 347, 410.<br />

Marble, Mrs A. (Russell). Standish of Standish... .812 M361....468<br />

The women who came in the Mayflower 974-4 M36.. . .530<br />

Marcosson, I. F. Adventures in interviewing 920 M375....137<br />

Peace and business 382 M37 74<br />

Marden, O. W. You can. but will you? 170 M37}'.. . .446<br />

Marechal, M. Un mariage a l'etranger 843 M37.. . .272<br />

Margueritte, P. Adam, Eve et brid 'oison 396 M38 75<br />

Un mariage a l'etranger. Marechal 843 M37. . . .272<br />

Mariller, C. La distillation fractionnee et la rectification<br />

r 663.55 M38.... 289<br />

Markham, C. E. Gates of paradise 811 M39g.. . .406<br />

Marroquin, L. Pax M4125P.. . .442<br />

Marschner, H. A. Hans Heiling qM 782.3 M41... .184<br />

Marshall, Alfred. Industry and trade<br />

338 M41....449<br />

Marshall, Archibald. Sir Harry M4i63si 66<br />

Marshall, E. The voice of the pack M4164V .... 321<br />

Marshall, J. A. Manufacture and testing of military<br />

explosives 662.2 M417 289<br />

The same<br />

r 662.2 M417....289<br />

Martin, E. J. Interstate commerce law r 385 M42.. .. 171<br />

Law of common carriers, abridged<br />

r 385 M42I....171<br />

Martin. F. L. Journalism of Japan r 070 M42.... 136<br />

Page


INDEX TO AUTHORS, 1920<br />

Call number Page<br />

Martin, T. C. & Coles, S. L. Story of electricity, .qr 621.309 M42 ..519<br />

Martini, H. E. Applied art qr 745 M43. .336<br />

Martius-Matzdorff, J. Die elemente der krystallographie<br />

qr 548 M43 . •331<br />

Marvin, D. M. Occupational propinquity as a factor<br />

in marriage selection r 392 M43 . . .70<br />

Marvin, F. S. The living past<br />

901 M43I. .138<br />

Maryan, M. pseud. Sec Deschard.<br />

Maryland—State and municipal research bureau.<br />

Study of social statistics in Baltimore r 309.1 M436. •373<br />

Masefield, J. Reynard the fox 821 M44r. ..82<br />

A tarpaulin muster M444t. . 112<br />

Mason, H. D. The old path r 811 M440. •133<br />

Mass.—Commission to compile information and data<br />

for the use of the Constitutional convention.<br />

Bulletins r 342.74 M45b . .117<br />

Mass.—Constitutional convention, 1917-18. Debates<br />

r 342.74 M455. .117<br />

Mass.—Defectives, criminals and misdemeanants,<br />

Special commission relative to the control,<br />

custody and treatment of. Report r 364 M45 . r373<br />

Mass.—Education board. Investigation regarding<br />

establishing schools in county jails and .houses<br />

of correction r 365 M45 . •275<br />

Mass.—Education, Special commission on. Report<br />

r 379-744 M455 .328<br />

Mass.—General court. Manual r 328.74 M455 .116<br />

Mass.—Minimum wage commission. Annual report<br />

r 331.2 M4552 • 378<br />

Mass. Hospital School, Canton. Annual report of<br />

the trustees<br />

r 362.7 M455 • 373<br />

Masse, R. Le gaz<br />

qr 665.7 M45 .522<br />

Massenet, J. £. F. Le Cid<br />

qM 782.4 M 4 5c .184<br />

Esclarmonde qM 782.4 M 4 5e .184<br />

Griselidis 9 M 782.4 M 4 5g .184<br />

[Herodiade.] Herodias qM 782.4 M45h • 339<br />

[Le jongleur de Notre Dame.] Our Lady's<br />

juggler<br />

^M<br />

782.4 M45J<br />

My recollections<br />

92 M 4 56m<br />

La Navarraise


592 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Call number<br />

Matzdorff, J. Martius- See Martius-Matzdorff.<br />

Maugham, W. S. The explorer M488e .<br />

The moon and sixpence M4881T10 .<br />

Maunier, R. Bibliographie economique, juridique et<br />

sociale de l'Egypte moderne r 016.962 M49 .<br />

Maureen. MacGill Mi624m.<br />

Maurice, A. B. The Paris of the novelists 809.3 M49.<br />

Maurice, Sir F. B. The last four months<br />

940.913 M49I.<br />

Maurice, W. Chevob-. See Chevob-Maurice.<br />

Maurois, A. The silence of Colonel Bramble<br />

M497S.<br />

Mausbach, J. Catholic moral teaching and its<br />

antagonists 171 M511.<br />

Maxey, C. C. County administration 352.98 M51 .<br />

Maxwell, W. B. Life can never be the same<br />

M525I.<br />

Mayers, C. W. Estimating concrete buildings r 693.5 M53.<br />

Mayo, K. "That damn Y." 940.927 M54.<br />

Mayran, C. Story of Gotton Connixloo, followed<br />

by F<strong>org</strong>otten M543S .<br />

Mead, D. W. Dam and water power development<br />

at Austin, Texas qr 627.8 M55 .<br />

Hydrology 551-49 M55.<br />

The same r 551.49 M55.<br />

Meccania, the super-state. Gregory G867m .<br />

Mecklin, J. M. Introduction to social ethics 304 M55.<br />

Revival of the ontological argument qr 201 M55.<br />

Survival value of miracle qr 231 M55 .<br />

The war and the dilemma of the Christian ethic .. qr 172 M557.<br />

Mees, C. E. K. Organization of industrial scientific<br />

research 607 M56.<br />

The same r 607 M56.<br />

Meigs, W. M. Life of John Caldwell Calhoun 92 Ci32m.<br />

Memoires d'une vieille fille. Bazin 843 B33me .<br />

Mendenhall, J. C. Aureate terms r 820.9 M61.<br />

Mercator. G. Atlas qr 912 M63 .<br />

Mercier, D. F. F. J. cardinal. Cardinal Mercier's<br />

own story 940.924 M63.<br />

Meredith, H. O. Outlines of the economic history<br />

of England 330.9 M63 .<br />

Meron, F. Manufacturer's instructor and adviser., r 621.7 M63.<br />

Merrick, D. V. Time studies as a basis for rate<br />

setting • 658.7 M63 .<br />

Merrick, L. The man who understood women M6395U1.<br />

Position of Peggy Harper M6395P .<br />

The worldlings<br />

M6395WO.<br />

Merrill, W. P. Christian internationalism 261 M63.<br />

Merwin, S. Hills of Han<br />

M6394hi.<br />

The passionate pilgrim<br />

M6394P.


INDEX TO AUTHORS, 1920 593<br />

T , , Call number Pace<br />

La mesangere. Thelen<br />

g<br />

Mesta Machine Company, West Homestead," Pa ""<br />

34 ''- 444<br />

Plant and product , ,,,<br />

Tr • t , . qr 621.7 M64. . . 2^6<br />

Usines et produits qr 6?i M6<br />

Metropolitan Museum of Art. See N. Y. (city), Met- 4.u....2 3 6<br />

ropolitan Museum of Art.<br />

Metzger, H. La genese de la science des cristaux . . . r 548 M64 25<br />

Mexico—Departamento de minas. Boletin minero<br />

, ,,,.<br />

,, . „,. . qr 622.05 M653.. . «•»<br />

Mexico—Mimsteno de fomento, colonizacion e industna.<br />

Boletin oficial qr 630.972 M65.... 125<br />

Meyer, C. A. Mercantile credits and collections. .. . 658 5 M65 20<br />

Meyer, Z. Orchard and meadow<br />

j S70. 4 M6 _. \ [-^<br />

Michael Forth. Johnston f^J ^<br />

Michaelis, H. & Passy, P. E. Dictionnaire phonetique<br />

de la langue frangaise<br />

r 443 M66....119<br />

Michigan—Geological and biological survey. Catalog<br />

and table of contents of the publica-<br />

... , . ti0nS r 016.55774 M66C...516<br />

Michigan—Public domain commission. Michigan;<br />

agricultural, horticultural and industrial advantages<br />

qr 9I/-74 M66....471<br />

The Middle Temple murder. Fletcher F635mi 162<br />

Middleton, A. Safroni-. Sec Safroni-Middleton.<br />

Middleton, P. H. Industrial Mexico 917.2 M67....189<br />

Mijatovich, Mme E. L. Serbian fairy tales j 398 M68 89<br />

Miles, W. R. Effect of alcohol on psycho-physiological<br />

functions qr 612.82144 M68 176<br />

Military Historical Society of Massachusetts. Civil<br />

war and miscellaneous papers r 973.7 M686cv 42<br />

Millais, J. G. A sportsman's wanderings 799 M68S....404<br />

Miller, Mrs A. (Duer). The charm school M6gich 66<br />

Miller, D. C. Laboratory physics r 530.7 M69.... 235<br />

Miller, E. A. History of educational legislation in<br />

Ohio r 379.14 M69.. . .384<br />

Miller, Mrs E. B. (Robertson). Butterfly and moth<br />

book j 595.78 M69. ... 141<br />

Miller, E. E. Dramatization of Bible stories 793-1 M69. . . .526<br />

Millien, A. Chants & chansons 784.4 M69.. . . 131<br />

Mills, E. A. Adventures of a nature guide 570.4 M69 . . ..514<br />

Story of Scotch j M699S 45<br />

Mills, W. T. American school building standards . . r 727.1 M69 .... 183<br />

Milne, A. A. First plays 822 M712.. . . 526<br />

Milton, J. Areopagitica 323 M71.... 449<br />

The same r 820.8 A66 v.i.... 449<br />

Mindel, A. S. Russian commercial correspondence. .491.7 M72....172<br />

Mirabelle of Pampeluna. Huzard H987m .... 162


594 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Call number Page<br />

Miss Fingal. Clifford Cs87mi 65<br />

Miss Lulu Bett. Gale Gi45mi. . . .365<br />

Mitchell, A. G. Public school class method for the<br />

cornet q 788.3 M74 239<br />

Mitchell, D. & Ruger, G.J. Psychological tests . .016.1367 M74 67<br />

Mitchell, S. W. Collected poems 811 M74C .. .. 186<br />

Mitchell, W. C. International price comparisons... r 338.5 M74....510<br />

Mix, J. I. At fame's gateway M7s8a. . . .271<br />

Mock, H. E. Industrial medicine and surgery 613.6 M76....394<br />

Mode, P. G. Influence of the black death on the English<br />

monasteries<br />

r 271 M76....230<br />

Modern Greek stories. Brown & Phoutrides B7851T1.... 502<br />

A modern Mephistopheles. Alcott A3551T1....161<br />

Moeller, P. Two blind beggars and one less blind .. . .812 M?6t 38<br />

Moerk, F. N. Electro-chemistry applied to sewage<br />

disposal r 628.335 M76 286<br />

Moliere, J. B. P. Le bourgeois gentilhomme 842 M79b.. . .407<br />

The same<br />

842 M79th.<br />

•407<br />

Mombert, J. I. Great lives 904 M81. •297<br />

Mon cousin Guy. Ardel 843 A67. . . . 163<br />

Le Monde illustre; journal hebdomadaire qr 074 M81.. . .445<br />

Mongellaz, Mme F. B. De l'influence des femmes<br />

sur les moeurs les destinees des nations 396 M82.. . .508<br />

Monier-Williams, Sir M. See Williams.<br />

Monks of Thelema. Besant & Rice B466mo. . ..320<br />

Monsieur le cure d'Ozeron. Jammes 843 J17 163<br />

Montague, M. P. England to America \ . M846e 366<br />

Twenty minutes of reality 201 M84. .371<br />

Montesquieu, C. de S. baron de. Persian letters 847 M8sp. . . .408<br />

Montessus de Ballore, R. F. B. vicomte de. Universitatum<br />

et eminentium scholarum index generalis<br />

r 378 M85 .... 170<br />

Montgomery, L. M. Further chronicles of Avonlea M864f 366<br />

Rainbow valley M864r 17<br />

Montgomery, R. H. Excess profits tax procedure<br />

r 336.24 M86e .... 380<br />

Monvert, A. de. Aux Etats-Unis 448 M87 ....119<br />

La belle France<br />

448 Mg 7b ,,\\ l20<br />

Moody, J. Masters of capital<br />

336. 7 M87....380<br />

Railroad builders 3g s Mg7 386<br />

The moon and sixpence. Maugham M488mo 17<br />

Mooney, W. D. Brief Latin grammar 475 M87 282<br />

Moore, F. F. Siberia to-day<br />

QI5. 7 U%7.'.'.'. 1B9<br />

Moore, H. H. The youth and the nation i 74 M87 69<br />

Moore, N. See Tiffany, Mrs N. (Moore).<br />

Moore, R. A. & Halligan, C. P. Plant production 630 M87....397<br />

Moore, V. F. Ethical aspect of Lotze's metaphysics .. 110 L92zm....sos


Morand, S. J.<br />

INDEX TO AUTHORS, 1920 595<br />

Histoire de la Ste-Chapelle royale<br />

Call number<br />

Page<br />

du palais qb 726 M883 .... 183<br />

Moreau, C. Fragmens et ornemens d'architecture . . qb 729 M887 .... 183<br />

Moreau, E. de. La bibliotheque de l'Universite de<br />

Louvain r 027.7 L93m .... 445<br />

M<strong>org</strong>an, G. The true La Fayette 92 L144111.... 135<br />

M<strong>org</strong>an, M. Chess digest 794-1 M89....525<br />

M<strong>org</strong>an, M. H. School Latin grammar 475 M89. . . .282<br />

M<strong>org</strong>an, T. H. Genetic and operative evidence relating<br />

to secondary sexual characters qr 577.8 M89. ... 173<br />

Physical basis of heredity 575-1 M8gp. . . .282<br />

Morice, C. Paul Gauguin qr 759.4 G23m .... 402<br />

Morley, C. D. Kathleen M899k. . . .321<br />

Mince pie 814 M8gm. . . .240<br />

Travels in Philadelphia 917.4811 M89....344<br />

Morris, B. J. & Paull, C. H. Opportunities for handicapped<br />

men in the rubber industry 371-91 M91 23<br />

The same r 371.91 R26 no.9 23<br />

Morris, H. S. Hannah Bye Mgi6h.... 366<br />

Morris. J. Household science and arts 640 M91 79<br />

Morrison. L. H. Oil engines 621.43 M91.... 124<br />

Mortet, V. Melanges d'archeologie b 720 M92 . . . .464<br />

Recueil de textes relatifs a I'histoire de l'architecture<br />

720.944 M92 .... 290<br />

Morton, O. T. The southern empire 973-7 M92.. ..298<br />

Mortreul, T. La Bibliotheque Nationale 027.5 P231T1.. . .368<br />

Mother Goose melodies. Boyd Smith Mother<br />

Goose<br />

qj 398.8 M93bo....I4i<br />

The little Mother Goose j 398-8 M93I 8g<br />

Nursery rhymes j 398-8 M93nu .... 533<br />

Mount Music. Somerville & Ross, Martin, pseud S696m.. . .322<br />

Mounts L. H. Dependents, defectives and delinquents<br />

in Iowa r36o M94-- • • 167<br />

Mrs Marden. Hichens H5222m 65<br />

Mu'allakat.<br />

Seven poems suspended in the temple<br />

at Mecca<br />

8 9-'-7 M 94s- - - .467<br />

Mueller, F. W. Our trip through a paper mill r 676 M95 - - • • 283<br />

Mulets, L. E. Sunshine lands of Europe j 9U M95 • • • • 300<br />

Mulfor'd P Your forces, and how to use them 131 M95----369<br />

Mundy, T. Eye of Zeitoon M9662C . . .322<br />

Miintz. E. Les arts a la cour des papes Innocent<br />

VIII Alexandre VI, Pie III (1484-1503) •-Qr 709-45 M 96ar.. ..289<br />

Murray, E.C. G. The men of the third republic 923.2 M97----470<br />

Murray, G. G. A. Our great war and the great war<br />

' . n , . .9^8 M970....530<br />

of the ancient Greeks ^ y<br />

Murray. J. L. The call of a world task 266 M97 - - - • 3-4<br />

b


596 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Call number<br />

Myers, A. B. Patchwork M993P .366<br />

Mystery at the Blue villa. Post<br />

P8483in .163<br />

Mystery in the Ritsmore. Johnston<br />

J37tm •365<br />

Mythology of all races<br />

r 291 M99 •371<br />

Namias, R. II chimico siderurgico r 543.7 N12 .283<br />

Napoleon, I, emperor of the French. Oeuvres choisies. .308 N12 ..448<br />

Narragansett Machine Co. Providence, R. I. Gymnasium<br />

construction 725-85 N13. •239<br />

National American Woman Suffrage Association.<br />

Anna Howard Shaw r 92 S534n . •343<br />

National Association for the Advancement of<br />

Colored People. The fight against lynching..r 343.2 N15. .381<br />

National Association for the Study and Prevention<br />

of Tuberculosis. Framingham monograph<br />

r 614.097444 N15 • -27<br />

National Association of Corporation Schools. Bulletin<br />

r 607 Ni552b •175<br />

National Automobile Chamber of Commerce. Facts<br />

and figures of the automobile industry qr 629.1 N15 •396<br />

National Child Welfare Association. Child welfare<br />

handbook<br />

qr 362.7 N1553 • 448<br />

National City Company, N. Y. city. Cuba and the<br />

Cuba railroad<br />

r 656.67291 N15 •399<br />

The Illinois Central Railroad Company r 656.673 N15 •399<br />

Internal war loans of belligerent countries.... r 336.3 N155 • 279<br />

National Civic Federation. Labor situation in Great<br />

Britain and France<br />

331.8 N15 •45i<br />

National Civil Service Reform League. Draft of a<br />

civil service law<br />

r 351.6 Ni5d<br />

Report on the foreign service<br />

r 327.73 N15<br />

National Congress of Mothers and Parent-teacher<br />

Associations. Twenty years' work for child<br />

welfare<br />

r 362.7 Ni554t.<br />

National Council of Public Morals for Great and<br />

Greater Britain. The cinema 792.7 N15.<br />

National Country Life Conference. Proceedings.. r 309.1 NT5.<br />

National Education Association. Greater Pittsburgh<br />

educationally r 379.748 N155 .<br />

National Education Association—Re<strong>org</strong>anization of<br />

secondary education, Commission on. Cardinal<br />

principles of secondary education 379-17 N15.<br />

The same r 379.17 N15.<br />

The same r 370 U25 1918 110.35.<br />

National efficiency quarterly r 658.705 N15.<br />

National Federation of Iron and Steel Manufacturers.<br />

Statistical report r 669.1 N15 .<br />

Page<br />

..71<br />

.276<br />

-448<br />

•465<br />

- 230<br />

•512<br />

.512<br />

•512<br />

..401


INDEX TO AUTHORS, 1920<br />

Call number<br />

National Fire Proofing Company of Pittsburgh.<br />

Natco tex-tile one-family house<br />

q 728 Nisna<br />

Natco two-apartment house<br />

q 728 Ni5n<br />

The same<br />

qr 7_, 8 Nl5<br />

National Foreign Trade Convention (6th), Chicago,<br />

1919- Official report r 382 N1556<br />

National Institute of Social Sciences. Government<br />

versus private railroads<br />

385 N15<br />

The same r 305 N15 v.5<br />

National Lead & Oil Company, Pittsburgh. Painting,<br />

protective & decorative<br />

qr 747 N15<br />

Protection of structural metal<br />

r 691.75 N15<br />

National Research Council. Military geology and<br />

topography<br />

551.4 N155<br />

National Safety Council. Principles and practice<br />

of safety<br />

r 614.8 N1552<br />

Procedings; annual safety congress<br />

r 614.805 N15<br />

National Society for Vocational Education. Agricultural<br />

education<br />

630.7 N15<br />

The same<br />

r 607 N155 no.31<br />

Commercial education<br />

650.7 N15<br />

The same<br />

r 607 N155 no.29<br />

Industrial education<br />

607 Nisi<br />

The same r 607 N155 110.30<br />

Lessons of the war<br />

607 N15<br />

The same<br />

r 607 N155 no.28<br />

National Transportation Conference, Washington,<br />

D. C. Railroad legislation r 385 N155<br />

National Woman's Liberty Loan Committee. Report<br />

for the fourth Liberty loan campaign r 336.3 N15<br />

The nations and the League, by 10 representative<br />

writers of seven nations<br />

341-6 N15<br />

Nearing, Mrs N. M. (Seeds). Education and fecundity<br />

r 312 N18<br />

Neilson, F. The old freedom<br />

304 N21<br />

Nelson, E. W. The larger North American mammals..j 599 N22<br />

Nesbit, A. F. Smoke prevention<br />

r 628.53 N23<br />

Nevill, R. British military prints<br />

qr 355-14 N25<br />

New Armenia; monthly<br />

qr 015.6 N26<br />

New careers for women .• 396-5 N26<br />

New Jersey—Commission for the survey of municipal<br />

financing. Laws affecting municipal and<br />

county finances and taxation<br />

352.1 N261<br />

N. Y. (state)—Education department. Report of the<br />

survey of the Binghamton school system, .r 379-747 N26i2r<br />

Report of the survey of the Utica school system<br />

r 379-747 N26i2ru<br />

597<br />

Page<br />

.129<br />

129<br />

129<br />

.385<br />

•455<br />

•455<br />

..81<br />

•390<br />

•394<br />

018<br />

•397<br />

•397<br />

•399<br />

•399<br />

• 458<br />

.458<br />

• 392<br />

•392<br />

• 386<br />

279<br />

.510<br />

• H5<br />

•374<br />

•249<br />

. 169<br />

• 472<br />

• 75<br />

•374<br />

.384


598 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Call number<br />

N. Y. (state)—Labor department. Plan for shop<br />

safety, sanitation and health <strong>org</strong>anization. . .r 331.82 N261....378<br />

The same r 331 N2612 no.91.. ..378<br />

N. Y. (state)—Legislature. Memorial to Theodore<br />

Roosevelt r 92 R684n 409<br />

N. Y. (state)—Reconstruction commission. Report<br />

on retrenchment and re<strong>org</strong>anization in<br />

the state government<br />

qr 353-9 N2617....449<br />

N. Y. (city). Directories. Directory of directors<br />

in New York r 917.471 N2613.. ..188<br />

N. Y. (city)—Public health education, Bureau<br />

of. Simple wholesome lunches for working<br />

people 641 N261 79<br />

N. Y. (city)—Public library. Astor, Lenox and<br />

Tilden foundations. Assyria and Babylonia<br />

qr 016.9352 N26 247<br />

N. Y. (city), Bureau of Municipal Research. Report<br />

on a survey of the public schools of Harrisburg,<br />

Pa r 379-748 N26 512<br />

N. Y., Century Association. Joseph Hodges Choate. .r 92 C44&2n. . .. 187<br />

N. Y. (city), Charity Organization Society. The<br />

f<strong>org</strong>otten army r 343 N26.... 279<br />

N. Y. (city), Merchants' Association. Industrial<br />

pensions<br />

r 331.2 N26....509<br />

N. Y. (city). Metropolitan Life Insurance Company.<br />

The child<br />

649.1 N26....461<br />

Metropolitan Life cook book 641 N2612. . . .398<br />

N. Y. (city), Metropolitan Museum of Art.<br />

Pierpont M<strong>org</strong>an wing<br />

qr 708.1 N26pi....i28<br />

Newark, N. J.—Free public library. Newark's last<br />

15 years r 917.49 N261. . . .344<br />

Roseville branch r 027.4 N26i5r. . . .504<br />

Newbolt, Sir H. J. Book of the long trail 910.9 N26. . . .244<br />

The same<br />

j 910.9 N26....249<br />

Newland, H. O. Planting, cultivation and expression<br />

of coconuts 634.53 N28.. . . 179<br />

Newton, A. W. The English elementary school... .379.42 N29....170<br />

Nexo, M. A. Ditte: girl alive! N296d .... 503<br />

Nichol, J. Tables of European history, literature,<br />

science and art .• r 802 N31.. . .466<br />

Nicholson, H. D. S. & Lee, A. H. E. Oxford book<br />

of English mystical verse • 821.08 N31....133<br />

The same<br />

r 821.08 N318....133<br />

Nicholson, M. Blacksheep! Blacksheep! N3i9b....322<br />

Nicol, G. Ship construction and calculations 623.8 N32....177<br />

Nicoll, M. Dream psychology 135 N32.. . . 113<br />

Niels Lyhne. Jacobsen Ji342n .... 365<br />

Page


Call number Page<br />

Nieman, H. A. The crawl stroke<br />

INDEX TO AUTHORS, 1920 599<br />

Nigrin, J. V. Bohemian grammar...'.'.'.'.'.•;.".•.'.•.'' "£%£ £33" " SU<br />

Ninde, W.E. Heat engines<br />

4<br />

6 '!i., N36-'-'-'1<br />

The same , .. ,<br />

0J0<br />

, T , . _ r 621.1 N36....333<br />

No defence. Parker P2 38no....o 3<br />

Nolen, J. City plan for Akron qr 710 A 3m.. .. 44<br />

Non-partisan Citizens' Protective Committee of Baltimore<br />

County. Baltimore county's protest<br />

against the proposed annexation r 352.001 N421 449<br />

Norris, K. Harriet and the piper N452 3ha.'.'.'!503<br />

North Carolina University—English department.<br />

•National ideals in British and American literature<br />

r 820.7 N45.. .. 293<br />

North Central Association of Colleges and Secondary<br />

Schools. Directory r 379 I? N4S 2g Q<br />

Norton, R. Drowned gold " N46sd 66<br />

Nos contemporains qr g20 N47 85<br />

Nutting, H. C. Latin primer 47S N54....172<br />

Nystrom, P. H. Economics of retailing 658.612 N55e 80<br />

O. Henry memorial award; prize stories 1919. Society<br />

of Arts and Sciences, New York city S6780 504<br />

Oberg, E. V. Developing a gaging system for interchangeable<br />

manufacture r 621.7163 O12. . . .459<br />

O'Brien, F. White shadows in the South seas 919.63 O12 245<br />

O'Brien, M. J. A hidden phase of American history. .973.3 O12 86<br />

O'Brien, S. Blind 822 O12b.--.242<br />

O'Byrne, D. Wrack O129W.. . . 162<br />

Odette. Deschard 843 D457. . . .444<br />

Oemler, M. C. Slippy McGee O156S....271<br />

Oh, you Tex! Raine R16120... .322<br />

Ohio—Adjutant-general. Official roster of Ohio<br />

soldiers in the War with Spain r 973.89 O18 86<br />

Ohio—Health and old age insurance commission.<br />

Health, health insurance, old age pensions r 331.2 O183....277<br />

Ohio State Bar Association. Proceedings of the<br />

annual session<br />

r 347.06 O18....382<br />

Oil and gas journal. North American oil and gas.. qr 665.5 O195.. ..522<br />

Oklahoma University. Woman suffrage r 324.3 O22 21<br />

Olcott, F. J. The wonder garden j 398 O23W 141<br />

Olcott, W. T. Field book of the stars j 523-8 O23 422<br />

The Old Card. Pertwee P4470I.. . . 112<br />

Old Colony Trust Company, Boston. Treaty of<br />

Versailles r 341.6 023t.. ..232<br />

Oldmeadow, E.J. Coggin O2312C. ..366<br />

Olgin, M.J. Guide to Russian literature 891.7 O23....405<br />

The same r 891.7 O23.. ..405<br />

Ollivant, A. Two men 023 4 t.... 162


600 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Call number<br />

Olrik, A. Heroic legends of Denmark 839.81 O237.. . .241<br />

Olson, O. L. Relation of the Hrolfs saga Kraka and<br />

the Bjarkarimur to Beowulf ;. . .r 839.6 O23.. . .340<br />

Omaha, Neb.—City planning commission. City planning<br />

needs of Omaha qr 710 O24C.... 523<br />

Oman, C. W. C. Outbreak of the war of 1914-18. .qr 940.911 O24.. ..475<br />

On the Makaloa mat. London L8220.... 503<br />

One after another. Aumonier A9250. . . .501<br />

One hundred best novels condensed. Grozier r G9450....502<br />

O'Neill, H. C. The war in Africa, 1914-17, and in<br />

the Far East, 1914 940.913 O25 43<br />

Open shelf; memorial number. William Howard<br />

Brett qr 92 B7350 343<br />

Open the door. Carswell C2340....441<br />

Oppenheim, E. P. The box with broken seals 0265bo.... 162<br />

The great impersonation 026sg 66<br />

L'Ordene de chevalerie 841 O28.. . .341<br />

O'Rell, Max, pseud. Les filles de John Bull 396 O283 75<br />

Orth, S. P. Armies of labor 331.87 O28 378<br />

Our foreigners 3 2 5-73 O28 375<br />

Osborn, A. S. Instruments and illustrations in disputed<br />

document trials<br />

r 652.4 02gi....336<br />

Osborne. H. How to stage a play 792.07 O29.. . .407<br />

O'Shaughnessy, Mrs E. L. (Coues). Alsace in rust<br />

and gold<br />

940.91 029al...,347<br />

Osterreichischer Verein fiir Kalteindustrie, Vienna.<br />

Festschrift fiir den Internationalen Kaltekongress<br />

(3.)<br />

qr 621.55 O29....178<br />

Ostrander, I.E. Ashes to ashes 0297a....272<br />

Unseen hands O297U. . . .442<br />

Ostrogorski, M. I. La femme au point de vue du<br />

droit public 396.3 O29 386<br />

Otis, James, pseud. Mary of Plymouth 974-4 O31.. . .413<br />

Our casualty. Hannay H2370.. ..112<br />

Outland. Austin A93720.... 161<br />

The outlaw. Hewlett H4990U. . . .365<br />

Overton, F. & Denno, W. J. The health officer 614.2 O33 518<br />

Owen, R. L. Foreign exchange 332.45 O34.... 380<br />

Owen, W. M. In camp and battle with the Washington<br />

artillery of New Orleans 973-7 O34. . . .473<br />

Oxford University. Calendar<br />

r 378.4 O3523....454<br />

Paaswell, G. Retaining walls 627.8 Pn .... 334<br />

Packard Motor Car Company. Detroit. Packard<br />

advance-training school r 658.7 P12. . .. 288<br />

The pagan. Smith S6482P.. ..443<br />

Page, N. C. Lord Howe's masquerade qM 7S4.6 P14.. . .339<br />

Page, T.N. Mount Vernon and its preservation.. .075.5 P14111.. ..191<br />

Page


INDEX TO AUTHORS, 1920 601<br />

Call number Page<br />

Page, V. W. Location of airplane power plant<br />

troubles made easy<br />

qr 621.43275 P14I.<br />

Page, W. Commerce and industry r 330.9 P14.<br />

Pailleron, E. The art of being bored<br />

842 Pi5ar.<br />

Paine, J. K. Im friihling qM 785.1 P16.<br />

Paine, R. D. Fight for a free sea 973-5 P16.<br />

Ships across the sea Pi64sh .<br />

Painters magazine. Nineteen ninety five paint questions<br />

answered r 698 Pi6n .<br />

Palgrave, Sir F. History of Normandy and of England<br />

942 P18.<br />

Palladius, bp. of Helenopolis. Lausiac history 271 P18.<br />

Palmer, C. I. Practical mathematics for home study..510 Pi9p.<br />

Palmer, F. Our greatest battle 940.913 P19.<br />

Pan American Union. Reference list on commerce,<br />

exporting and importing r 016.382 P21.<br />

Pani, A.J. Hygiene in Mexico r 614.09725 P21 .<br />

The Paradise mystery. Fletcher F635P.<br />

Paraguay—Oficina de estadistica. Anuario estadistico,<br />

1916 q 318.9 P22.<br />

Paris, Bibliotheque Nationale. La Bibliotheque<br />

Nationale r 027.5 P23 .<br />

Park, J. E. The bad results of good habits 814 P23.<br />

Parker, C. H. The casual laborer 331-8 P23 .<br />

Parker, Sir G. No defence P238no .<br />

Parker, H. W. Hora novissima qM 783.4 P23.<br />

Parlette, R. A. University of hard knocks 170 P24.<br />

Parmer, C. B. We are Americans!<br />

r 940.92 P25 •<br />

Parry, E. A. & Codrington, Sir A. E. War pensions,<br />

past and present 351-5 P26.<br />

Parsons, G. Land of fair play j 353 P26.<br />

Parsons, M. P. The new poetry 016.821 P26.<br />

The same<br />

r 374-3 W76 no.26.<br />

Pascal, B. Lettres provinciales 271.5 P27I.<br />

La passion d'Armelle Louanais. Geniaux 843 G293 .<br />

The passionate pilgrim. Merwin M6394P •<br />

Pasture, Mrs H. de la. See De la Pasture.<br />

Patchwork. Myers M993P-<br />

Pater, W. Sketches and reviews 824 P29S .<br />

Paton, L. A. Elizabeth Cary Agassiz 92 A2623P .<br />

Patton, C. H. World facts and America's responsibility..261 P31<br />

Paul J H Boiler chemistry and feed water sup-<br />

' ,- 621.186 P31<br />

plies<br />

Pavicevic M. M. Mountain roses 891.892 F32<br />

_ ,, M412SP<br />

Pax. Marroquin op<br />

Paxson, F. L. The last American frontier<br />

97» ^32<br />

Payne, E. G. Education in accident prevention.. . .614.807 P33


602 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

t Call number Page<br />

Payne, W. The scarred chin P334S .... 272<br />

Peace in Friendship village. Gale Gusp.... 320<br />

Peace treaties 341.2 P34. . . .233<br />

The same r 341.2 P34. . . .233<br />

Peacock, D. H. Joseph Priestley 92 P947P . . . .343<br />

Peake, A. S. Commentary on the Bible r 220.7 P34 • • • • 506<br />

Peixotto, E. C. The American front 940.91 P37 43<br />

Peking leader. China in 1918 qr 915.1 P37. . . .245<br />

Pellett, F. C. Beginner's bee book 638.1 P37....179<br />

Penance of Magdalena. Chase C3912P .. . .441<br />

Penitentiary Post. Pinkerton P635P. . . .443<br />

Pennell, J. Etchers and etching qr 767 P39 80<br />

Pa.—Committee of public safety. Outline of departmental<br />

activities r 940.917 P399. . . .532<br />

Pa.—Constitutional amendment and revision commission.<br />

Preliminary draft of constitution, .r 342.74 P3992. . . .233<br />

Pa-—Council of national defense. Americanization<br />

in Pennsylvania q 325.73 P39. . . .326<br />

A year of food administration in Pennsylvania 338.1 P39. . . .327<br />

Pa.—Economy and efficiency commission. Report<br />

of the solicitor r 353.9 P39992. . . .231<br />

Pa.—Fire protection bureau. Monthly bulletin. . . .r 614.84 P399. . . .285<br />

Pa.—Old age pensions, Commission on. Report... .r 351.5 P39....328<br />

Pa.—Public service commission. Tentative draft of<br />

uniform classification of accounts for natural<br />

gas companies r 657.55328 P39t 461<br />

Uniform classification of accounts for natural gas<br />

companies r 657.55328 P39 180<br />

Pa.—State library. Arms of Pennsylvania and the<br />

great seal of the commonwealth r 929.8 P39. . . .410<br />

Fa.—State museum. Catalogue of lantern slides 779 P39 30<br />

The same r 779 P39 30<br />

Pa. Statutes. Laws relating to trades r 338.9 P39C. . . .278<br />

Pa.—Water supply commission. Water resources<br />

inventory report r 551.48 P39 76<br />

Pa. Andersonville Memorial Commission. Pennsylvania<br />

at Andersonville, Ga<br />

973-7 P3993....413<br />

Pa. Federation of Labor. Proceedings of the annual<br />

convention r 337 P3992 378<br />

Pa. Railroad Co. Classification of freight qr 385 P411. . . .386<br />

Penton's foundry list r 621.7202 P41 78<br />

People's Refreshment House Association, Limited.<br />

P. R. H. A. red book r 178 P41P....505<br />

Pepper, C. M. Life and times of Henry Gassaway<br />

Davis<br />

9, D318P....295<br />

Pepys, Samuel, jr. pseud. Last diary of the great warr. .827 P41I 526<br />

Pera, E. J. Varona y. Sec Varona y Pera.


INDEX TO AUTHORS, 1920 603<br />

Call number Page<br />

Percy, E. S. C. lord. Responsibilities of the league ... .341 6 P42 510<br />

Perez Lugin, A. La casa de la Troya<br />

863 P427<br />

323<br />

Pergolesi, G. B. La serva padrona<br />

qM 782 5 P42<br />

130<br />

Perkins, G. W. Activities of the Y. M C A with<br />

0 theA.EF r 940.927 P43.... 139<br />

Perkins, Mrs L. (Fitch). The Scotch twins j P 434s 478<br />

Perleberg, H. C. Art in advertising qr 659 P43.... 126<br />

Perouze, G. Le livre de l'aveugle 655.38 P43 .. 126<br />

Perrault-Harry, Mme. Little daughter of Jerusalem... P438I 17<br />

Perrigo, C. O. E. Les tours r 621.94 P 4 4t....i 7 8<br />

Perry, B. Study of poetry 808.1 P44 5^5<br />

Pershing Limit Club qr 940. 9I7 p 44 . „<br />

Pertwee, R. The Old Card P 447 ol II2<br />

Peterkin, G. S. Medical ethics versus ethical economics<br />

qr 610 P45 .... 518<br />

Peters, C. A. Preparation of substances important in<br />

agriculture S47.8 9 p 4S 77<br />

Petit, H. Traite elementaire d'automobile r 629.1135 P46....520<br />

La petite mademoiselle. Bordeaux 843 P63P.. . ->- .27 -><br />

Les petites ames. Vismes 843 V35. \i ;<br />

Petroleum times<br />

qr 665.505 P4654....180<br />

Petrucci, R. Chinese painters 759-93 P46....290<br />

Petrunkevitch, A. Morphology of invertebrate types..591.4 P46....120<br />

Pfister, O. Psychoanalytic method 130 P47 18<br />

Phelan, J. J. Motion pictures in Toledo 792.7 P48.. . .340<br />

Phelps, G. H. Go! i 74 P 4 8....37o<br />

Philadelphia, Bureau of Municipal Research. Workingmen's<br />

standard of living r 331.83 P49.... 379<br />

Philadelphia Charter Committee. Measures needed<br />

for the improvement of the government of<br />

the city and county<br />

r 352 P4942....231<br />

Phillips, C. A. History of education in Missouri..r 370.9 P51 23<br />

Phillips, W. S. The sandman; his Indian stories..j 398.097 P51 89<br />

Phillpotts, E. Evander P5i8e 442<br />

St. Ge<strong>org</strong>e and the dragons 822 Psi8sa.. . .526<br />

Photo-miniature. Lens facts you should know in<br />

the choice and use of photographic lenses for<br />

different branches of photography<br />

77LI2 P52le.--.524<br />

Photographing the children 778.15 ?52p. . . . 524<br />

Practical instructions in color photography 778-4 ?52p. - - .524<br />

Photograms of the year, annual review qr 779 P52.. . .464<br />

Pier, A. S. The Hilltop troop j P556hi.. ..422<br />

Pierce, G. W. Electric oscillations and electric<br />

waves • -538-56 P55 • • • • 282<br />

Pierre & Joseph. Bazin B3392P.. ..441<br />

Pillion, L. Les sculpteurs frangais du 13 s siecle 735 p 59- • • -462


604 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Call number<br />

Pillsbury, W. B. Psychology of nationality and<br />

internationalism 321.041 P59.<br />

Ping, L. G. Jeux frangais 448 P62 .<br />

Pinkerton, Mrs K. S. (Gedney), & Pinkerton, R. E.<br />

Penitentiary Post P635P -<br />

Pinski, D. Ten plays 892.52 P64te.<br />

Pippard, A. J. S. & Pritchard, J. L. Aeroplane structures<br />

533-652 P64.<br />

Pirie-Gordon, C. H. C. Brief record of the advance<br />

of the Egyptian expeditionary force under<br />

the command of Gen. Allenby qr 940.913 P65-<br />

Pitman (Sir I.) & Sons. Mercantile correspondence. . . .448 P66.<br />

Pitt-Rivers, G. Conscience & fanaticism 171 P67.<br />

Pittsburgh—Public education board. Reports on<br />

teachers' pensions r 371.17 P67.<br />

Pittsburgh—Taxation study, Committee on. Report<br />

r 336.2 P674.<br />

Pittsburgh, Chamber of Commerce. Pittsburgh,<br />

the gateway between East and West..r 917.4886 P674ipi<br />

Pittsburgh Council of the Churches of Christ. Annual<br />

report r 206 P67.<br />

Pittsburgh, Czecho-Slovak Army and Relief Committee.<br />

Trail of the Hun in Austria Hungary<br />

r 940.924 P67.<br />

Pittsburg observer qr 282.05 P674.<br />

Pittsburgh University. Information book r 378.7 P67L<br />

A place in the world. Turner T865P.<br />

Plumbing news; monthly qr 696.05 P718.<br />

Plutarch. Selected essays<br />

888 P72S.<br />

Le poisson d'or. Feval 843 F438.<br />

Pollak, G. Michael Heilprin and his sons 92 H417P .<br />

Pollard, A. F. League of nations 341.6 P76.<br />

A short history of the great war 940.911 P76.<br />

Polybius, pseud. Greece before the conference 949-5 P77 •<br />

Ponchielli, A. La Gioconda qM 782.5 P78.<br />

Pontalis, E. A. Lefevre. See Lefevre Pontalis.<br />

Porter, Mrs G. (Stratton). Homing with the birds..598.2 P83h.<br />

Porter, J. E. Activated sludge process of sewage<br />

treatment r 016.628348 P83 .<br />

Porter, J. T. Stem-vowel shorthand 653.7 P83 .<br />

Porter, S. See Henry, O. pseud.<br />

Portland, Ore.—City planning commission.<br />

Zoning<br />

and city planning for Portland r 710 P83 .<br />

Portland Cement Association. Catalog of books,<br />

periodicals and pamphlets in the library of<br />

the Portland Cement Association r 016.6915 P83 .<br />

The Portygee. Lincoln L7162P0.


INDEX TO AUTHORS, 1920 605<br />

Call number<br />

Posey, W. C. Hygiene of the eye 617.75 P84....285<br />

Position of Peggy Harper. Merrick M6395P .. . .271<br />

Post, M. D. Mystery at the Blue villa P8483m 163<br />

Potter, A. A. & Calderwood, J. P. Steam and gas<br />

power engineering 621.1 P8se .... 397<br />

Potter, E. C. Railway traffic departments r 658.62 P85 .. . .461<br />

Potts, R. M. Addresses and papers on insurance r 368 P86.... 328<br />

Poussin, G. T. Travaux d'ameliorations interieures..qr 626.9 P86. . ..178<br />

Atlas qr 626.9 P86a 178<br />

Powell, E. A. The army behind the army 355-973 P87 .... 328<br />

New frontiers of freedom 914.96 P87....411<br />

Powell, H. M. Taxation of corporations and personal<br />

income in New York r 336.24 P87L . . .381<br />

& Silver, J. J. New York franchise tax<br />

on manufacturing and mercantile corporations<br />

r 336.24 P87 381<br />

Power of a lie. Bojer B597P. . . .441<br />

Power wagon reference book qr 629.1126 P87 .. . .460<br />

Powers, H. H. The American era 330-9 P87 376<br />

Presbrey, E. W. Courtship of Miles Standish 812 P92....407<br />

Prescott, H. E. See Spofford, Mrs H. E. (Prescott).<br />

Preuss, A. Fundamental fallacy of socialism 336.2 P93 327<br />

Price, L. Immortal youth; a memoir of Fred A.<br />

Demmler<br />

r 92 D421P....243<br />

Price, T. S. Per-acids and their salts 546 P94....174<br />

Prince, W. F. Psychological tests for the authorship<br />

of the Book of Mormon r 298 P95 70<br />

Principles of Quakerism<br />

289.6 P95----274<br />

Prison life<br />

P 9S6p • • • • 443<br />

Procter, H. R. Leather chemists' pocket-book 675 P96I 517<br />

Prometheus illbound. Gide G374P 227<br />

Provident Loan Society of New York. Twentyfifth<br />

anniversary<br />

r 332-3 P97----232<br />

Public service properties<br />

r 332.6 P98.. .-451<br />

Punch. Mr Punch's history of the great war 940.9" P98 - - • • 192<br />

Putman D. Primary and secondary public education<br />

in Michigan<br />

r 379-774 P99- • 23<br />

1S0<br />

Q ST [monthly] r 654.105 Qil.<br />

922 296<br />

Quaker biographies<br />

A _ _'<br />

The Querrils. Aumonier<br />

A925q 1<br />

Quincke W. Handbuch der kostumkunde qr 391 U34<br />

Quintana, M.J. La vida de Vasco Nunez de Balboa. .92 Bi8 7 q<br />

Quitard, P. M. Proverbes sur les femmes r 398.9 CJ47<br />

Rabelais, F. Les cinq livres<br />

o &47 r, ,111'" '^<br />

Le rachat. Deschard<br />

8 43 £457 ' • ''<br />

Raemaeke'rs, L. The great war; victory volume .. qr 741 Ki3gr - • • • 5<br />

Rageot G. La Frangaise dans la guerre r 940.92K K14 - - • •<br />

Page


6o6<br />

CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Call number<br />

The Ragged Inlet guards. Wallace j Wi75r.. . .348<br />

Rain before seven. Leadbitter L449r.... 503<br />

Rainbow valley. Montgomery M864r 17<br />

Raine, W. M. A man four-square Ri6l2m 66<br />

Oh, you Tex! R16120. . . .322<br />

Rainsford, W. K. From Upton to the Meuse with<br />

the 307th infantry 940.9137 R16.. . .475<br />

Ramsay, R. E. Effective house <strong>org</strong>ans<br />

659.132 R18....400<br />

Ramsay, Sir W. Life and letters of Joseph Black,<br />

M. D 92 Bsi3r 243<br />

Ramsey, S. C. Small houses of the late Ge<strong>org</strong>ian<br />

period<br />

qb 724.59 R18....403<br />

Rand, McNally & Co. New York guide to the city<br />

and environs r 917.471 R18.. . .244<br />

Randall, J. H. The spirit of the new philosophy 131 R18... .273<br />

Rapagnetta, G. Sec Annunzio, Gabriele d', pseud.<br />

Raspberry jam. Wells W494r.. . .227<br />

Rathbone, J. A. Shelf department r 025.8 R21. . . .368<br />

Viewpoints in travel r 016.91 R21.. . .244<br />

Ravage, M. E. The Jew pays 296 R22.... 115<br />

Raymond, R. L. At a dollar a year R2452a. . . .227<br />

Raymond, W. L. American and foreign investment<br />

bonds 332.6 R24.. . .510<br />

Rea, S. Statement in support of the plan for the<br />

future management of the railroads r 385 R24.... 171<br />

Reade, W. H. V. Revolt of labour against civilisation<br />

331.8 R254. . . .510<br />

Recouly, R. Foch, the winner of the war 940.913 R26f. . . .348<br />

Red and Black. Richmond R425red. . .. 112<br />

Red Ben, the fox of Oak ridge. Lippincott j L733r .. .. 141<br />

"The red code." r 379.14 R26 329<br />

Red Cross Institute for Crippled and Disabled Men.<br />

American program for the rehabilitation of disabled<br />

soldiers qr 371.91 R26pr 74<br />

Red-Cross Society. (United States. American<br />

National Red Cross.) American Red Cross..r 361 R269am 70<br />

American Red Cross, Pittsburgh chapter; Junior<br />

Red Cross r 361 R269J 71<br />

Report of the commission for tuberculosis. . qr 614.0945 R26....176<br />

Red seal. Lincoln L7i63r.. . .321<br />

Redemption of David Corson. Goss G6g8r 365<br />

Redfield, C. L. Control of heredity r 575.6 R27.... 330<br />

Reed, C. A. L. Text-book of gynecology r 618 R28.. . .394<br />

Reed, M. Master of the vineyard R283ma .... 322<br />

Reely, M. K. Daily bread; A window to the south;<br />

The lean years 812 R28 242<br />

Page


INDEX TO AUTHORS, 1920<br />

Call number<br />

Rees, A. J. The hand in the dark R2862h . .<br />

Reeve, A. B. The soul scar<br />

R2872S0..<br />

The refugee family. Canfield<br />

j Cl7i2r..<br />

Reiche, C. La vegetacion en los alrededores de la<br />

capital de Mexico<br />

r 581.972 R29..<br />

Reichert, J. Erz und eisen in Deutschlands zukunft<br />

r 669.1 R29. .<br />

Reid, F. A garden by the sea R2992g. .<br />

Reigner, C. G. Dictation course in business literature<br />

653.042 R3id..<br />

Reiss, R. The home I want<br />

331-83 R32..<br />

Reiss, R. A. The kingdom of Serbia<br />

940.924 R32..<br />

Reiss, W. & Stiibel, A. Necropolis of Ancon in<br />

Peru qr 913.85 R32.<br />

Renard, G. F. Guilds in the middle ages 338.6 R33 .<br />

Renaut, F. P. La question de la Louisiane, 1796-1806. .976.3 R33.<br />

Rendle, T. M. Swings and roundabouts 791 R33 •<br />

Renee Orlis. Ardel<br />

843 A67r.<br />

Repington, C. a C. Vestigia 9 2 R353r-<br />

Republic of the Southern Cross. Brussof<br />

B8382r.<br />

Requin, E. J. America's race to victory 973.9132 R35 .<br />

The rescue. Conrad C755re.<br />

Responsibility. Agate A263r..<br />

Resurrection Rock. Balmer B2i6r.<br />

Reuter, E. B. The mulatto in the United States 326 R36.<br />

The review; a weekly journal qr 051 R36.<br />

Review of war surgery and medicine [monthly] . . . .r 610.5 R36.<br />

Reynolds, Mrs H. C. (Collins). Thoughts on humane<br />

education 179-3 R37-<br />

Reynolds, Sir J. R. System of medicine r 616 R37 -<br />

Rhead, L.J. Fisherman's lures and game-fish food..799 R38L<br />

Rhys, E. Lyric poetry 821.09 R38.<br />

New golden treasury of songs & lyrics 821.08 R38.<br />

Ribbert, H. Heredity, disease and human evolution..r 613.9 R38.<br />

Ricci, L. & Ricci, F. Crispino e la comare qM 782.6 R39-<br />

Richards, Mrs L. E. (Howe). In my nursery j 811 R411-<br />

Joan of Arc J ° 2 J32 9 r-<br />

Richmond, Mrs G. L. (Smith). Red and Black R 4 25red.<br />

Rickenbacker, E. V. Fighting the flying circus 940-914 R43-<br />

Ricordi (G.) & C, Milan. Gli avvisi delle officine G.<br />

Ricordi & C, Milano [plates]<br />

qr 741 R43 •<br />

Rideout, H. M. The foot-path way<br />

R 438f-<br />

Ridin' kid from Powder river. Knibbs<br />

K34ir.<br />

Riegel R Fire underwriters' associations in the<br />

United States<br />

r 368 R44-<br />

Rightor, C. E. City manager in Dayton 352-021 K4o -


608 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Call number<br />

Rimsky-Korsakov, N. A. Sadko qM 786.4902 R46S .<br />

Sheherazade, after the "Arabian nights;" symphonic<br />

suite for orchestra, arranged for piano<br />

4 hands qM 786.4902 R46<br />

Sheherazade, after the "Arabian nights;" symphonic<br />

suite for orchestra, arranged for piano.<br />

2 hands qM 786.4 R46.<br />

Rinehart, Mrs M. E. (Roberts). Affinities<br />

R472aff.<br />

"Isn't that just like a man!" 817 R47 .<br />

Ringer, P. H. Clinical medicine for nurses 616 R47.<br />

Ripley, C. M. Romance of a great factory 621.309 R48.<br />

Risque, F. W. Loose leaf books and systems for<br />

general business 657.262 R49.<br />

Rittenhouse, J. B. Second book of modern verse. .811.08 R51S.<br />

Rivers, F. The hotel butcher, garde manger and<br />

carver q 641.72 R52.<br />

The same qr 641.72 R52.<br />

Rivers, G. Pitt-. Sec Pitt-Rivers.<br />

The river's end. Curwood C936r.<br />

Rivoira, G. T. Moslem architecture qb 726 R52.<br />

La robe de laine. Bordeaux<br />

843 B63r.<br />

Roberts, Cecil. Poems 821 R53.<br />

Roberts, Charles. Illustrated catalogue of the<br />

private library of the late Charles Roberts of<br />

Philadelphia<br />

r 016.2896 R53..<br />

Roberts, M. H. Feeding and management of<br />

dairy cattle 637 R53. .<br />

Roberts, M. Lopez. See Lopez Roberts.<br />

Roberts, O. With Lafayette in America<br />

92 Li44r..<br />

•135<br />

Roberts. S. C. Story of Doctor Johnson 92 j365ro. . •39<br />

Roberts, T. S. Ornithology of Minnesota r 598.2 R538.. • 25<br />

Robin Linnet. Benson B443ro.. .270<br />

Robinson, E. G. Principles and practice of morality.. 171 R549.. .165<br />

Robson, A. G. Engineering machine tools and processes<br />

621.9 R56..<br />

Rochester, N. Y.—Public library. Union list of<br />

serials in the libraries of Rochester r 016.05 R57..<br />

Rochester (N. Y.) Bureau of Municipal Research.<br />

Problem of street cleaning<br />

r 628.46 R57r..<br />

Rockwood, E. W. Laboratory manual of physiological<br />

chemistry<br />

547-9 R58..<br />

Rogers, Mrs C. K. Memories of a musical career 92 R6isr..<br />

Rogers. R. E. Behind a Watteau picture<br />

812 R61..<br />

Rogers and Manson Company, Boston. Old colonial<br />

brick houses of New England<br />

q 728 R61..<br />

The same qr 728 R61. .<br />

Rohmer, Sax, pseud. See Ward, A. S.<br />

Page<br />

.292<br />

••34<br />

130<br />

367<br />

293<br />

123<br />

397<br />

.83<br />

398<br />

398<br />

16<br />

290<br />

.67<br />

186<br />

.506<br />

• 398<br />

.178<br />

• 505<br />

• 334<br />

•77<br />

243<br />

.468<br />

•31<br />

• 31


INDEX TO AUTHORS, 1920<br />

Call number<br />

Rolet, A. Plantes a parfums et plantes aroraatiques<br />

r 633.45 R63<br />

Rolland, R. Colas Breugnon R644C<br />

Colas Breugnon [in French]<br />

843 R64C<br />

Liluli<br />

842 R64I<br />

Rolling stones. Henry, O. pseud<br />

H4522ro<br />

Rome, Esposizione Internazionale, 1911. Catalogo<br />

della mostra di etnografia italiana in Piazza<br />

d'Armi<br />

r 708.5 R66<br />

Ronciere, C. G. M. B. de la. See La Ronciere.<br />

Rood, H. W. Little flag book 929.9 R67<br />

Roosevelt, K. War in the garden of Eden 940.913 R68<br />

Roosevelt, T. Average Americans<br />

940.918 R68<br />

Roosevelt Memorial Association. Theodore Roosevelt;<br />

a biographical sketch and excerpts from<br />

his writings and addresses<br />

92 R684roo<br />

Root, E. United States and the war, The mission<br />

to Russia, Political addresses<br />

973.9132 R68<br />

Rose, C. European slavery<br />

r 396 R71<br />

Rosenthal, L. Villes et villages frangais apres la<br />

guerre<br />

710 R72<br />

Ross, D. W. The painter's palette q 752 R73<br />

Ross, J. E. Christian ethics 171 R73<br />

Rostetter, A. The widow's veil 812 R75<br />

Routledge, Mrs K. (Pease). Mystery of Easter<br />

island<br />

913-96 R78<br />

Rowbotham, F.J. Story-lives of great scientists j 925 R7S<br />

Rowntree, B. S. & Pigou, A. C. Lectures on housing<br />

331-83 R79<br />

Rowntree, J. & Sherwell, A. State purchase of the<br />

liquor trade<br />

r 178 R79<br />

Roy, J. Saint Nicholas I<br />

282 R81<br />

Royce, J. Lectures on modern idealism<br />

193 R81<br />

Rubenstein, A. Concerto no.4 q M 786.4901 R82<br />

Ruder, W. E. Protection of metals<br />

r 691.75 R83<br />

Riidisiile, A. Nachweis, bestimmung und trennung<br />

der chemischen elemente<br />

r 543 R83<br />

Die untersuchungsmethoden des eisens und<br />

stahls<br />

r<br />

543-7 R83<br />

Rush, T. E. The port of New York<br />

381 R89<br />

Rushmore, E. M. Bibliography for social workers<br />

among foreign-born residents of the United<br />

States<br />

r 016.32573 R89<br />

Russell. B. Mathematical philosophy 5io.i R91<br />

Proposed roads to freedom 335 R9ip<br />

Russell, F. T. Satire in the Victorian novel 823 R91<br />

Russian short stories. Schweikert<br />

s 4 T 3r<br />

609<br />

Page<br />

.287<br />

.66<br />

.18<br />

.526<br />

.65<br />

• .30<br />

.471<br />

..87<br />

..87<br />

.528<br />

• 530<br />

.386<br />

.238<br />

.290<br />

.114<br />

.468<br />

• 472<br />

.422<br />

.278<br />

.114<br />

.230<br />

.446<br />

.292<br />

-175<br />

•457<br />

• 390<br />

• 513<br />

.508<br />

• •77<br />

.116<br />

• 293<br />

• 322


610 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Call number Page<br />

Rutherford, M. L. The South in history and<br />

literature r 810.9 R93 133<br />

Ruud, M. B. Essay toward a history of Shakespeare<br />

in Norway<br />

r S22.33 HM....242<br />

Rydberg, P. A. Flora of the Rocky mountains.. .r 581.978 R96....121<br />

Key to the Rocky mountain flora r 581.978 R95k. . . .516<br />

Ryland. F. Ethics i 7I R 9 8 e 114<br />

Sabin, E. L. Building the Pacific railway 385 Sn .. . .281<br />

Sabin, F. E. & Woodruff, L. B. The relation of Latin<br />

to practical life 375.8 Su 233<br />

Safroni-Middleton, A. South Sea foam 919.6 S12 472<br />

St. Louis—City plan commission. The zone plan, .qr 710 S145Z.. .. 182<br />

St. Mars, F. Snapshots of the wild 591-5 S14.. . .283<br />

Saint-Rene Taillandier, Mme. Soul of the "C. R. B.". .940.917 S15 43<br />

Saint-Saens, C. C. Concerto (2e), pour piano et<br />

orchestre<br />

qM 785.6 S15C...292<br />

Concerto pour violon, avec accompagnement de<br />

P'ano qM 787.1 S15C 81<br />

Deuxieme concerto<br />

qM 786.4901 Si5d 292<br />

Deuxieme concerto (en Ut majeur)<br />

qM 787.1 S15 •34<br />

Etienne Marcel qM 782.4 Si5e .... 185<br />

Henry VIII q M 782.4 Si 5 h.<br />

Musical memories<br />

780.4 Si5m.<br />

•35<br />

Phryne qM 782.6 S15. • 130<br />

Premier concerto, partition d'orchestre qM 785.6 S15P 339<br />

Premier concerto, pour piano principal qM 786.4901 Sl5p 292<br />

Troisieme concerto pour piano, avec accompagnement<br />

d'orchestre, piano seul qM 786.4901 Sl5t....292<br />

Troisieme concerto pour violon et piano qM 787.1 Sl5t 34<br />

Sanchez, Mrs N. (Van de Grift). Life of Mrs<br />

Robert Louis Stevenson<br />

92 SS47S....409<br />

Sanctus Spiritus and Company. Steiner S822S ....113<br />

Sandiford, P. Comparative education 3 7 o.g S21 170<br />

Sandys, Sir J. E. Latin epigraphy 471.7 S22.. .. .25<br />

Sanford, A. H. Story of agriculture in the United<br />

5 t S , ta 5 S ' •;•"•",", 63 °- 973 S " 79<br />

.santord, b. Electrical charges of atoms and ions..qr 541.17 S22.. ..515<br />

Sara Videbeck, and The chapel. Almquist<br />

A452S....501<br />

Sarett, L. Many many moons 811 S24 3-41<br />

Sarkar, B. K. Hindu achievements in exact science .... 509 S24 26<br />

Sarolea, C. Europe and the league of nations 341.6 S24....453<br />

Sassone, F. El tonel de Diogenes 863 S25 272<br />

Sassoon, S. The old huntsman 821 S'50 294<br />

Picture-show g 2I s ~ 2 . p ' "<br />

Saunders, C. F. Useful wild plants of the United<br />

States and Canada 58 T .6 S25 516<br />

The samc<br />

r 581.6 S25....S16


INDEX TO AUTHORS, 1920 611<br />

Call number Page<br />

Saur, C. Eine niitzliche anweisung r 428.2 S25 .... 172<br />

Savidge, F. R. Formation and management of<br />

corporations in Pennsylvania<br />

r 347.1 S26....511<br />

Saward's annual r 622.33 S271.... 237<br />

Saward's journal qr 622.3305 S27 237<br />

Sayler, O. M. Russia, white or red 947 S27....190<br />

The Russian theatre under the revolution<br />

792 S27....134<br />

Sayre, L. A. Orthopedic surgery and diseases of<br />

the joints r 617.3 S27 . . . .395<br />

The scarred chin. Payne P334S.... 272<br />

Schauffler, R. H. Fiddler's luck S313L...367<br />

Schenck, R. Physical chemistry of the metals 669 S32P....127<br />

Schinz, A. French literature of the great war 840 S33 .... 467<br />

Schmit, C. L. Garments for girls 646 S35 .... 287<br />

Schmitt, H. The pedals of the piano-forte 786.3 S35 .... 239<br />

Schoeller, W. R. & Powell, A. R. Analysis of the<br />

rarer elements r 543.7 S36.... 330<br />

Scholefield, G. H. The Pacific 990 S36. ... 191<br />

Scholes, P. A. Listener's guide to music 780 S36....404<br />

Schopenhauer, A. Essays 193 S37C...505<br />

Schulze, F. K. A. Die deutsche Napoleon-karikatur<br />

qr 92 Ni29sh. . . .469<br />

Schumann, R. Concerto qM 786.4901 S39 292<br />

Fest-ouverture qM 785.5 S 3 9f 130<br />

Genoveva<br />

qM 782.3 S392....185<br />

Hermann und Dorothea qM 785.5 S39h 34<br />

Schurz, C. Speeches, correspondence and political<br />

papers r 92 S394S 470<br />

Schweikert, H. C. Russian short stories S4l3 r ----3 22<br />

Schwink, O. Ypres, 1914 940.913 S41 • • • -475<br />

The Scotch twins. Perkins j P434S-- - -478<br />

Scott, Mrs C. M. (Brandon). Old days in Bohemian<br />

London 792 S425 - - - • 134<br />

Scott, E. J. The American negro in the world war 940-91 S42- ... 192<br />

Scott, J. W. Syndicalism and philosophical realism. .331.88 S42. - - -450<br />

Scott, M.J. Convent life 271.9 S42 20<br />

Scott, W. R. The itching palm<br />

331238 S43---"7<br />

Scotus Viator, pseud. Europe in the melting-pot 940-9 S43 472<br />

Seaman, G. W. Progressive steps in architectural<br />

drawing q 744 S43 31<br />

Seaman, L. L. Shall disease triumph in our army?, .r 613.67 S43-• • -285<br />

Seashore, C. E. Elementary experiments in psychology<br />

.52S43-.-I64<br />

Psychology of musical talent 780.1 S43- • • -339<br />

The second latchkey. Williamson W75ise. - - .367<br />

Secret of the tower. Hope, Anthony, pseud H78ise 17<br />

Secrist, H. Statistics in business 3" s 44s - - --324


612 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Call number<br />

Sedgwick, A. D. The third window S448th. . . .443<br />

Seibel, G. The Mormon saints 298 S45.... 166<br />

Seidel, H. Leberecht Huhnchen 833 S45I. . . .163<br />

Seitz, Don C. Artemus Ward 92 W2132S 39<br />

Selden, G. C. The A B C of bond buying 3326 S46 117<br />

Seligman, V. J. The Salonica side-show 940.913 S46. . . .475<br />

Sella, Q. Abhandlungen zur kristallographie r 548.7 S46. . . .331<br />

Sellars, R. W. Essentials of logic 160 S46.... 164<br />

Sell's world's press r 071 S46. . . .445<br />

Sembrich, M. My favorite folk songs qM 784.4 S47. . . . 130<br />

September. Swinnerton S9782se . . . .322<br />

Seth, J. English philosophers and schools of philosophy<br />

192 S495 369<br />

Seton-Watson, R. W. See Scotus Viator, pseud.<br />

Seven peas in the pod. Bailey j Bi6is. . . .421<br />

Sewall, F. The new ethics 171 S51. . . .370<br />

Sewall, W. W. Bill Sewall's story of T. R 92 R684S 136<br />

Seymour, W. K. Miscellany of British poetry 821.08 S52. . . .341<br />

Shackleton, Sir E. H. South q 919.9 S52S. . . .530<br />

Shadow of the rock 245 S52. . . .274<br />

Shay, F. Plays and books of the little theatre 016.822 S53. . . .242<br />

Shedd, E. C. The first Latin book 475 S54.. . .456<br />

Sheil, R. L. Sketches, legal and political 914.15 S54 40<br />

Sheila intervenes. McKenna Mi78sh. . . .321<br />

Shelmire, R. W. The draftsman 744 S54. . . . 182<br />

Shelton, L. Beautiful gardens in America qr 710 S54. . . .402<br />

Sherry. McCutcheon M143S. . . . 162<br />

Shimmin, A. N. Taxation and social reconstruction . .r 336.2 S55 72<br />

Shin-bigitsukai b 705 S55 337<br />

Shipley, A. E. Voyage of a vice-chancellor 9173 S557. . . .529<br />

Ships across the sea. Paine Pi64sh. . . .367<br />

Shirley, R. Short life of Lincoln 92 L7i5sh 39<br />

Short stories from the Spanish. McMichael M213S. . . .442<br />

Shorter, Mrs D. (Sigerson). A legend of Glendalough. .821 S55I.. . .241<br />

Shull, A. F. Laboratory directions in animal biology. . . .591 S56. . . . 120<br />

Principles of animal biology 591 S56p. . . .515<br />

Shurter, E. D. Constitutional tax for the support of<br />

higher educational institutions in Texas r 379.13 S56. . . .512<br />

Government ownership of railroads 385 S56. . . .325<br />

The same r 385 S56. . . .325<br />

Shute, H. A. Real diary of the worst farmer 817 Ss6r. . . .468<br />

Sidgwick, Mrs C. (Ullmann), & Garstin. C. The<br />

black knight S568b.. ..504<br />

Sidgwick, M. C. Sonnets 821 S568 406<br />

Siegerist, M. Die moderne vorkalkulation in maschinen<br />

fabriken r 621.9 S57. . . .397<br />

Sigerson, D. See Shorter, Mrs D. (Sigerson).<br />

Page


INDEX TO AUTHORS, 1920<br />

6l3<br />

c. Call number Page<br />

Silence of Colonel Bramble. Maurois M49-S<br />

Silenco. Fernandez-Florez •.•.•.••.863 F399' ' ' 67<br />

Sillery, marquise de. See Genlis, S. F. D. de St. A.<br />

' '<br />

comtesse de.<br />

The silver horde. Beach R,,„„ •<br />

r-., . „ L>4322S1 .... 161<br />

Silverman, A. Survey of high-school chemistry in<br />

Pennsylvania<br />

r S40 - S s8<br />

Simmons, J. R. Historic trees of Massachusetts. . ' . . .917.44 S59. . . .188<br />

Simon, C. E. Human infection carriers 61443 S59 12^<br />

Simon. Clouston nc. • ,<br />

c-. , _ C619S1 6s<br />

Simple, Peter, pseud. 6 ee Herford, O.<br />

Simples from the Master's garden. Slosson S634si 272<br />

Sinclair, B. W. Burned bridges S6i6 4 bu 227<br />

Singmaster, E. Basil Everman S6i-b 322<br />

Sir Harry. Marshall .''.'.' .M4163S1'. .' .' .' .66<br />

The Siren, O. Giotto and some of his followers qr 759.5 G43S 462<br />

Sisson, Mme.<br />

See Dombre, Roger, pseud.<br />

Skelton, O. D. The Canadian dominion 97I S62 .414<br />

Skillman, W. R. The A. E. F 973-9-32 S62.. . .473<br />

The same<br />

r 973-9132 S62....473<br />

Skinner, A. W. Selections for memorizing 821.08 S628 38<br />

Skinner, C. L. Adventurers of Oregon 979-5 S62. . .413<br />

Skinner makes it fashionable. Dodge D669S .... 364<br />

Slater, G. Some South Indian villages r 330.9 S63 . . . .376<br />

Slattery, C. L. Why men pray 248 S63. . . .275<br />

Slattery, M. The second line of defense 362.7 S631.... 115<br />

Sheer, T. R. Great affirmations of religion 230 S63g. . . .447<br />

Slippy McGee. Oemler O156S. . . .271<br />

Sloan, C. A. & Mooney, J. D. Advertising the technical<br />

product 659 S63 521<br />

Sloane, W. M. Powers and aims of western democracy<br />

320.9 S63 21<br />

Slosson, Mrs A. (Trumbull). Simples from the<br />

Master's garden S634SE . . .272<br />

Slosson, E. E. Creative chemistry 660 S63....127<br />

Easy lessons in Einstein 531.18 S63. . . .389<br />

The same r 531.18 S63. . . .389<br />

Slusser, E. Y. Stories of Luther Burbank j 581.15 S63. . . .422<br />

Small, J. L. Home—then what? 940.919 S63 . . . .416<br />

Smith, A. Intermediate text book of chemistry 540 S642L . . .390<br />

Smith, Mrs A. S. (Swan). As others see her 917.3 S64 85<br />

Smith, C. A. New words self-defined r 423 S644 75<br />

Smith, E. F. & Van Haagen, W. K. Atomic weights<br />

of boron and fluorine qr 541.2 S64.... 174<br />

Smith, E. R. Johnny Appleseed, a pioneer orchardist. . r 92 C368S.... 527<br />

Smith, G. A. The pagan S6482P.. ..443


614 -CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Call number<br />

Smith, G. E. P. Machine-made cement pipe for irrigation<br />

systems and other purposes 666.992 S64. .522<br />

The same<br />

r 630.6 A7ib no.86. .522<br />

Smith, G. G. Ben Jonson<br />

822 J42zsm. .242<br />

Smith, G. Gordon-. See Gordon-Smith.<br />

Smith, G. M. Introductory course in quantitative<br />

chemical analysis 545 S648. • 457<br />

Smith, G. O. Strategy of minerals 553 S648. .283<br />

Smith, Mrs H. T. Voices from the void 134 S64. •369<br />

Smith, J. F. Our neighborhood<br />

309.1 S65 • .167<br />

Smith, J. H. The war with Mexico 973.6 S65. .138<br />

Smith, J. L. Diseases of infancy and childhood r 618.9 S65 .•332<br />

Smith, J. R. The world's food resources r 641.1 S65 . .287<br />

Smith, L. Y. Romance of aircraft 533-609 S65 . .174<br />

Smith, M. From brain to keyboard 786.3 S65. •239<br />

Smith, N. A. Christmas festival service 394 S65 . ..24<br />

Smith, R. H. Justice and the poor q 361 S65. .230<br />

The same qr 371.17 C2ib no. 13 . • 230<br />

Smith, S. Kaye-. The four roads<br />

S659L .322<br />

Smith. T. R. The woman question 396 S662. ••75<br />

Snaith, J. C. The adventurous lady<br />

S669ad.<br />

Snake-bite. Hichens<br />

H5222S.<br />

Snell, J. F. Elementary household chemistry 540 S67.<br />

Snelling, W. E. Excess profits (including excess<br />

mineral rights) duty r 336.24 S67.<br />

Snider, L. C. Oil and gas in the mid-continent fields. .553.28 S67.<br />

The same r 553.28 S67.<br />

Snow, B. E. & Froehlich, H. B. Theory and practice<br />

of color qr 535.6 S67.<br />

Snow, W. G. Pipe fitting charts for steam & hot water. .696 S67.<br />

Snowden, J. H. Is the world growing better? 261 S674.<br />

Snyder, W. H. Everyday science 500 S675 .<br />

Sociedad Cubana de Ingenieros. Revista<br />

[monthly] r 620.5 S6782.<br />

Society of Arts and Sciences, New York city. O.Henry<br />

memorial award; prize stories 1919 S6780.<br />

Society of Automotive Engineers. Constitution, bylaws,<br />

rules r 629.1 S67.<br />

S. A. E. handbook r 629.108 S67.<br />

Society of Glass Technology. Journal r 666.105 S67.<br />

Society of Industrial Engineers. American and international<br />

labor conditions r 331 S67.<br />

Sokolow, N. History of Zionism 296 S68.<br />

Soldier poets 821.08 S68.<br />

Soldiers' book fund campaign r 027.6 S68.<br />

Some British ballads q 821.08 S693.<br />

The same qj 821.08 S69.<br />

Page<br />

• 504<br />

•365<br />

.283<br />

.381<br />

.284<br />

.284<br />

..26<br />

•392<br />

..70<br />

•515<br />

.286<br />

•504<br />

.520<br />

.520<br />

• 336<br />

• 451<br />

. .20<br />

.467<br />

•445<br />

.526<br />

•533


INDEX TO AUTHORS, 1920<br />

Call number<br />

Some of us are married. Cutting<br />

C955SO<br />

Somerset county historical quarterly<br />

qr 974.9 S69<br />

Somerville, E. CE. & Ross, Martin, pseud. Mount Music. . S696m<br />

Sommer, J. G. Gemalde der physischen welt r 551.4 S69<br />

Sonia married. McKenna M178SO<br />

Sorley, W. R. Moral values and the idea of God 171 S7im<br />

Soteriades, G. Ethnological map illustrating Hellenism<br />

in the Balkan peninsula and Asia Minor, .qr 914.95 S71<br />

The soul scar. Reeve<br />

R2872S0<br />

Souster, E. G. W. Design of factory and industrial<br />

buildings<br />

72 5 . 4 S72<br />

Southern workmen [monthly], 1918-date<br />

qr 371.9 S72<br />

Spacek, A. & Boyd, N. L. Folk dances of Bohemia<br />

and Moravia<br />

793-3 S73<br />

Spalding, W. R. Music 780 S73<br />

Spargo, J. Psychology of bolshevism<br />

335 S73P<br />

Russia as an American problem<br />

947 S73r<br />

Sparkman, C. F. Industrial Spanish<br />

468 S736<br />

Spence, L. Legends & romances of Brittany<br />

398 S74<br />

Spencer, J. F. Metals of the rare earths<br />

r 546.3 S74<br />

Speransky, J. (Grant), countess. See Cantacuzene,<br />

J. (Grant), princess.<br />

Spicher, C. R. Practice of presswork 655.3 S75<br />

The same<br />

r 655.3 S75<br />

Spiers, H. H. Tuberculosis or consumption r 616.246 S75<br />

Spiller, G. Faith in man<br />

304 S75<br />

Spillman, H. C. Personality<br />

1704 S75<br />

Spirit of liberty; weekly<br />

qr 326 S75<br />

The splendid outcast. Gibbs<br />

G364SP<br />

Spoehr, H. A. Carbohydrate economy of cacti. . .qr 583.471 S76<br />

Spofford, Mrs H. E. (Prescott). The elder's people S762e<br />

Spohr, L. Concerto (no.2)<br />

qM 787.1 S76<br />

Concerto (no.7)


616 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Call number<br />

Standardized Housing Corporation, N. Y. city. Manufacture<br />

of standardized houses qr 691.3 S78.<br />

Stanley, A. A. Catalogue of the Stearns collection of<br />

musical instruments qr 780 S78.<br />

Starling, E. H. Oliver-Sharpey lectures on the<br />

feeding of nations 613.2 S79-<br />

Starling, S. G. Electricity and magnetism 537 S79.<br />

Stars and stripes. Yanks; A. E. F. verse 811.08 S79-<br />

Statistisches jahrbuch der hoheren schulen Deutschlands,<br />

Luxemburgs und der Schweiz und der<br />

hoheren deutschen schulen im ausland r 379-43 S79.<br />

Staunton, H. The chess player's text-book 794.1 S79chs.<br />

Stearns, J. W. Columbian history of education in<br />

Wisconsin r 370.9 S79.<br />

Stebbins, J. E. Fifty years history of the temperance<br />

cause r 178 S81.<br />

Steele, G. M. Rudimentary ethics 170 S81.<br />

Steele, T. S. Canoe and camera 917-41 S81.<br />

Stein, H. Les architectes des cathedrales gothiques. . . .726 S81.<br />

Steiner, E. A. Sanctus Spiritus and Company<br />

S822S.<br />

Steinheil, H. A. & Voit, E. Applied optics 535-8 S82.<br />

The same r 535.8 S82.<br />

Stello. Yigny<br />

843 \*32st.<br />

Step, E. Insect artizans and their work 595-7 S82.<br />

Stephens, H. Illustrated descriptive Argentina 918.2 S83 .<br />

South American travels 918 S83.<br />

Stephenson, J. Industrial fuels 662.6 S83.<br />

Stevens. D. H. Party politics and English journalism<br />

r 942.07 S84.<br />

Stevens, H. P. Paper mill chemist 676 S84.<br />

Stevenson, F. An American ace qM 784.6 S84.<br />

Stevenson, R. L. Learning to write 808 S84.<br />

Stiles, P. G. Human physiology 612 S85.<br />

The nervous system and its conservation 612.8 S85.<br />

Stockbridge, Mrs B. E. (Lay). What to drink 642.4 S86.<br />

Stone, E. W. Elements of radiotelegraph}' 654.1 S87.<br />

Stone, J. C. Teaching of arithmetic 511.07 S87.<br />

Stone, Mrs J. (Dransfield). The lost Pleiad 812 S87.<br />

Stone, R. B. Arthur Ge<strong>org</strong>e Olmsted<br />

92 O235S.<br />

Stork, T. B. Hints toward a theory of ethics 171 S885.<br />

Storrow, C. S. Treatise on water-works r 628.1 S88.<br />

Story of Gotton Connixloo, followed by F<strong>org</strong>otten.<br />

Mayran<br />

M543S.<br />

Stoughton, J. Spiritual heroes 274.2 S88.<br />

Stout, W. B. Boy's book of mechanical models j 684 S88.<br />

The stranger. Bullard B874S .<br />

Straus, S. W. Thrift movement iu America 331.84 S91.


INDEX TO AUTHORS, 1920 617<br />

Call number Page<br />

Strayer, G. D. & Engelhardt, N. L. The classroom<br />

teacher at work in American schools 371 S91C. . . .512<br />

Street, J. L. After thirty 89153a 67<br />

Street, J. P. Composition of certain patent and proprietary<br />

medicines r 614.27 S91... . 123<br />

Strong, C. A. Origin of consciousness 126 S92. ... 113<br />

Strong, W. W. New science of the fundamental<br />

physics 530 S92 77<br />

The strong hours. Diver D646S....111<br />

The strongest. Clemenceau C562S . . . . 111<br />

Structural Materials Research Laboratory, Lewis<br />

Institute, Chicago. Bulletin r 666.9 S92. . . . 127<br />

Stuart, B. How to become a successful engineer. . . . r 620.7 S92. . . . 124<br />

Studensky, P. Teachers' pensions systems in the<br />

United States 371-17 S93. . . .385<br />

Sturtevant, A. H. Analysis of the effects of selection<br />

qr 575.4 S93 173<br />

Sutton, R. S. Personal experiences in pelvic and abdominal<br />

surgery r 617.55 S96. . . .395<br />

Svenskt biografiskt lexikon r 920 S96 470<br />

Swan, A. S. See Smith, Mrs A. S. (Swan).<br />

Swatty. Butler B9762S 270<br />

Swedenb<strong>org</strong>, E. The soul 128 S97. ... 164<br />

Swedenb<strong>org</strong>, with a compend of his teachings. . . .289.4 S97S. . . .3/1<br />

Sweetser, A. & Lamont, G. Opportunities in aviation<br />

533.607 S97----33I<br />

Swinburne, A. C. Works r 821 S97 • • • • 341<br />

Swinnerton, F. A. The chaste wife S9782C ... .443<br />

September S 9 782se. . . .322<br />

Swinton, W. New word-analysis 422 S9711<br />

Symons, A. The toy cart<br />

822 S98to .468<br />

Syracuse, N. Y.—Public library. List of 87 poets,<br />

representing American verse from 1900 to •<br />

1919 O I6 -8II S99 • 342<br />

Syracuse University—New York state college of<br />

forestry. Bulletin r 634.9 Sggb<br />

..28<br />

Circular<br />

6 3 4-9 S99C<br />

..28<br />

r<br />

Technical publication<br />

349 S99t .179<br />

Tabata, S. Ayanishiki 1 b 745 Tn • 337<br />

Tabourot, J. Orchesographie<br />

793-3 Til • 404<br />

• 137<br />

• •75<br />

Tacoma, Wash.—Justice to the mountain committee.<br />

Brief submitted to the U. S. geographic board, .r 917-97 T119<br />

Taft, J. J. The woman movement<br />

qr 396 T13<br />

Taillandier, Mme Saint-Rene. See Saint-Rene Taillandier.<br />

.<br />

Tales from the Secret kingdom. Gate .-


618 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Call number<br />

Tales of Serbian life. Davies D3i22t.... 162<br />

The same<br />

j D3i2t....i94<br />

Tales of three hemispheres. Dunsany D9262tl 65<br />

The tall villa. Harrison H299L . . .321<br />

Talman, C. F. Story of coal qr 553.2 T16... .516<br />

Tama. Wells W4943t. . . .322<br />

Tapisseries et etoffes coptes qb 746 T18. . . .462<br />

Tappan, E. M. The little book of the flag 929.9 T19. . . .410<br />

Tapper, T. Education of the music teacher 780.7 Ti9e ., . .131<br />

Tarbell, I. M. In Lincoln's chair T1962L . . .272<br />

Tarkington, N. B. & Wilson, H. L. The Gibson upright<br />

812 T2ig 83<br />

A tarpaulin muster. Masefield M444t.... 112<br />

Tate, Jones & Co. Pittsburgh. Fuel oil and its use. .r 662.75 T23. . . .522<br />

Tatterdemalion. Galsworthy Gi57t.... 320<br />

Taussig, F. W. Free trade, the tariff and reciprocity. .337 T24f. . . .232<br />

Taylor, H. O. Deliverance. See his Prophets, poets<br />

and philosophers of the ancient world.<br />

Taylor, H. O. Prophets, poets and philosophers of<br />

the ancient world 180 T25 .... 370<br />

Taylor, Hannis. Cicero 937 T253. . . .246<br />

Taylor, Howard, & Taylor, Mrs G. G. Hudson Taylor<br />

in early years 92 T2543L . . .243<br />

Taylor, J. M. Reconstructive therapeutics r 615.8 T25. . . .395<br />

Teachers Insurance and Annuity Association of<br />

America. Handbook of life insurance r 368 T26. . . .382<br />

Teall, G. C. A little garden the year round 716 T26. . . .290<br />

Technical Association of the Paper and Pulp Industry.<br />

Papers and addresses qr 676 T26. . . .236<br />

Teed, P. L. Chemistry and manufacture of hydrogen<br />

661.96 T26 180<br />

The tempering. Buck B853t. . . .320<br />

Terry, T. P. Short cut to Spanish 46s T31. . . .330<br />

Test of scarlet. Dawson D3324t 65<br />

Texas—Agriculture, Department of. Bulletin; new<br />

series r 630.6 T32gb .... 398<br />

Texas University. University of Texas community<br />

song book<br />

M 784.8 T32....130<br />

Texas University—Engineering department. Roads<br />

and pavements r 625.7 T32. .237<br />

Thatcher, E. Making tin can toys j 680 T33. . . .141<br />

Their son, and The necklace. Zamacois Z24L . . .272<br />

Thelen, M. La mesangere 843 T34. .444<br />

Thewlis, M. W. Geriatrics 615.54 T35....395<br />

Thibault, J. A. See France, Anatole, pseud.<br />

The third window. Sedgwick S448th. . .443<br />

Page


INDEX TO AUTHORS, 1920<br />

Call number Page<br />

Thomas, A. G. Principles of government purchasing<br />

658.31 T37 ...80<br />

Thomas, C. L. A. Mignon<br />

qM 782.4 T37111 • •35<br />

Thomas, C. S. & Paul, H. G. Atlantic prose and poetry..810.8 T37 ..405<br />

Thomas, R. G. Applied calculus 517 T37 ..388<br />

Thompson, C. B. How to find factory costs 657.524 T37 .521<br />

Thompson, C. D. Municipal electric light and power<br />

Plants<br />

r 352 T37 . . 167<br />

Thompson, C. L. The soul of America<br />

266 T379 • •37i<br />

Thompson, H. The new South<br />

330.9 T38 .•327<br />

Thompson, Mrs J. M. Water wonders every child<br />

should know<br />

j 551.57 T38 • ••45<br />

Thompson, M. R. Trust dissolution<br />

338.8 T38 • -376<br />

Thomson, J. A. Secrets of animal life<br />

590.4 T38 . . 121<br />

Thomson, J. E. H. The Samaritans<br />

296 T38 • -447<br />

Thorp, J. Road to tomorrow<br />

q 792.5 T41 • .407<br />

Thread of flame. King<br />

K2632t • -503<br />

The three Mulla-mulgars. De La Mare<br />

j D388t ..248<br />

Thucydides. Speeches<br />

888 T42S • .293<br />

Thum, W. The coming land policy<br />

336.2 T42 • -376<br />

Untaxing the consumer<br />

336-2 T42U ..381<br />

Thuren, H. Folkesangen paa Fa;r0erne<br />

7844 T43 • -339<br />

Tiersot, J. Sixty folksongs of France<br />

qM 784.4 T45 • .130<br />

Tietjens, Mrs E. Profiles from China<br />

811 T45 . .406<br />

Tiffany, Mrs N. (Moore), & Tiffany, F. Harm Jan<br />

Huidekoper<br />

92 H91H • -343<br />

Tiplady, T. Social Christianity in the new era 261 T49 • •275<br />

Tissandier, G. History and handbook of photography<br />

770-9 T52 ..338<br />

Tolstoi, L. N. count. The pathway of life<br />

240 T58 ..230<br />

Redemption<br />

7i-72 T58r ...83<br />

Tomes, R. & Smith, B. G. The great Civil war r 973-7 T59 • .413<br />

Tomlinson, E. T. Story of General Pershing j 92 P447t ..141<br />

El tonel de Diogenes. Sassone 863 S25 . .272<br />

Topical architecture<br />

Q b 729 T62 • .464<br />

Torices F. & Curchod, A. Bobinage des machines<br />

electriques<br />

r 62I 3i T63 • -335<br />

The Touchstone. Touchstone houses<br />

q 728 T64 • -523<br />

Toulouse University, International Trade Relations<br />

Society [A E. F.] Report to American busi-<br />

.r 382 T64.<br />

ness men<br />

•><br />

The tour. Couperus<br />

C8 3 0to •<br />

Tower W L. Mechanism of evolution in Leptinotarsa<br />

V 595-768 T6 S m.<br />

The traffic field ^^T^ 7'<br />

Train, A. C. Courts, criminals and the Camorra 343 t-° 8c -<br />

Tu'tt and Mr Tutt<br />

T684t '<br />

619


620 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Call number Page<br />

Transplanted. Atherton A868t ..16<br />

Travelers Insurance Company, Hartford, Conn.<br />

Motor vehicles and safety<br />

614.8 T69<br />

The same<br />

r 614.8 T69ac<br />

Safety in building construction<br />

614.8 T69S<br />

The same<br />

r 614.8 T69S<br />

Treacherous ground. Bojer B597t<br />

Tremblaye, M. Coutel de la. See La Tremblaye.<br />

Trevelyan, G. M. Lord Grey of the Reform bill 92 G8873t<br />

Trevelyan, Mrs J. P. (Ward). Short history of the<br />

Italian people<br />

945 T734<br />

Trever, A. A. Greek economic thought<br />

r 330.9 T73<br />

Trinks, W. Governors and the governing of prime<br />

movers<br />

621.115 T74g<br />

The same<br />

r 621.115 T74<br />

Tripitaka. Catalogue of Ta-jih-pen-hsii-ts'angching<br />

r 016.294 T74<br />

The triple mystery. Luehrmann<br />

L975t<br />

Trollope, T. A. What I remember<br />

92 T763t<br />

Trotter, J. T. Valour and vision<br />

821.08 T76<br />

Troward, T. Creative process in the individual 131 T77C<br />

Trowbridge, E. D. Mexico to-day and to-morrow. . . .917.2 T77<br />

Trueman, A. Suggestions for students of psychology.. 150 T77<br />

Truffaut, G. & Colt, H. Army gardens in France.<br />

Belgium and occupied German territory r 635 T77.<br />

Trumbull, J. Jonathan Trumbull, governor of Connecticut<br />

92 T78it<br />

Trumps. Curtis r C934t<br />

Tschaikowsky, P. I. Concerto no.i<br />

qM 786.4901 T78<br />

Francesca da Rimini<br />

qM 786.4902 T78f<br />

Hamlet<br />

qM 786.4902 T78ha<br />

"La tempete"<br />

qM 786.4902 T78t<br />

Tsuji, S. Sensho-ku-taikan<br />

b 745 T79<br />

Tucker, W. J. My generation<br />

92 T8i5t<br />

Turgenief, I. S. Lettres a Madame Viardot<br />

92 T855t<br />

Turner, C. C. The struggle in the air, 1914-18 623.74 T86<br />

Turner, E. R. Ireland and England<br />

941.5 T86<br />

Turner, G. K. Hagar's horde<br />

T864h<br />

Turner, J. Robert Devereux<br />

r 92 E846t<br />

Turner, J. E. William James's philosophy<br />

149 T86<br />

Turner, J. H. A place in the world<br />

T865P<br />

Tutt and Mr Tutt. Train<br />

T684t<br />

Twain, Mark, pseud. Extract from Captain Stormfield's<br />

visit to heaven<br />

T897e<br />

Saint Joan of Arc<br />

j 92 J329t<br />

Twining, A. Flora of northeastern Pennsylvania. . r 581.9748 T92<br />

Two men. Ollivant 0234t


INDEX TO AUTHORS, 1920<br />

()2I<br />

Call number Page<br />

Tynan, K. See Hinkson, Mrs K. (Tynan).<br />

Udden, J. A. Identification of geological formations. .551.7 U14 ..26<br />

Ulrich, F. Krystallographische figurentafeln qr 548 U23 •331<br />

Underwriters' Laboratories. Laboratories' data, .r 621.3157 U25I •177<br />

Union Trust Company, Pittsburgh. Over there and<br />

over here<br />

940.9137 P39U • -44<br />

United Lead Company. Lead wool<br />

r 696 U25 .285<br />

United Lutheran Church in America. Minutes of<br />

the convention (ist)<br />

r 284.1 U25 .506<br />

U. S.—Adjutant-general's office. Personnel system<br />

of the United States army<br />

r 355.62 U2532 . 169<br />

Regimental history of the United States regular<br />

army<br />

353.6 U2532 •"5<br />

Trade specifications and index of professions. . . ,r 358.3 U25 .328<br />

U. S.—Agriculture, Department of. Department circular<br />

r 630.6 U25d •398<br />

Thrift leaflet<br />

r 640 U25 •193<br />

U. S.—Alaskan engineering commission. Annual report<br />

r 656.6798 U25 ..80<br />

U. S.—Alien property custodian. Report r 341.3 U2532 .382<br />

U. S.—Census bureau. Special census of Tulsa county,<br />

Oklahoma<br />

r 317.66 U25C • -71<br />

Standard nomenclature of diseases and pathological<br />

conditions, injuries and poisonings for<br />

the United States<br />

r 616.014 U25 .518<br />

U. S.—Children's bureau. Child-welfare laws passed<br />

in 1916<br />

r 362.7 U25S • 275<br />

Children's year follow-up series<br />

r 362.7 U25chi -448<br />

Conference series<br />

r 362.7 U25C0 • 374<br />

Legal series<br />

r 362.7 U25I .508<br />

U. S.—Coast and geodetic survey. Connection of<br />

the arcs of primary triangulation along the<br />

ninety-eighth meridian in the United States, .r 526.4 U25r -388<br />

U. S.—Commission to investigate title of U. S. to<br />

lands in District of Columbia. Map of the<br />

public lands under Federal jurisdiction qr 912-753 M2<br />

TJ. S.—Committee on public information. Souvenir<br />

catalogue, United States and allied governments<br />

war exposition, Pittsburgh, Nov. 28th<br />

to Dec. 8th, 1918<br />

r 940916 U253S 475<br />

U. S. Congress. Memorial addresses. (64th cong.<br />

ist sess. House. Doc. no.1030, 1360, v.139-) • -1 r 923-2 U25mu<br />

Memorial addresses. (64th cong. 2d sess. House.<br />

Doc. no.2138-42, v.108.)<br />

qr 923-2 U2 5 mh<br />

243<br />

• 40<br />

Memorial addresses. (64th cong. 2d sess. Senate.<br />

Doc. no.649, 717. 721, 745, v.i 1.)<br />

qr 923.2 U2 5 mt<br />

• 40<br />

Statue of Henry Mower Rice<br />

qr 92 R395U<br />

.84


622 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Call number<br />

'Page<br />

U. S.—Council of national defense. Readjustment<br />

and reconstruction information r 330.9 U25 . . . .450<br />

U. S.—Council of national defense. Committee on<br />

women's defense-work. War workers' handbook<br />

r 917-53 U25 4"<br />

U. S.—Education and special training, Committee on<br />

(War department). Committee on education<br />

and special training; a review of its work. . qr 355.07 U2532S. . . .382<br />

U. S.—Education bureau. Educational institutions<br />

equipped with motion-picture projection machines<br />

r 778.5 U25 524<br />

Lessons in gardening for southwestern region. . . .r 635 U25I. . . .335<br />

U. S.—Employment service. Labor conditions in<br />

Porto Rico r 331.8 U251 379<br />

U. S. employment service bulletin; weekly. . . . qr 331.86 U251. . . .451<br />

TJ. S.—Federal reserve board. Index-digest of the<br />

act of Oct. 15, 1914 (Clayton act) and of the<br />

act approved May 15, 1916 (Kern amendment)<br />

r 338.8 U25393 72<br />

U. S.—Federal trade commission. Anthracite and<br />

bituminous coal r 338.2 U2532 117<br />

Cost reports; coal r 622.33 U25. . . .520<br />

Food investigation; report on the meat-packing<br />

industry r 338.8 U252 376<br />

Foreign trade series r 382 U2539L . . .513<br />

Leather and shoe industries r 338.4 U2532r.... 169<br />

U. S.—Foreign and domestic commerce bureau.<br />

Decimal system for indexed correspondence<br />

files r 025 4 U2532 44<br />

U. S.—Forest service. National forest areas. . . .qr 634.9 U25na. . . .179<br />

U. S.—Fuel administration. Conservation by correct<br />

use of natural gas for cooking 641.584 U25. . . .125<br />

U. S.—Fuel administration—Oil division. Prices of<br />

petroleum and its products during the war. . . .r 338.2 U255. . . .377<br />

Report to the Arkansas Gas Users' Association<br />

qr 553.28 U2532.... 235<br />

U. S.—Internal revenue office. Manual for the oil<br />

and gas industry r 336.2 U25m 22<br />

U. S.—Interstate commerce committee. Theatened<br />

strike of railway employees r 331.89 U2538 72<br />

U. S.—Judiciary committee. (House.) Uniform laws<br />

as to marriage and divorce r 347.6 U2532. . . .279<br />

U. S.—Judiciary committee. (Senate.) Bolshevik<br />

propaganda r 335 U25 .... 377<br />

U. S.—Labor statistics bureau. Descriptions of occupations<br />

r 607 U2533 .... 236


INDEX TO AUTHORS, 1920<br />

D23<br />

Call number Page<br />

U. S.—Library of Congress. Bibliographies on the<br />

European war qr ol6. 940QI U25i. . . . 247<br />

Government control of railways in Great Britain.. . r 385 U244 .... 386<br />

List of publications which contain statistics of<br />

production of foreign countries qr 016.338 U25I. . . .450<br />

References on church unity and federation qr 016.28 U25 166<br />

References on freedom of the seas qr 016.3477 U25. .452<br />

References on great European tunnels qr 016.62513 U25 124<br />

References on physical training in relation to<br />

medicine qr 016.61371 U25 .<br />

References on the cable systems of the world, .qr 016.6545 U25. . . .336<br />

References on trade opportunities of the United<br />

Stat es qr 016.382 U25 . . ..281<br />

U. S.—Markets bureau. Food surveys qr 338.1 U2537L . . .450<br />

U. S.—Mediation and conciliation board. Railroad<br />

labor arbitrations r 331.1 U253r 73<br />

U. S.—Military aeronautics division. Air service<br />

medical manual r 613.64 U25 395<br />

U. S.—Military commission to Europe, 1855-56. Report<br />

on the art of war in Europe qr 355 U2533r. . . .382<br />

U. S.—Mines bureau. TNT as a blasting explosive<br />

qr 662.2373 U25.. . .336<br />

U. S.—Mines bureau—Pittsburgh experiment station.<br />

Library bulletin qr 016.622 U253. . . .334<br />

U. S.—National park service. Wild animals of Glacier<br />

national park r 599 U25 26<br />

U.S.—Navigation bureau. (Department of commerce.)<br />

Radio service bulletin r 654.105 U25 29<br />

U. S.—Negro economics division. Negro migration<br />

in 1916-17 r 326 U2532 71<br />

U. S.—Railways and canals committee. Canal connecting<br />

Lake Erie and the Ohio river r 626.9 U25393. . . .520<br />

U. S.—Revision of the laws, Committee on. (House.)<br />

Bankruptcy laws of the United States qr 347.7 U2534 233<br />

U. S.—Signal office. Principles underlying radio<br />

communication<br />

U. S.—Standards, Bureau of. International metric<br />

654.1 U25....126<br />

system qr 389 U25U1. . . .456<br />

U. S. Statutes. Public land statutes of the United<br />

States r 336.1 U2535P 73<br />

Revenue laws r 336.2 U25322r.. . .327<br />

Transportation act r 385 U2538t. . . .231<br />

U. S.—Surgeon-general's office. Laboratory methods<br />

of the United States army 616.07 U25 . . . .332<br />

Manual of neuro-surgery r 617.48 U25. . . . 176<br />

Recruit psychological examination for illiterates<br />

and non-English-speaking citizens and aliens, .r 136.8 U25 446


624 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Call number<br />

U.S.—Tariff commission. Japan; trade during the<br />

war r 382 U2532 24<br />

Reciprocity and commercial treaties r 337.9 U2535. . . .278<br />

U. S.—Treasury department. Digest of decisions<br />

of the United States courts r 336.2 U253d 73<br />

U. S.—Working conditions service. Treatment of<br />

industrial problems by constructive methods<br />

r 331.8 U2532 169<br />

U. S. coast pilot; Philippine islands r 656.8 U25P . . . .400<br />

U. S. Shipping Board Emergency Fleet Corporation.<br />

Construction of concrete ships r 623.835 U25 28<br />

Structural steel for ships r 699.1201 U25 . . . .517<br />

Training of shipyard workers r 623 807 U25. . . . 178<br />

United Typothetae of America. Instruction in printing<br />

in public schools 655.07 U25 .... 126<br />

Unseen hands. Ostrander O297U. . . .442<br />

Untermeyer, L. Including Horace 817 U25. . . .341<br />

Modern American poetry 811.08 U25. . . . 134<br />

Modern British poetry 821.08 U25 .. . .526<br />

Up and down. Benson B443U....270<br />

Up, the rebels! Hannay H237U. . . .271<br />

Urban, H. L'effort de demain 330.9 U27.... 169<br />

Vaka, D. See Brown, Mrs D. (Vaka).<br />

Valera, J. El pajaro verde 468 V15 73<br />

Valley of silent men. Curwood C936V . . . .502<br />

Van der Zee, J. The Hollanders of Iowa 977-7 V18. . . . 191<br />

Van Dyke, H. The house of Rinimon 812 ViS. . . .407<br />

Studies in Tennyson 821 T29zva. . . .342<br />

What peace means 252 Yi8w 20<br />

Van Dyke, J. C. American painting and its tradition . .759.1 V18 30<br />

Grand canyon of the Colorado 917.91 V18. . . .297<br />

Van Gehuchten, A. Anatomic du systeme nerveux<br />

de l'homme r 611.8 V18. . . .395<br />

The vanishing men. Child C4362V. . . . 441<br />

Van Kleeck, M. Wages in the millinery trade r 331.4 V19. . . .327<br />

Van Vechten, C. In the garret 780.4 V21L . . . 185<br />

Varilla, P. Bunau-. See Bunau-Varilla.<br />

Varinois, M. Le fraisage r 621.943 V21 . . . .460<br />

Varona y Pera, E. J. Conferencias sobre el fundamento<br />

de la moral<br />

I 7 i V21....165<br />

Veblen, T. B. Place of science in modern civilisation . .304 V24. . ..27s<br />

Velimirovic, N. Religion and nationality in Serbia. .949.7 V25 41<br />

Vem ar det? r g20 V25 244<br />

Verdi, G. Masked ball [libretto] 782.5 V26m. . . .185<br />

The same r 782.5 V261T1 185<br />

[Masked ball]; canto e pianoforte qM 782.5 V26m. . . . 185<br />

Verena in the midst. Lucas L96gve so}<br />

Page


INDEX TO AUTHORS, 1920 625<br />

Call number Page<br />

Vermont—Education, State Board of. Vermont<br />

junior high schools<br />

r 379.17 V27....233<br />

Vetalapafichavimsati. Twenty-two goblins 891.2 V28 82<br />

Viaud, J. See Loti, Pierre, pseud.<br />

Victoria and Albert Museum, South Kensington.<br />

Catalogue of the Le Blond collection of Corean<br />

pottery<br />

qr 738 V31....182<br />

Vignola, G. B. da. Li cinque ordini di architettura.. qb 729.3 V32C. ..183<br />

Vigny, A. V. comte de. Journal d'un poete 848 V32. . . .467<br />

Stello 843 V32st. ... 113<br />

Le village moderne qb 728 V32 .... 403<br />

Villesbrunne, J. de la. See La Villesbrunne.<br />

Villiers, F. Days of glory r 741 V33. . . .402<br />

Vincent, J. H. & Joy, J. R. Outline history of<br />

Greece<br />

938 V34....412<br />

Vinogradov, Sir P. G. The reconstruction of Russia<br />

914.7 V34 244<br />

Violinist's book of songs qM 787.1 V347. . . .465<br />

Virgil. Bucolics, Ge<strong>org</strong>ics and Aeneid r 873 V34b .... 186<br />

Virginia—Agriculture and immigration department.<br />

Handbook of Virginia 917-55 V349 4"<br />

The same r 917-55 V34h.. . .411<br />

Virginia r 917-55 V34V. . . .411<br />

Virginia—Legislative reference bureau. Road laws<br />

of the American states r 625.7007 V34 - - - • 520<br />

Virginia—State forester. Administrative report..r 634.9 V34ad .. ..398<br />

Vismes, H. de. Les petites ames 843 V35 .... 323<br />

Vitry, P. La cathedrale de Reims qb 726 V357.... 524<br />

Vizetelly, E. A. Paris and her people under the third<br />

republic 944-36 V35 86<br />

Vizetelly, F. H. Desk-book of 25,000 words frequently<br />

mispronounced<br />

r 421-5 V35....282<br />

Vocational summary; monthly qr 607 V364. . . .332<br />

Le vceu de Nadia. Greville, Henry, pseud<br />

843 G88V....163<br />

Voge, A. L. In<strong>org</strong>anic compounds r 546 V361....457<br />

The voice of the pack. Marshall M4164V. . . .321<br />

Voltaire, F. M. A. de. Candide<br />

843 V37.--.367<br />

Vorse, Mrs M. M. (Heaton). Growing up V384g 443<br />

Vrba, K. Krystallographische tafeln fiir die mineral-<br />

' ogischen vortrage an der Prager Universitat.. r 548 V39....331<br />

W. B. in California 811.08 Wn - - - -134<br />

Wada, T. Minerals of Japan<br />

qr 555-2 W11....516<br />

Waddle, C. W. Child psychology 136.7 W11....113<br />

Wade C F. Efficient boiler management 621.18W11 520<br />

Wade! Sir C. G. Australia 919-4 Wu - • - .412<br />

Walcott, G.D. Tsing Hua lectures on ethics 170 Wl55 • • •-370


626 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Call number<br />

Waldie, G. History of the town and palace of Linlithgow<br />

914.144 W15....296<br />

Waley, A. More translations from the Chinese 895 Wi6m 83<br />

Walker, S. More portmanteau plays 812 Wi7m . . . .407<br />

Wallace. D. The Ragged Inlet guards j Wl75r. . . .348<br />

Wallace, H. B. Historic Paxton<br />

r 285.1 W17....166<br />

W T allace & Tiernan Co. N. Y. Chlorine control<br />

apparatus for water and sewage purification<br />

qr 663.633 W17....401<br />

Wallas, G. The life of Francis Place 92 P678W. . . .469<br />

Walmsley, T. Manual of practical anatomy 611.07 W18. . . .458<br />

Walpole, H. Jeremy W1862J 17<br />

Walsh, J. J. Memorial of the Futtehgurh mission .... 266 W188.... 372<br />

Walsh, James J. Health through will power 615.851 W18 78<br />

Walter, H. A. Ahmadiya movement 297 W19. . : .372<br />

Walton, T. H. Coal mining described and illustrated<br />

qr 622.33 W19. . . .520<br />

Walton's Vermont register r 328.74 W19. . . .374<br />

Ward, A. S. The golden scorpion W2i32g. . . .367<br />

Ward, Mrs H. Fields of victory 940.91 W2uf. . . . 193<br />

Helena W214I1I. . . . 113<br />

Ward, H. F. The new social order 304 W21. . . .448<br />

Ward, J. With the "Die-hards" in Siberia 940.913 W21. . . .532<br />

Wardlaw, J. Mining mathematics simplified 622.33 W21. . . .460<br />

Wardle, A. G. Handwork in religious education 268 W2ih. . . .506<br />

Sunday school movement in the Methodist Episcopal<br />

church 268 W21 70<br />

Ware, I. A complete body of architecture qb 720 W222.... 183<br />

Warfield, G. A. Outdoor relief in Missouri 361 W22. . . .325<br />

Warren, B. S. & Bolduan, C. F. War activities of<br />

the United States public health service. . . .r 614.0973 W24. . . .177<br />

Warren, D. M. Elementary treatise on physical<br />

geography qr 551 W245e 26<br />

Warren, H. L. Foundations of classic architecture. . . .722 W24 80<br />

Washington, G. Agricultural papers r 630 W27. . . .179<br />

Authenticated copy of the last will and testament<br />

of Ge<strong>org</strong>e Washington r 929.3 W27. . . .299<br />

Washington (state)—Labor bureau. Labor laws of<br />

the state of Washington r 338.9 W27. . . .377<br />

Waterman, Mrs A. H. (Lane). A little candy book<br />

for a little girl j 642 W29 300<br />

Waters, B. Modern training, handling and kennel<br />

management r 636.7 W29 460<br />

Watkins, A. Photography 770 W311 80<br />

Watterson, H. "Marse Henry" 92 W327W. . . .136<br />

Watts, H. C. Design of screw propellers 533.6014 W33. . . .390<br />

The same<br />

r 533.6014 W33....390<br />

Page


INDEX TO AUTHORS, 1920<br />

Call number<br />

Watts, W. Vignettes of Italy qM 784 W33<br />

Waugh, A. Tradition and change<br />

820.4 W33t<br />

Waugh, F. A. Recreation uses on the national<br />

. forests r 7 n W33<br />

Weale, B. L. Putnam, pseud. Truth about China and<br />

J apan - • 327.51 W35..<br />

Weale, J. Divers works of early masters in Christian<br />

decoration qb 74g W 3 5 . .<br />

Weatherhead, R. Star pocket-book<br />

523.8 W36<br />

Weaver, E. W. Choosing an occupation I74 W36ch<br />

The same<br />

r 174 W36..<br />

Weaver, J. E. Ecological relations of roots qr 581.43 W36.<br />

Webb, C. C. J. God and personality 231 W36.<br />

Webb, S. J. & Freeman, A. J. Great Britain after the<br />

war<br />

r 330.9 W36. . ••73<br />

Webb, W. Garden first in land devolopment 710 W36. • -30<br />

Weber, G. A. Organized efforts for the improvement<br />

of methods of administration in the<br />

United States<br />

350 W37<br />

168<br />

Webster, C. K. Congress of Vienna, 1814-15 940.8 W38 •41<br />

Webster—man's man. Kyne K448W .366<br />

Weddell, J. W. Your study Bible 220.7 W41 •275<br />

Weedon, L. L. From the grain to the loaf<br />

j 633 W42 .249<br />

Weeks, E. T. Reconstruction programs<br />

r 330.9 W42 •377<br />

Weeks, R. M. Socializing the three R's<br />

371.3 W42 •512<br />

Wegmann, E. Conveyance and distribution of water<br />

for water supply<br />

628.14 W44<br />

The same<br />

r 628.14 W44<br />

Wehrle, G. American gas works practice<br />

665.7 W44<br />

Weigle, L. A. Talks to Sunday-school teachers 268 W44<br />

Weill, G. J. Histoire des Etats-Unis<br />

973 W45<br />

Wells, A. E. Potash industry of the United States, .r 661.31 W49<br />

Wells, C. Raspberry jam<br />

W494r<br />

Wells, F. Tama<br />

W4943t<br />

Wells, H. Ears, brain and fingers<br />

786.3 W49<br />

Wells, H. G. In the days of the comet<br />

W494iin<br />

Wells, W. Six place logarithmic tables r 510.8 W49<br />

Wendell, L. Systematic development of X-ray plates<br />

and films<br />

778-33 W51<br />

Wenstrom, O. E. & Lindgren, E. Engelsk-svensk<br />

ordbok<br />

r 439.7 W52<br />

& Harlock, W. E. Svensk-engelsk ordbok. ,r 439.7 W52S<br />

Wessling, H. L. Use of wheat flour substitutes in<br />

baking<br />

641 W55<br />

West, A. F. The war and education<br />

370-4 W56<br />

West Virginia—Labor bureau. Biennial report r 331 W56<br />

627<br />

Page<br />

•339<br />

••36<br />

•337<br />

.182<br />

•515<br />

•446<br />

•446<br />

•173<br />

.230<br />

237<br />

237<br />

180<br />

506<br />

413<br />

181<br />

227<br />

322<br />

132<br />

443<br />

77<br />

524<br />

-75<br />

•75<br />

• 79<br />

280<br />

451


628 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Call number<br />

Westinghouse Air Brake Co. P C passenger brake<br />

equipment<br />

r 625.25 W56PC....237<br />

Weyl, T. Les methodes de la chimie <strong>org</strong>anique. . . . qr 547 W58. . . .457<br />

Weyman, S. J. The great house Ws86gr 17<br />

What happened to Inger Johanne. Zwilgmeyer j Z94W. . .'.141<br />

What men from Pittsburgh say about the "Y"<br />

overseas r 940.927 W59 44<br />

What outfit, Buddy? Kelly K1722W 365<br />

What's what in Wall street r 332.6 W59. . . .232<br />

Wheeler, A. M. Sketches from English history 942 W61. . . .297<br />

Wheeler, E. R. Women of the cell and cloister 922 W61.... 137<br />

Wheeler, H. F. B. Boys' life of Lord Kitchener j 92 K297W. . . .140<br />

Wheeler, H. L. Bibliography of manganese, .qr 016.55346 W61. . . .391<br />

Bibliography on zinc r 016.6695 W61. . . .289<br />

Whipple, G. M. Classes for gifted children 371-9 W62. . . .281<br />

Whitaker, A. C. Foreign exchange 332.45 W62. . . .279<br />

Whitaker, C. H. The joke about housing 331-83 W62J. . . .379<br />

White, A. E. Notes on metallurgy qr 669.17 W63. . . .289<br />

White, B. The free city 321.021 W63.... 168<br />

White, J. A. Practical aviation 533-652 W634. . . .515<br />

White, S. A. Ambush W6363a. . . .443<br />

White, S. E. The killer W6362k 367<br />

White Pine Bureau, St. Paul, Minn. White pine in<br />

home building q 728 W637 31<br />

White pine series of architectural monographs qr 728 W63. . . .338<br />

Whitehead, H. Business career of Peter Flint W639b 67<br />

Whitehouse, J. H. Ruskin centenary addresses r 92 R899W 84<br />

Whitehouse, Mrs V. (Boarman). A year as a<br />

government agent 940.916 W64. . . .299<br />

Whiteley, O. Story of Opal 92 W6422W. . . .528<br />

The same r 92 W642W 528<br />

Whiting, G. A lace guide for makers and collectors, .r 746 W64. . . .463<br />

Whitman, C. O. Posthumous works qr 598.65 W64.... 175'<br />

Whitworth, J. F. Taxation of foreign and domestic<br />

corporations r 336.2 W66 381<br />

Who's who and why r 920 W6655. . . .296<br />

Whose name is legion. Clarke C532W 16<br />

Whyte-Edgar, Mrs C. M. See Edgar.<br />

Widdemer. M. The haunted hour 821.08 W67 .. ..294<br />

Wiggin, Mrs K. D. A child's journey with Dickens..j 92 D551W. . ..194<br />

Wild, W. Victory through conflict qM 782.9 W71. . . .525<br />

The wilderness mine. Bindloss B485W....501<br />

Wildman, E. Reconstructing America 330.4 W71 22<br />

Willard, Mrs E. (Hart). Plan for improving female<br />

education<br />

r 376 W73....512<br />

Willey, J. H. Between two worlds 237 \N7\. .372<br />

William, an Englishman. Hamilton Hi 99W.... 503<br />

Page


INDEX TO AUTHORS, 1920<br />

Call number<br />

Williams, G. Fear not the crossing<br />

T3 4 W74<br />

Williams, L. M. Up-to-the-minute monologues 812 W746<br />

Williams, Sir M. Monier-. Dictionary, English and<br />

Sanskrit<br />

qr 4gl. 2 W74<br />

Williams, R. S. Principles of metallography 669.042 W74<br />

Williamson, C.N. & Williamson, Mrs A.M. (Livingston).<br />

The second latchkey<br />

W75ise<br />

Willis, H. P. American banking<br />

332.1 W75<br />

Willis, R. Architectural history of Glastonbury abbey<br />

b 726 W75<br />

Williston, S. Negotiable instruments<br />

347-7 W75<br />

Willmore, J. S. Story of King Constantine in the<br />

Greek white book<br />

949-5 W75<br />

Willsie, Mrs H. (McCue). The forbidden trail W762f<br />

Willson, E. Middle English legends of visits to<br />

the other world and their relation to the<br />

metrical romances<br />

r 821.09 W76<br />

Willy, Colette, pseud. Mitsou<br />

842 W76<br />

Wilson, C. H. Talks to young people on ethics.... 170.4 W767<br />

Wilson, H. G. Special freight services, allowances<br />

and privileges<br />

r 385 W76<br />

Wilson, L. N. War collection at Clark University<br />

library<br />

r 940.91 W76<br />

Windoes, R. F. Shop sketching<br />

744 W78<br />

Winship, A. E. Danger signals for teachers<br />

371 W78<br />

Winston simplified dictionary<br />

r 423 W79<br />

Winter, N. O. Florida 9 T 7-59 W79<br />

Wirick, L. A. How to read blue prints<br />

r 744 W81<br />

Wisconsin magazine of history<br />

qr 977.5 W812<br />

Wisconsin University—University extension division.<br />

Plays for community Christmas<br />

812 W81<br />

The same<br />

r 378.1 W81 no.794<br />

Wise, J. C. Ye kingdome of Accawmacke r 975.5 W81<br />

Wister, O. A straight deal<br />

327-73 W81<br />

Withers, H. Our money and the state 336.2 W82<br />

Witthaus, R. A. General medical chemistry r 540 W82g<br />

Witwer, H. C. Alex the Great W829a<br />

Wodehouse, P. G. A damsel in distress<br />

W832d<br />

Wolf, L. Diplomatic history of the Jewish question<br />

qr 296 W836<br />

Wolf-Ferrari, E. [Le donne curiose.]<br />

qM 782.6 W83<br />

Jewels of the Madonna<br />

qM 782.5 W83<br />

Suzanne's secret<br />

qM 782.5 W83S<br />

Wolfe, A. J. International commerce<br />

380 W83<br />

Wolff, J. S. Story of the Paris churches<br />

726 W83<br />

Woman triumphant. Blasco Ibaiiez B5412W<br />

Wood, E. F. Leonard Wood 92 W854W<br />

629<br />

Page<br />

•274<br />

•294<br />

•172<br />

.401<br />

•367<br />

•279<br />

•464<br />

.280<br />

.138<br />

•322<br />

.69<br />

.456<br />

•348<br />

3i<br />

• 513<br />

.172<br />

.189<br />

.408<br />

.408<br />

• 4U<br />

• 325<br />

• 327<br />

• 390<br />

• 17<br />

.163<br />

• 372<br />

• 131<br />

• 131<br />

•35<br />

.234<br />

338<br />

• 320<br />

296


630 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Call number<br />

Wood, F. J. Turnpikes of New England qr 917.4 W85 .... 189<br />

Wood, R. The ruins of Balbec qb 722.3 W85 . . . .464<br />

The ruins of Palmyra qb 722.3 W8sr.. . .524<br />

Woodbury, C. H. Painting and the personal equation. .750 W86.. .. 128<br />

Woodhouse, H. Applied aeronautic engineering<br />

qr 533-652 W86t 331<br />

Woods, A. Policeman and public 352.2 W86 71<br />

Woods, G. H. Public school orchestras and bands...787 W86....339<br />

Woodward, W. H. Vittorino da Feltre and other<br />

humanist educators 375-8 W86.... 329<br />

Woolf, L. S. Co-operation & the future of industry<br />

334 W87 328<br />

International government 341.6 W87. . . .325<br />

Woollcott, A. The command is forward 940.913 W87 44<br />

Woolley, R. M. Coronation rites 394 W87....115<br />

Wootton, A. C. Chronicles of pharmacy r 615.09 W88.. . .518<br />

Worden, E. C. Technology of cellulose esters r 679 W89.... 392<br />

Worker's Educational Association. Education year<br />

book r 370.6 W89.... 233<br />

The worldlings. Merrick M6395WO .... 503<br />

World's Christian Citizenship Conference (3d), Pittsburgh,<br />

1919. The world's moral problems 304 W89....508<br />

The same r 304 W89.... 508<br />

Worst, E. F. Foot-power loom weaving 689 W91.... 122<br />

Wrack. O'Byrne 0129W .... 162<br />

Wright, C. H. H. Introduction to the Old testament. .221 W93....275<br />

Wright, E. L. Wilson's meat cookery<br />

641 W93....287<br />

Wright, F. S. Industrial nursing 610.7 W93....177<br />

Wright, H. P. The young man and teaching 371 W93. . . .281<br />

Wright, O. & Wright, W. Early history of the air-<br />

Page<br />

P lane qr 533-652 W93- • - -390<br />

Wiirttembergischer Kunstgewerbe-Verein. Preisgekronte<br />

und andere decorative holzarbeiten aus<br />

der konkurrenz-ausstellung<br />

qb 736.1 W97....182<br />

Wyer. S. S. Supply of natural gas available in Pennsylvania<br />

r 553.28 W98.. .. 174<br />

Wyllie, W. L. & Wren, M. F. Sea fights of the<br />

great war q 940.915 W98 87<br />

Yale University. Obituary record of Yale graduates<br />

r 378.7 Y130 234<br />

Yeats, W. B. Two plays for dancers<br />

822 Y22t. . . . 1S7<br />

Yeats-Brown, F. C. C. Caught by the Turks 940.917 Y22 348<br />

Young, M. S. Key to the families and genera of the<br />

wild plants of Austin, Texas r 581.9764 Y38 77<br />

Young, N. Life of Frederick the Great<br />

92 F895}'. . . . S27<br />

Young, W. A. The silver and Sheffield plate collector.. 739 Y41. . ..463


INDEX TO AUTHORS, 1920 631<br />

Call number Page<br />

Young Women's Christian Associations, U. S.—<br />

National board. Drama of Esther 792.2 Y41. . . . 343<br />

Young Women's Christian Associations, U. S.<br />

—War work council. American Y. W. C. A.<br />

in France<br />

qr 940.927 Y41....475<br />

State laws affecting women in the United<br />

States r 396.2 Y41.... 329<br />

Youngken, H. W. Pharmaceutical botany 581.63 Y41....388<br />

Youth and the bright Medusa. Cather C2822y.... 502<br />

Yver, Colette, pseud. See Huzard, Mme A. (de Bergevin).<br />

Zamacois, E. Their son, and The necklace<br />

Z24t....272<br />

Zangerle, J. A. Untaxed wealth of Cleveland and<br />

why<br />

r 336.2 Z28....452<br />

Zeller, E. Grundriss der geschichte der griechischen<br />

philosophie 180 Z45.... 274<br />

Ziemann, H. & Gillette, Mrs F. L. (Camp). White<br />

house cook book 641 Z61. . . .335<br />

Zimmer, H. The Irish element in mediaeval culture. .940.1 Z62....345<br />

Zimmermann, K. Die ramwirkung im erdreich. .. qr 624.1 Z64....460<br />

Zimmern, A. E. Nationality & government 320.4 Z65 71<br />

Zwilgmeyer, D. What happened to Inger Johanne j Z94W. . . . 141<br />

Books for the Blind<br />

American Braille<br />

Aldrich, M. A hilltop on the Marne qE 940.918 A36.... 476<br />

Declaration of independence in Congress, July 4,<br />

1776 E 342.7 D36a....247<br />

Spicer, W. A. Our day in the light of prophecy.. qE 220.1 S75 44<br />

U. S. Constitution. Constitution of the United States<br />

of America<br />

E 342-7 U25 88<br />

American Braille with Contractions<br />

Plato. Selections qE 888 P68.... 532<br />

Line type<br />

Dana, J. D. Geological story briefly told qE 550 Di 9 a....4i6<br />

Scott, Sir W. Lady of the lake qE 821 S«l2.... 4 i6<br />

Swinton, W. Outline of the world's history qE 909 S97 88<br />

Moon Type<br />

Adderley, J. G. Francis, the little poor man of AsriE<br />

92 F866a.. . • 4 r 7<br />

M 7<br />

sisi<br />

Bell, J.J. The whalers 1 E B412W....417<br />

Bible—Whole Holy Bible, containing the Old and<br />

New testaments


632 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Call number<br />

Bible—Old testament. Genesis. Genesis, chapters<br />

1-5 in Hebrew qE 222.1 B47....417<br />

Bible—Old testament. Isaiah. Isaiah, chaps. 35 &<br />

49 E 224.1 B47 417<br />

Isaiah, chap. 53, Psalms 19, 23 & 125 E 224.1 B47E . . .417<br />

Isaiah, chaps. 53, 55 & 60 (in Hebrew) E 224.1 B47is. . . .417<br />

Bible—New testament. Matthew. St. Matthew.. qE 226.2 B47S....248<br />

Bible—New testament. Mark. St. Mark qE 226.3 B47S .... 193<br />

Bible—New testament. Luke. St. Luke qE 226.4 B47S. . . . 193<br />

Bible—New testament. John. St. John qE 226.5 B47stj.... 193<br />

Bible—New testament. Revelation. Revelation .... qE 228 B47 .... 193<br />

Connor, Ralph, pseud. Sky pilot qE C753S. . . .417<br />

Dorling, H. T. Carry on! naval sketches and<br />

stories<br />

qE 940.915 D73....417<br />

Eliot, Ge<strong>org</strong>e, pseud. Silas Marner qE E476S4. . . .417<br />

Hunt, V. B. Lord Roberts<br />

qE 92 R536h....4i7<br />

London, J. Tales of the fish patrol qE L822t.. . .417<br />

Lorimer, G. H. Letters from a self-made merchant<br />

to his son qE8i7 L87. . . .417<br />

Mitford, M. R. Selected stories from "Our village.". .qE M754S. . . .417<br />

Moon, W. Geography qE 910 M87....417<br />

Pearse, M. G. Daniel Quorm and his religious notions..E P348d... .417<br />

Porter, Mrs E. (Hodgman). Pollyanna qE P835P2. . . .417<br />

Rice, Mrs A. C. (Hegan). Mrs Wiggs of the Cabbage<br />

Patch qE R3951112 417<br />

Roberts, M. Madonna of the Beechwood qE R537111. . . .417<br />

Roe, E. P. Barriers burned away, v.2 qE R595b. . . .418<br />

Scott, Sir W. Ivanhoe qE S43ii4. . . .418<br />

Stevenson. R. L. Treasure island qE S848t2.. . .418<br />

Wilkins, M. E. Revolt of "Mother" E W728r. . . .418<br />

Yonge, C. M. Dove in the eagle's nest qE Y2gd . . . .418<br />

New York Point<br />

Page<br />

Hall, Eliza Calvert, pseud. Aunt Jane of Kentucky. . .qE Hi72a 44<br />

Lippmann, J. M. Martha by-the-day qE L7331U.. . . 532<br />

Poetry for every-day reading qE 821.08 P74a .. ..248<br />

White, Mrs E. G. (Harmon). Christ our Saviour.. qE 232 W63C .. . .248<br />

Revised Braille<br />

Chancellor, W. E. History and government of<br />

the United States<br />

qE 342.7 C36....476<br />

Revised Braille with Contractions<br />

Andrews, M. R. S. Courage of the commonplace .... E A568C2 .. . .476<br />

A good Samaritan qE As68g.!.^i8<br />

Baldwin, J. Fifty famous stories retold qE 904 Biga 532<br />

Thirty more famous stories retold qE 904 Bl9t. . .4-6


INDEX TO AUTHORS, 1920 633<br />

Call number Page<br />

Bangs, J. K. Little book of Christmas qE B226I.... 532<br />

Bible—New testament. John. Gospel according to<br />

Saint John qE 226.5 B47a. . . .477<br />

Brooks, C. S. Chimney-pot papers<br />

qE 814 B77....418<br />

Brown, A. The flying Teuton qE B7832f. . . .477<br />

Browne, F. The wonderful chair and the tales it<br />

told qE B8nw. . . .532<br />

Business correspondence qE 652 B965. . . .477<br />

Cobb, I. S. "Speaking of operations" qE 817 C62a . . . .418<br />

Connolly, J. B. The trawler, and The commandeering<br />

of the "Lucy Foster." E C/53t.... 348<br />

Conwell, R. H. Acres of diamonds qE 174 C76. . . .418<br />

Craik, Mrs D. M. (Mulock). Little lame prince qE C863I.. . . 533<br />

Crane, F. If you are up against it—go around....qE 814 C86....418<br />

Cushing, L. S. Manual of parliamentary practice . . qE 328.1 C93 .. . .418<br />

Cutting, Mrs M. S. (Doubleday). The blossoming rod..qE C955b....477<br />

Davis, R. H. The boy scout qE D323bo 45<br />

Dix, B. M. Soldier Rigdale E D647S 299<br />

Drinkwater, J. Abraham Lincoln qE 822 D82. . . .418<br />

Eggleston, E. Stories of great Americans for little<br />

Americans<br />

qE 923.2 E35....477<br />

Ferber, E. That's marriage, and The frog and the<br />

puddle qE F3711.. ..419<br />

French, H. W. Lance of Kanana E F926I. . ..348<br />

Gatlin, D. Full measure of devotion qE G234f 533<br />

Glass, M. Object matrimony E G4660.. ..419<br />

Graham, J. C. Brooding and rearing chicks E 636.5 G77.. ..419<br />

Guerber, H. M. A. Story of the Greeks<br />

qE 938 G95-• •-477<br />

Story of the 13 colonies qE 973-2 G9S 477<br />

Haines, D. H. The price qE B7832L. ..477<br />

Hall, Eliza Calvert, pseud. Gardens of memory,<br />

taken from "Aunt Jane of Kentucky." qE Hl72g.. . .477<br />

Harte, B. Tennessee's partner E H3i9t 419<br />

Hawkes, C. The good fight qE 92 H 3 6 4 2g.. . .533<br />

Hawthorne, N. Tanglewood tales qE 292 H36a2... -477<br />

Henry, O. pseud. Memoirs of a yellow dog E H452me 45<br />

Romance of a busy broker E H 4 52ro 45<br />

Shoes, and The moment of victory qE H452sh.. . .419<br />

Hines J. C. The blue streak, and A one-man dog...qE Hs67b...-4I9<br />

Holland, R. S. Historic adventures qE 973 H89. - - .419<br />

Knight, W. A. Song of our Syrian guest E 223.2 K34a3 • • ••248<br />

Lait, J. Lars, the useless, was a nuisance, and It<br />

wasn't honest, butit was sweet E Ll64b....477<br />

Laughlin, C. E. Everybody's lonesome qE L 3 68e2.. ..419<br />

Leacock S. B. Anecdotes of Doctor So and So. ... E 827 L 4 4an... .4/7<br />

Soaked in seaweed<br />

fk^T^""^<br />

Weejee, the pet dog E 827 L 44 w.. . .4/8


634 CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH<br />

Call number Page<br />

Lee, Mrs J. B. (Perry). The air-man and the tramp..qE L524a.. .. 478<br />

Leupp, F. E. A day with father E L659d2 419<br />

Lewis, H. R. Poultry keeping E 636.5 L67 420<br />

London, J. Love of life<br />

qE L822I....420<br />

Macafee, N. E. Massage E 615.82 Mu.. ..420<br />

Meras, B. & Meras, E.J. French verbs and verbal<br />

idioms in speech qE 445 M63 478<br />

The same; key<br />

qE 445 M63a....478<br />

Mitchell, J. K. Principles, methods and therapeutics<br />

of massage qE 615.82 M74 420<br />

Montague, M. P. The gift<br />

qE M846g....420<br />

Morley, C. D. The haunted bookshop qE M899h 478<br />

Oppenheim, E. P. The great impersonation qE 026sg 478<br />

Page, T. N. Burial of the guns qE Pu5b 420<br />

Palmer, M. D. Lessons on massage, including<br />

Swedish remedial gymnastics and bandaging<br />

qE 615.82 P19....420<br />

Peple, E. H. A night out E P4i7n.. . .420<br />

Poe, E. A. Descent into the maelstrom, The purloined<br />

letter, and The masque of the red<br />

death<br />

qE P74id....420<br />

Porter, H. E. New York and return, and What is<br />

wasted time? qE P83611 478<br />

Prouty, O. H. Pluck qE P972P 45<br />

Richmond, Mrs G. L. (Smith). Red Pepper Burns...qE R425r....42i<br />

Rinehart, Mrs M. E. (Roberts). Love stories qE R472I.. . .421<br />

Roman Catholic church. Catechism of Christian<br />

doctrine qE 282 R6sa2.... 533<br />

Manual of prayers and devotions, by J. M. Stadelman<br />

qE 248 R651T12 88<br />

Roosevelt, T. Theodore Roosevelt's letters to his<br />

children qE 92 R684r.... 478<br />

Ruskin, J. King of the Golden river qE R899k2 .... 533<br />

Snaith, J. C. The time spirit qE S669L . . .478<br />

Spicer, W. A. The hand that intervenes qE 231 S75 .. . .248<br />

Stockton, F. R. A borrowed month, from "The<br />

Christmas wreck." E S866bo. . .. 533<br />

Twain, Mark, pseud. The $30,000 bequest, and The<br />

danger of lying in bed qE T897t.. . .421<br />

U. S. Constitution. Constitution of the United<br />

States and Declaration of independence.. .qE 342.7 U25a....42i<br />

Wade, Mrs M. L. Book of potato cookery qE 641 Wu .. . .421<br />

Webster, J. Dear enemy E W383de .. . .421<br />

Young, S. H. Adventures in Alaska qE 917.98 Y39. . . .421


Errata<br />

Page<br />

64 Brown. For call number 879131 read 67851.<br />

86 Ohio—Adjutant-general. For Offical read Official.<br />

243 United States—Congress. In note, for adresses read addresses.<br />

289 Miintz. For call number r 709-45 M6gar read qr 709.45 M96ar.<br />

300 Omit entry for Webber.<br />

333 Ninde. For call number 621.1 N26 read 621.1 N36.<br />

372 Walter. For call number 297 Wz9 read 297 W19.<br />

400 Dickeroff. For Dickeroff read Dickerhoff.<br />

415 Ford. For call number 940.917 F7 read 940.917 F76.<br />

462 Siren. For call number r 759-5 G43S read qr 759-5 G43S.<br />

464 Photograms of the year. For call number qr 770 5 P5286 read<br />

qr 779 P52.<br />

496 Paragraph 8, line 9. For its read it.<br />

635


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