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World Affairs Institute Back Matter Source: The Advocate of Peace (1894-1920), Vol. 71, No. 8 (AUGUST and SEPTEMBER, 1909) Published by: World Affairs Institute Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/20665792 . Accessed: 23/05/2014 00:36 Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use, available at . http://www.jstor.org/page/info/about/policies/terms.jsp . JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range of content in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new forms of scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact [email protected]. . World Affairs Institute and Heldref Publications are collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extend access to The Advocate of Peace (1894-1920). http://www.jstor.org This content downloaded from 194.29.185.184 on Fri, 23 May 2014 00:36:49 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
Transcript
Page 1: Back Matter

World Affairs Institute

Back MatterSource: The Advocate of Peace (1894-1920), Vol. 71, No. 8 (AUGUST and SEPTEMBER, 1909)Published by: World Affairs InstituteStable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/20665792 .

Accessed: 23/05/2014 00:36

Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use, available at .http://www.jstor.org/page/info/about/policies/terms.jsp

.JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range ofcontent in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new formsof scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact [email protected].

.

World Affairs Institute and Heldref Publications are collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extendaccess to The Advocate of Peace (1894-1920).

http://www.jstor.org

This content downloaded from 194.29.185.184 on Fri, 23 May 2014 00:36:49 AMAll use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions

Page 2: Back Matter

1909. THE ADVOCATE OF PEACE. 193

International Arbitration and Peace Lecture Bureau, 31 Beacon Street, Boston.

The following persons may be secured to give ad dresses before public meetings, churches, schools and

EVERYLAND The new magazine for boys and g?r?s, offers a ptize of twenty-five ($25) dollars lot the best story in the interests of the object of the

Peace Association, The story must be for boys and girls between

the ages of ten and fourteen years* It must be in the hands of the

fublisher not later than October U It must contain from 4,000 to

,000 words, and must be a story and not a sermon.

Acceptable stories that do not win the prize will be purchased at regular rates. Send manuscript clearly written or typewritten, with

stamps for return, to

EVERYLAND Care of M. H- LEAVIS, WEST MEDFORD, MASS.

WORLD-PETITION TO THE THIRD HAGUE CONFERENCE

Petition-blanks and "Letter to the Signers" sent free on receipt of request addressed to

Miss A. B. ECKSTEIN 29 BEACON STREET, BOSTON, MASS.

PACIFIC COAST AGENCY OF THE

AMERICAN PEACE SOCIETY, DEPOSITORY OF PEACE LITERATURE.

ROBERT C. ROOT, Representative. Severance Building, Los Angeles, California.

THE FISK TEACHERS' AGENCIES EVERETT O. FISK & CO., Proprietors

2A Park Street, Boston 156 Fifth Avenue, New York 1505 Penn. Avenue, Washington 203 Michigan Avenue, Chicago 414 Century Bldg., Minneapolis 405 Cooper Building, Denver 618 Peyton Building, Spokane 202 Swetland Building, Portland 2142 Shattuck Avenue, Berkeley 238 Douglas Bldg., Los Angeles.

Send to any address above for Agency Manual free.

NEW ENGLAND SANITARIUM, MELROSE, M?S5.

In Middlesex Fells, a beautiful park of 3,500 acres, seven miles from Boston, an ideal home for invalids. Circular sent free. References, Everett O. Fisk, Boston ; Boswell S. Douglass, Brookline.

NEWSPAPER CLIPPINGS An important factor in peace negotiations

Count Witte, Russian Peace Commissioner, and Baron Kaneko, Japan's secret representative in America, were kept posted through newspaper clippings furnished by the Argos Prese Clipping Bureau.

What Interests You Can be supplied from American and foreign publications to your entire satisfaction. Any topic, any name.

Terms : f 5 per hundred, $35 per 1,000 clippings.

ARGUS PRESS CLIPPING BUREAU 352 THIRD AVENUE, NEW YORKi"CITY

OTTO SPENGLER, Director

other organizations, on international arbitration and

peace. Those wishing their services should communi cate directly with them as to dates and terms.

Mrs. Fannie Fern Andrews, 405 Marlboro St., Boston. Rev. A. Eugene Bartlett, 691? Washington Boulevard, Chicago. Rev. Charles E. Beals, 31 Beacon St., Boston.

Raymond L. Bridgman, State House, Boston. E. Howard Brown, New Sharon, Iowa. Arthur Deerin Call, Hartford, Conn. W. C. Dennis, State Department, Washington. Rev. Charles F. Dole, Jamaica Plain, Mass. Miss Anna B. Eckstein, 30 Newbury Street, Boston. Rev. Bradley Gilman, Canton Corner, Mass. Rev. J. J. Hall, D. D., Fayetteville, N. C. Prof, Benjamin H. Hibbard, Ames, la. Hamilton Holt, 130 Fulton Street, New York. Rev. William G. Hubbard, Goldsboro, N. C. K. S. Inui, Japanese Lecturer, Ann Arbor, Mich. Edwin D. Mead, 20 Beacon St., Boston. Lucia Ames Mead, 39 Newbury St., Boston. Dr. Ernst Richard, Columbia University, New York. Dr. Sylvester F. Scovel, Wooster University, Wooster, Ohio. Dr. Homer B. Sprague, 809 Grand View, Los Angeles, Cal. Dr. Benjamin F. Trueblood, 31 Beacon St., Boston. Rev. James L. Tryon, 31 Beacon Street, Boston.

Branches and Auxiliaries of the American Peace Society.

Branches.

The Peace Society of Southern California, 414 Severance Building, Los Angeles, Cal.

Dr. William Y. Coffin, President. Robert C. Root, Secretary.

The Utah Peace Society, Salt Lake City, Utah. Ex-Go v. John C. Cutler, President. J. M. Sjodahl, Secretary.

The New York Italian Peace Society, Hon. A. Zucca, President. Giovani Daniele, Secretary, 2039 First Ave., . Y.

The Connecticut Peace Society, Hartford, Conn. Arthur Deerin Call, President. Rev. R. W. Roundy, Secretary,

The Cleveland Peace Society, Cleveland, Ohio. Dr. Charles F. Thwing, President. Mrs. H. E. Hollingshead, Secretary.

The Buffalo Peace Society, Buffalo, . Y. J. N. Larned, President. Frank F. Williams, Secretary.

The Peacemakers of Washington, Seattle, Wash. Charles F. Whaley, President. C. W. Scarff, Secretary.

Auxiliaries.

The Kansas State Peace Society, Wichita, Kansas. Prof. W. P. Trueblood, President. Orman Emery, Secretary.

NewYork German-American Peace SociETY,NewYork,N. Y. Dr. Ernst Richard, President, 12 West 103d Street. Theodor Meyer, Secretary, 444 Broome St.

Henry Feldman, Treasurer, 2835 Third Ave. The Arbitration and Peace Society of Cincinnati,

121 East Ninth Street, Cincinnati, Ohio. William Christie Herron, President. E. D. Lyon, Secretary.

The Texas State Peace Society, Waco, Texas. Dr. S. P. Brooks, President. John K. Strecker, Jr., Secretary.

The Intercollegiate Peace Association, Prof. Elbert Russell, President, Richmond, Ind.

George Fulk, Secretary, Cerro Gordo, 111.

The Association of Cosmopolitan Clubs, George W. Nasmyth, President,

110 Highland Place, Ithaca, N. Y. Heber E. Griffith, Secretary-Treasurer,

140 College Avenue* Ithaca, N. Y. Louis P. Lochner, Recording Secretary,

915 University Avenue, Madison, Wis.

This content downloaded from 194.29.185.184 on Fri, 23 May 2014 00:36:49 AMAll use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions

Page 3: Back Matter

194 THE ADVOCATE OF PEACE. August and September,

OFFICERS OF THE AMERICAN PEACE SOCIETY. president secretary

Hon. Robert Treat Paine, 6 Joy St., Boston, Masi, Benj. F. Trueblood, LL.D., 31 Beacon St., Boston, Mass.

treasurer auditor

Thomas H. Russell, 27 State St., Boston, Mass. Dr. William F. Jarvis, ?33 Moody St., Waltham, Mass

Assistant Secretary

James L. Tryon, 31 Beacon Street, Boston, Mass.

Field Secretary

Charles E. Beals, 31 Beacon Street, Boston, Mass.

vice-presidents :

Rev. Bdw. Everett Hale, D.D., 39 Highland St., Roxbury, Mass.

Rev. Lyman Abbott, D. D., 287 4th Avenue, New York.

Jane Addams, Hull House, Chicago, 111.

Rev. Charles G. Ames, D.D., 12 Chestnut St., Boston, Mass.

Joshua L. Baily, 32 S. 15th St., Philadelphia, Pa.

Mrs. Hannah J. Bailey, Winthrop Centre, Me.

Hon. Richard Bartholdt, House of Representatives,Washington Rev. Wm. E. Barton, D.D., Oak Park, 111.

Alice Stone Blackwell, 45 Boutwell St., Dorchester, Mass.

Prof. Geo. . Boardman, Pittsford, Vt.

Pres. S. P. Brooks, Baylor University, Waco, Texas.

Hon. E. E. Brown, Commissioner of Education, Washington,

D. C.

Hon. William I. Buchanan, Buffalo, . Y.

Hon. Theodore E. Burton, Cleveland, Ohio.

Arthur Derrin Call (ex-officio), Hartford, Conn.

Hon. Samuel B. Capen, 38 Greenough Ave., Boston, Mass.

Andrew Carnegie, 2 East 91st St., New York.

Hon. Jonathan Chace, Providence, R. I.

Rev. Frank G. Clark, Wellesley, Mass.

Rev. Joseph S. Cogswell, Dummerston, Vt.

Rev. D. S. Coles, Wakefield, Mass.

Se?ora Angela O. C. de Costa, 1105 Calle Santa F?, Buenos

Aires, Argentina. Geo. Cromwell, Brooklyn, N.Y.

Gov. John C. Cutler (ex-?fficio), Salt Lake City, Utah. Rev. John H. DeForest, D.D., Sondai, Japan. Rev. G. L. Demarest, D.D., Manchester, N. H.

Everett O. Fisk, 4 Ashburton Place, Boston, Mass.

B. O. Flower, Brookline, Mass.

Hon. John W. Foster, Washington, D. C.

Merrill E.Gates, LL.D., Washington, D. C.

Bel ton Gilreath, Birmingham, Ala.

Edwin Ginn, 29 Beacon St., Boston, Mass.

Maria Freeman Gray, 1303 13th Ave., East Oakland, Cal.

Rev. Scott F. Hershey, LL.D., Newcastle, Pa.

Bishop E. E. Hoss, D. D., Citra, Fla.

Julia Ward Howe, 241 Beacon St., Boston, Mass.

Hon. John W. Hoyt, Washington, D. C.

Dr. W. G. Hubbard, Goldsboro, N. C.

Rev. Charles E. Jefferson, New York City, N. Y.

Pres. David Starr Jordan, Stanford University, Cal.

Hon. Sumner I. Kimball, Washington, D. C.

Bishop William Lawrence, 122 Commonwealth Ave., Boston, Mass.

Edwin D. Mead, 20 Beacon St., Boston, Mass.

Prof. John Bassett Moore, Columbia University, New York.

Rev. Philip S. Moxom, D.D., Springfield, Mass.

George Foster Peabody, 28 Monroe Place, Brooklyn, N. Y.

L. H. Pillsbury, Derry, N. H. Hon. Wm. L. Putnam, Portland, Me. Hon. James Brown Scott, State Department, Washington.

Sylvester F. Scovel, D. D., Wooster, Ohio.

Mrs. May Wright Sewall, Indianapolis, Ind.

Albert K. Smiley, Mohonk Lake, N. Y.

Mrs. Ruth H. Spray, Salida, Col.

Mrs. L. M. N. Stevens, Portland, Me.

Rev. Edward M. Taylor, D.D., Cambridge, Mass.

Pres. M. Carey Thomas, Bryn Mawr, Pa.

Pres. C. F. Thwing, D.D., Cleveland, Ohio.

Dr. James Wallace, 541 Lexington Ave., New York.

Bishop Henry W. Warren, Denver, Col.

Booker T. Washington, LL. D., Tuskegee, Ala.

Kate Gannett Wells, 7 Otis Place, Boston, Mass.

Herbert Welsh, 1305 Arch St., Philadelphia, Pa.

Charles F. Whaley (ex-officio), 110 Olympic Place, Seattle,Wash. Rev. A. E. Winship, 29 Beacon St., Boston, Mass.

Richard Wood, 1620 Locust St., Philadelphia, Pa.

Pres. Mary E. Woolley, South Hadley, Mass.

directors :

Hon. Robert Treat Paine, ex-officio.

Benjamin F. Trueblood, LL. D., ex-officio.

Magnus W. Alexander, Lynn, Mass.

Fannie Fern Andrews, 405 Marlboro St., Boston, Mass.

Frederick Brooks, 31 Milk St., Boston, Mass.

W. H. H. Bryant, 10 Berwick Park, Boston, Mass.

Rev. S. C. Bushnell, Arlington, Mass.

Edward H. Clement, The Transcript, Boston.

Frederic Cunningham, 53 State St., Boston, Mass.

Rev. Charles F. Dole, Jamaica Plain, Mass.

Miss Anna B. Eckstein, 30 Newbury Street, Boston, Mass.

Mrs. J. Malcolm Forbes, Milton, Mass.

Augustine Jones, Newton Highlands, Mass.

Rev. B. F. Leavitt, Belmont, Mass.

Lucia Ames Mead, 20 Beacon St., Boston, Mass.

Wm. A. Mowry, LL. D., Hyde Park, Mass.

Bliss Perry, 4 Park St., Boston, Mass.

Rev. James L. Tryon, 61 Morton Street, Waltham, Mass,

Fiske Warren, 8 Mt. Yernon Place, Boston, Mass.

executive committee:

Hon. Robert Treat Paine, ex-offlcio.

Benjamin F. Trueblood, LL. D., ex-offlcio. Fannie Fern Andrews, 405 Marlboro Street, Boston, Mass

Frederick Brooks, 31 Milk St., Boston, Mass.

W. H. H. Bryant, 10 Berwick Park, Boston, Mass.

Frederic Cunningham, 53 State St., Boston, Mass.

Wm. A. Mowry, LL. D., Hyde Park, Mass.

honorary counsel:

Cephas Brainerd, New York, N.Y.

Hon. Robert M. Morse, Brookline, Mass.

Judge William L. Putnam, Portland, Me.

Hon. Josiah Quincy, Boston, Mass.

Moorfield Storey, 26 Fenway, Boston.

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Page 4: Back Matter

1909. THE ADVOCATE OF PEACE. 195

CONSTITUTION of the

American Peace Society. Article I. This Society shall be designated the ''Ameri

can Peace Society." Abt. II. This Society, being founded on the principle that

war is contrary to the spirit of Christianity and of all true

religion and morality, shall have for its object to illustrate the inconsistency of war with this spirit, to show its baleful influence on all the great interests of mankind, and to devise

means for insuring universal and permanent peace. Art. III. All persons desirous of promoting peace on

earth and goodwill towards men may become members of this society.

Art. IV. Every annual member of the Society shall pay a

yearly contribution of one dollar; the payment of five dollars a year shall constitute one a sustaining member ; the payment of twenty-five dollars at one time shall constitute any person a life member.

Art. V. Branch Societies shall be formed on the following basis : The members of the Branch Societies shall be members of the American Peace Society. The membership fee in Branch Societies shall be one dollar a year. One-half of the member

ship fee in the Branch Societies shall be paid to the American Peace Society, in return for which the Advocate of Peace shall be furnished to the members of the Branch Societies.

Art. VI. The Presidents of the State Branch Societies shall be ex-officiis Vice-Presideijts of the American Peace Society.

Art. VII. The Officers of this Society shall be a President, Vice-Presidente, a Secretary, a Treasurer, an Auditor and a Board of Directors, consisting of not more than twenty members of the Society, including the President, Secretary and Treas

urer, who shall be ex-officio members of the Board. All Offi cers shall hold their offices until their successors are appointed, and the Board of Directors shall have power to fill vacancies in any office of the Society. There shall be an Executive Committee of seven, consisting of the President, Secretary and five Directors to be chosen by the Board, which Com mittee shall, subject to the Board of Directors, have the entire oontrol of the executive and financial affairs of the Society. Meetings of the Board of Directors or the Executive Com mittee may be called by the President, the Secretary, or two members of such body. The Society or the Board of Direc tors may invite persons of well-known legal ability to act as

Honorary Counsel. Art. VIII. The Society shall hold an annual meeting at

such time and place as the Board of Directors may appoint, to receive their own and the Treasurer's report, to choose officers, and transact such other business as may come before them.

Art. IX. The object of this Society shall never be changed ; but the Constitution may in other respects be altered, on recommendation of the Executive Committee, or of any ten members of the Society, by a vote of three-fourths of the members present at any regular meeting.

Publications of the American Peace Society, The Teaching of Historv in the Public Schools with

Reference to War and Peace.? Report of a Committee of three appointed by the American Peace Society. 28

pages. Price 5 cts. each; $3.50 per hundred, prepaid. Tolstoy's Letter on the Russo-Japanese War.?48 pages

and cover. Price, postpaid, 10 cts.

War Unnecessary and Unchristian.?By Augustine Jones, LL. B. Third edition, 20 pages. 5 cts. each, $3.00 per hundred.

Freedom of Commerce in Time of War.?By James L. Try on. With a letter by Judge L. E. Chamberlain, President of Massachusetts State Board of Trade. $1.50 per hundred.

Economic Facts for Practical People. ?By Lucia Ames Mead. Price 75 cts. per hundred.

The Limitation of Armaments.? The Position of the United States at the Hague Conference. By Edwin D. Mead. 28 pages. Price 5 cts. per copy. $3.00 per hundred.

Historic Development of the Peace Idea.?By Benjamin F. Trueblood. Price 5 cts. per copy; #3.50 per hundred.

Passive Resistance ? Jesus' Method of Government. ? By Algernon S. Crapsey. 12 pages and cover. 5 cts. each; $3.00 per hundred, net.

A Primer of the Peace Movement. ? By Lucia Ames Mead.

A valuable compendium of statistics, arguments, facts, etc., 26 pages. Price 5 cts. ; $4 per hundred.

A Solemn Review of the Custom of War. ? By Noah Wor cester, D. D. A reprint of the pamphlet first published in 1814. 24 pages. Price 5 cts. ; $3 per hundred.

Dymond's Essay on War. ?With an introduction by John Bright. Sent free on receipt of 5 cts. for postage.

War from the Christian Point of View.?By Ernest How ard Crosby. Revised edition. $1.50 per hundred, prepaid.

The Case for Limitation of Armaments. ? By Benjamin F. Trueblood. Reprinted from the American Journal of In ternational Law. 16 pages. 5 cts. each; $3.50 per hundred.

History of the American Peace Society and its Work.? 16 pages. Price 5 cts. per copy.

The Absurdities of Militarism.?By Ernest Howard Crosby. 12 pages. Price $1.50 per hundred. Third edition.

An Essay toward the Present and Future Peace of Europe.? By William Penn. First published in 1693. 24 pages, with cover. Price 6 cts., or $3.00 per hundred, prepaid.

The Interparliamentary Union and its Work. ? By Rev. J. L. Tryon. 8 pages. 3 cts. each, $1.50 per hundred.

A Periodic Congress of the Nations, with list of Congresses held.?By Benjamin F. Trueblood, LL.D. 12 pages. 5 cts. each. $2.50 per hundred.

The Cost of War.?Giving approximate loss in men, in money, in destruction of property, and in indirect economic waste. By Benjamin F. Trueblood, LL.D. 16 pages. 5 cts. per copy. $3.00 per hundred.

International Arbitration at the Opening of the Twentieth Century.?By Benjamin F. Trueblood, LL.D. 20 pages. Price 5 cts. each. $3.00 per hundred, postpaid.

Perpetual Peace. ? By Immanuel Kant. Translated by Ben

jamin F. Trueblood. 53 pages. Price 20 cents, postpaid. The Arbitrations of the United States. ? By Professor John

Bassett Moore. 32 pages. 5 cts. each. $3.00per hundred. The War System; Its History, Tendency, and Character, in

the Light of Civilization and Religion. ? By Rev. Reuen

Thomas, D.D. New edition. Price 10 cts., prepaid. Military Drill in Schools. ? By Rev. W. Evans Darby, LL.D

8 pages. Price 2 cts., or $1.50 per hundred, postpaid. William Penn's Holy Experiment in Civil Government. ?

By Benjamin F. Trueblood, LL.D. 24 pages with cover. 5 cts. each, or $3.00 per hundred, carriage paid.

How the Sunday Sehools May Aid the Peace Movement. ? By Benjamin F. Trueblood. 4 pages. Price 50 cts. per hundred, postpaid.

A Battle, as it appeared to an Eye-witness. ?

By Rev. R. . Howard. Letter Leaflet No. 1. 20 cts. per hundred.

The Cherry Festival of Naumburg. ? Letter Leaflet No. 4.

Price 20 cts. per hundred, prepaid.

Washington's Anti-militarism. ? Letter Leaflet No. 6. 4 pages. Price 50 cts. per hundred, prepaid.

Coals of Fire. ?By Willis R. Hotchkiss, of the Friends' Africa Industrial Mission. Letter Leaflet No. 7. Price 30 cts. per hundred, prepaid.

The Christ of the Andes. ?8 pages. Illustrated. $1.25 per hundred, postpaid.

The First Hague Conference and its Results. ? 8 pages. 2 cts. each, $1.25 per hundred, postpaid.

Hymns for Peace Meetings.?6 pages. 5 cts. each. 35 cts. per dozen.

Some Fallacies of Militarism. ? By Rev. Charles E. Jeffer

son, D. D. 8 pages. Price $1.25 per hundred.

Teaching Patriotism and Justice.?By Lucia Ames Mead. Price $2.00 per hundred.

Is Japan a Menace to the United States ? By Rev. J. H. DeForest, thirty-three years a missionary in Japan. 12 pages. $2.00 per hundred.

War Facts ?Peace Facts.?2 pages. Valuable for distribu tion at public meetings. 50 cts. per hundred.

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Page 5: Back Matter

196 THE ADVOCATE OF PEACE. August and September, 1909.

mt ̂iwatt of fare a nONTHLY JOURNAL OF THE

INTERNATIONAL PEACE MOVEMENT.

Price, One Dollar a Year. In Clubs of

ten or more, 50 Cents a Year.

PUBLISHED BT

The American Peace Society? 31 Beacon Street, Boston.

PEACE PUBLICATIONS FOR SALE BT THE

American Peace Society. Prices Include Postage.

LAY DOWN TOUR ARMS. By the Baroness von Suttner. Au thorized English translation by T. Holmes. New edition, cloth, 65 cts.

S UM ER'S ADDRESSES ON WAR. The True Grandeur of

Nations, The War System of the Commonwealth of Nations, and The Duel Between France and Germany : The three in one volume. Price, 65 cts.

THE HAGUE PEACE CONFER ENCES OF 1899 AND 1907. By James Brown Scott. Two

large vols. Price, $5.00 net.

TEXTS OF THE PEACE CON FERENCES AT THE HAGUE, 1899 AND 1907. Edited, with an

Introduction, by James Brown Scott. Prefatory Note by Elihu Root. 447 pages. Price, $2.00.

CHANNING'S DISCOURSES ON WAR. Containing Dr. Channing's Addressee on War, with extracts from discourses and letters on the

ubject. Price, 65 cts.

ARBITRATION AND THE HAGUE COURT. By Hon. John W. Foster. A concise manual of the chief features of the arbitra tion movement. Price, $1.00.

INTERNATIONAL TRIBU NALS: A collection of the Schemes which have been proposed. Adds a long list of instances of interna tional settlements by arbitral courts and commissions. By W. Evans

Darby, LL.D. Cloth, over 900

pages. Price, $3.50.

THE ETHICS OF FORCE. By H. E. Warner. Price, 60 cts.

THE NEWER IDEALS OF PEACE. By Jane Addams.

Price, $1.25.

THE TWO HAGUE CONFER ENCES. By William I. Hull, Professor of History in Swarth more College. 516 pages. Price, $1.65 A fine account of the work and results of the two Conferences.

THE FUTURE OF WAR. By John de Bloch. Preface by W. T. Stead. The sixth volume of Mr. Bloch's great work on " The Future of War," containing all his proposi tions, summaries of arguments, and conclusions. Price, 65 cts.

THE FEDERATION OF THE WORLD. By Benjamin F. True blood. Third Edition. Two new

chapters. 227 pages. Price, 75 cts.

A LEAGUE OF PEACE. By Andrew Carnegie. The Rectorial Address delivered by Mr. Carnegie to the students of the University of St. Andrews the 17th of Octo

ber, 1905. 47 pages. Price, 10 cts.

THE HUMAN HARVEST. By David Starr Jordan. Cloth. $1.00.

TOLSTOY AND HIS MESSAGE. By Ernest Howard Crosby. Cloth. Price, 50 cts.

THE MORAL DAMAGE OF WAR. By Rev. Walter Walsh. Revised Edition. A powerful ar

raignment of war from the moral

point of view. Fresh, vigorous, courageous. 462 pages. 75 cts.

THE ARBITER IN COUNCIL. A Compendium of Argument and Information on the Peace Move ment, in the form of a Seven Days' Discussion of a group of friends. 567 pages. Price, $1.25.

PATRIOTISM AND INTERNA TIONALISM. By Lucia Ames Mead. A Manual for Teachers.

Containing Material for Programs for May 18, etc. Price, 20 cts.

WORLD ORGANIZATION. By R. L. Bridgman. Price, 60 cts.

WAR INCONSISTENT WITH THE RELIGION OF JESUS CHRIST. By David L. Dodge. A reprint of the first two pamphlets published in this Country in the Interests of Peace. Price, 65 cts.

GARRISON THE NON RESISTANT. By Ernest H.

Crosby. Price, 50 cts. THE LIMITATION OF ARMA

MENTS. By Senator d'Estour nelles de Constant. Paper pre sented to the Interparliamentary Conference at London, July, 1906. 5 cts. to cover postage.

REPORT OF THE NEW YORK NATIONAL PEACE CON GRESS, held in 1907. 478 pages. Handsomely printed and illustrated.

Paper, 75 cts. Cloth, $1.50 REPORT OF THE PENNSYL

VANIA STATE PEACE CON GRESS, held in May, 1908. 222

pages. Price, 65 cts. AMONG THE WORLD'S PEACE

MAKERS. By Hayne Davis. An account of the Interparliamentary Union and its work, with sketches of eminent members of the Union. Price, cloth, $1. Paper, 75 cts.

Report of the Thirteenth Universal Peace Congress.?Held at Boston in 1904. 350 pages. A most valuable document for all peace workers and students of the cause. Price, 10 cts.

The Results of the Second Hague Con ference.? By Benjamin F Trueblood. 8 pages. 3 cts. each. $1.25 per hundred.

The Churches and the Peace Move ment.? By Rev. James L. Tryon. 4

pages. Price, 50 cts. per hundred.

Shall Any National Dispute be Reserved from Arbitration??By Hon. J.H. Ral ston. 8 pages. $1.00 per hundred.

The Conditions of Peace Between the East and the West.?By J.H.DeForest, D.D. 16 pages. $2.50 per hundred.

The Moral Damage of War to the School Child.? By Rev. Walter Walsh. 8 pages. 75 cts. per hundred.

Arbitration, but Not Armaments.? By Prof. William I. Hull. Price, $1.25 per hundred.

Anyone sending a sketch and description may quickly ascertain our opinion free whether an invention is probably patentable. Communica tions strictly confidential. HANDBOOK on Patents sent free. Oldest agency for securing patents. Patents taken through Munn & Co. receive

special notice, without charge, in the

Scientific American. A handsomely illustrated weekly. Largest cir culation of any scientific journal. Terms, fa a year ; four months, $L Sold by all newsdealers

MUNN & Co.36,B,oadwa'- New York Branch Office, 625 F St., Washington, D. C.

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