The Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, GA.) 1906-1907, December 19, 1906, Image 10
THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN, DECEMBER •. 1M1 ► ! The Woriel’s Work A few of the articles that this Magazine has published about the South AND THE SOUTH VOLUME I. VOLUME VHI. Atlanta, the energetic city of the South: W. L. Southern Education; A Southern Wilson and Coal-shipping and Ship-building Center; The New Basis of Southern Prosperity; Significant South ern Educational Activity. VOLUME II. A Southern Candidate for President; Suffrage in Virginia and Alabama; No Artificial Solution of the Race “Problem;” Child-labor in Southern Cotton Mills, by Irene M. Ashby. VOLUME III. The South in Congress; The Real Southern Ques tion, by Eugene C. Branson, Superintendent of Schools, Georgia; The Southern Educational Board—a New Patriotic Force. VOLUME IV. The Real Southern Question Again; The Southern Educational Conference; Why Not Southern Dem ocratic Leadership. VOLUME V. Saving the Southern Forests, by Overton W. Price; A New Chapter in Southern Politics; Lynchings and the Color Line. VOLUME VI. W T hy Not a Southern Man as a Presidential Can didate?; Making Cotton Pay, by Ulrich Bonnell Phillips; Cotton Again King; Patriotism and Ed ucation in the South; The World’s Fair at St. Louis (A Whole Number); The Educational Up- trie lift in the South, by W. H. Heck; Uplifting Backwoods Boys in Georgia, by Martha Berry. VOLUME IX. The South’s Practical Cotton Monopoly; The Rich Kingdom of Cotton; A Great Fanner at Work, Col. James M. Smith, by Harry Hodgson. VOLUME X. Building Railroads in the South; Immigration to the South; The South and Mr. Roosevelt. VOLUME XI. The President and the Southern People; The Cot ton Growers, by Arthur W. Page; Texan Regula tion of Corporations; Texas and the Texans, by M. C. Cunniff. VOLUME XII.—Continued. The Louisiana Purchase, by Charles M. Harvey; The Only Way to Allay Race Friction; .Farmer Children Need Farmer Studies, by Clarence 11. Poe; The South Becoming a Seaboard Gateway of the West. VOLUME VII. 'Pile Hculthful Growth of Southern Opinion; The South, and the Passing of the Missionaries and Orators. An Agricultural Revolution, by Dr. Seaman A. Knapp; Tillman Smasher of Traditions, by Zach McGhee, of the “Columbia State”; Two Leaders of Educational Statesmanship—President David F. Houston, of the University of Texas, and Ed win A. Alderman, President of the University of Virginia; The Picturesque Jamestown Fair, by Charles Russell Keiley; A Southern Presidential Candidate; Is Our Cotton Monopoly Secure? by Clarence H. Poe and Charles W. Burkett; The Re publican Party in the South. December, 1906.— The True Voice of the South; Mclver, a Leader of the People, by Walter H. Page. ■puis is simply an indication of what The World’s Work does regularly. It has paid more attention to the South than any other American Magazine. The number for May, 1907, wfll.be a special Southern Number, giving an appreciative report of the South’s great progress. The Magazine has also in preparation a series of articles by the editor, Mr. Wal ter H. Page, on the “Real South: Why and How It is Becoming Nationalized”—an explanation for the whole country of the vital change going on in men, and movements that are giving the South its full share in the life of the Nation. It will be an interpretive story of the South in this new and bustling day. If you are not familiar with The World’s Work, permit us to send you a trial sub scription, three months for the price of two. Simply fill in your name and address in the Northwest corner of this page, and send the coupon to us with fifty cents. DOUBLEDAY, PAGE & COMPANY, 133 East 16th St, New York City