SURVEY GRAPHIC, published monthly and copyright 1926 by SURVEY ASSOCIATES, Inc., 112 East 19th Street, New York. Price: this copy (August, 1926; Vol. IX, Pres, Robert W. de Forest. WORLD PEACE FOUNDATION 40 Mt. Vernon St., Boston, Mass. PUBLISHERS AND DISTRIBUTORS I. World Peace Foundation Pamphlets. Historical and documentary studies of contemporary aspects of international problems. Specimen copies. free on application. II. Official publications on all phases of international cooperation: League of Nations Secretariat. Allinclusive subscription $100 per year; International Labour Office. All- Permanent Court of International International Institute of Intellectual Complete catalogs on application. How Shall We Wage Peace? A Conference to Discuss Methods of at the Hotel Plimpton, Watch Hill, R. I. The aim of the Conference is to pool the experience of those who are working for a friendly coordinated society and to develop an effective technique of action. Four groups will consider ways of working: I Through Writing, Pamphlets, etc.; II Through Education; III Through Personal Action in Situations of Conflict; IV Through Established Organizations. Among those who will act as leaders are A. J. Muste, John Nevin Sayre, Norman Thomas, Prof. O. B. Gerig, Maud Richards, Roger Baldwin, Agnes Pollock Cooper, Beatrice Price, Dr. G. Normil Sylvain, George L. Collins, Paul Jones. Conference Fee $2.00 Board and Room $4.00 per day To get the full program and to make reservations write to THE FELLOWSHIP OF RECONCILIATION 383 Bible House, Astor Place New York City International Migration Service One of the bogies of our world is immigration. It is spoken of apprehensively as something vast, formless, sinister, and something threatening the peace of the globe. But many an evil spirit has turned out to be a bubble in the water-pipe when some practical soul with a penchant for facts and a flair for plumbing has looked into the matter. In some such spirit a pioneer group in Poland, in Greece, in Czechoslovakia, in France, in Canada, in the United States, with common ideals, similar methods, open minds and lead by a cental office in Geneva have been dealing with the migration social problems of persons and families, in the search for facts. Because the social consequences of the separation of families, of desertion of wives and of children, of conflicts in law, of illness and ignorance, of deportation, of refugee conditions, create hatreds out of which wars are made, the migration question is therefore an international one and must be so studied, as the common problem of many nations. The International Migration Service believes that progress toward world peace can be made through such constructive efforts. INTERNATIONAL MIGRATION SERVICE 10 Rue de la Bourse, Geneva 1 Madison Avenue, New York (In answering advertisements please mention THE SURVEY. It helps us, it identifies you.) Georgia International Anarchy By G. LOWES DICKINSON "A detailed analysis of international relations in the years from 1904 to 1914. . . . Mr. Dickinson is able to present the record of these years as something akin to the fatalistic character of a Greek drama. . . . Done with a masterly and consummate control of sources. . . . The book is written by a great prose artist with an eloquent simplicity that not more than three living Englishmen can equal. If I had to name one book on the origins of the war that statesmen and publicists ought to be compelled to read, it is this."-Harold J. Laski in N. Y. Herald Tribune. "It is the duty of every thoughtful man to read this book."-H. M. Tomlinson in Saturday Review of Literature. The Womens International League for Peace and Freedom International President Jane Addams The Section for the U. S. is one of the 24 National Sections which make up this great body of women who are cooperating in practical and courageous work for peace. Write Miss Detzer, 1403 H St., Washington, for program. National dues $1.00; include Monthly News Bulletin from the International Office of the W. I. L. P. F. in Geneva. Fellowship for a Christian Social Order binds together for mutual counsel, inspiration, and co-operation, men and women who are seeking to effect fundamental changes in the spirit and structure of the present social order through loyalty to Jesus' way of life. It functions through personal contact, correspondence, group meetings and periodic conferences. A pamphlet service and a circulating library, covering especially international, industrial, economic, race and social relations, are maintained. Write the Executive Secretary for information. SHERWOOD EDDY, Chairman, National Committee 347 Madison Avenue (In answering advertisements please mention THE SURVEY. It helps us, it identifies you.) |