6. The National Committee for Mental Hygiene at the same Office Headquarters, publishes a valuable Quarterly and is a source of information respecting the treatment and prevention of mental diseases.
7. The American a.s.sociation for Organizing Family Social Work, Mrs. John M. Glenn, Chairman, with Office at 130 East Twenty-second Street, is able to advise in relief work and organized efforts toward family rehabilitation.
8. The Child Welfare League of America, C.C. Carstens, Director, at the same Headquarters, 130 East Twenty-second Street, New York City, can be consulted as to standards of child-care and the status of child-helping in various parts of the country.
9. The National Child Labor Committee, Owen Lovejoy, Secretary, with Office at 105 East Twenty-second Street, New York City, furnishes information and practical aid in any part of the United States and publishes valuable pamphlets showing child-labor conditions.
10. The Community Service Agency, headed by Joseph Lee, with Office at 315 Fourth Avenue, New York City, will help local communities anywhere in organizing for better use of leisure time.
11. The Consumer"s League, Mrs. Florence Kelley, General Secretary, with Office at 44 East Twenty-third Street, New York City, promotes legislation for enlightened standards for women and minors in industry and publishes important material for students and workers.
12. The American Home Economics a.s.sociation, which publishes the _Journal of Home Economics_ at 1211 Cathedral Street, Baltimore, Maryland, is an organization devoted to standardizing the housemother"s task and helping toward efficient home-making.
13. The National Woman"s Trade Union League, with Office at 311 South Ashland Boulevard, Chicago, Illinois, publishes a journal and other material of special interest to women wage-earners.
14. The National Health Council, with Office at 370 Seventh Avenue, New York City, and at 411 Eighteenth Street, Washington, D.C., issues valuable publications.
15. The National a.s.sociation for the Advancement of Colored People, with Office at 70 Fifth Avenue, New York City, and the National Urban League for Social Service among negroes aim at helping in problems of race adjustment.
16. The General Federation of Women"s Clubs, with headquarters in Washington, D.C., at 1734 N. Street, N.W., has centres of influence throughout the country and furnishes the personnel of many leaders in local social enterprises.
17. The National Council of Women of the United States, member of the International Council of Women of the World, has headquarters at the home of its President, Mrs. Philip North Moore, Lafayette Avenue, St. Louis, Mo., and includes in its membership all the leading bodies of organized women in the country. At its Biennial gatherings reports of work are presented from all these a.s.sociations and afterward published.
18. The National League of Women Voters, the child of the National American Woman Suffrage a.s.sociation, has its headquarters at 532 Seventeenth Street, N.W., Washington, D.C., with Mrs. Maud Wood Park as President, and energizes and directs a large force of women in numerous local Leagues in non-partisan work for better government.
19. The Woman"s Party, with Headquarters also in the National Capital, aims to secure a Federal Amendment which will wipe out all s.e.x-discriminations. It publishes much interesting material.
20. Among the most valuable publications for constant reading for those who would keep in touch with important social movements in all fields is _The Survey_, published at 112 East Nineteenth Street, New York City, Paul U. Kellogg, Editor.
21. The _American Journal of Sociology_, published by University of Chicago Press, and the _Journal of Applied Sociology_, published by the University of California, give more extended treatment of the principles underlying social service.
22. The Council of Jewish Women, the National Catholic Welfare Council, the Young Men"s and Young Women"s Christian a.s.sociations, and the Federal Council of the Churches of Christ, together with the Federation of Religious Liberals, The Laymen"s League, and Women"s Alliance of the Unitarian body, and other church organizations, have departments or committees engaged specifically in work for the stability of the family and the betterment of the home, as well as for the enn.o.bling of the common life and for the organization of the world for permanent peace.
23. The Educational interests of the country are served by many agencies and organizations, chief among them the U.S. Bureau of Education, the Federal Board of Vocational Education at Washington, D.C., which publish invaluable material, and the National Education a.s.sociation, with office at 1201 Sixteenth Street, Washington, D.C., membership in which keeps one in touch with progressive movements.
The vital thing for one who would prepare for practical service in any line of social work is to study people and conditions in one"s own locality and then compare what is done or attempted in that locality with what is considered by those best fitted to judge to be the best and most efficient standards for service of the kind considered.
The vital thing for those who would help in the educational field is to know their local schools, their teachers, buildings, equipment, management, and financial support, and then to secure all possible national, state, and local aid in making those schools the best they can be.
24. If the newest movements in education are chosen for study, read The New Education, by L. Haden Guest, and other articles in _The New Era_, published by Hodder and Co., London, England. Also Nursery School Experiment, by Bureau of Educational Experiments, 144 West Thirteenth Street, New York City.
For comparison with these, read Talks to Teachers, by William James, and also pamphlets of Home Education Series, by Charlotte Mason, published by Parents" National Education Union, 26 Victoria Street, London, England.
25. For economic reform especially helpful to family life, study the publications of the Cooperative League of America, Doctor and Mrs. Warba.s.se, Directors, 70 Fifth Avenue, New York City.
26. For political reform, study the publications of Proportional Representation League, 1417 Locust Street, Philadelphia, Pa.