II

6. The economic geography of your section. (Consult Dryer, Elementary Economic Geography.)

7. A comparison of America three hundred years ago with the America of to-day. (Price, The Land We Live In, chapters i and ii.)

8. Character of the American population. (Burch and Patterson, American Social Problems, chapter ix.)

9. An analysis of the American character. (Bryce, The American Commonwealth, vol. ii, chapters cxiv and cxv.)

10. Ways of getting a living. (Carver, Elementary Economics, chapter xv.)

11. Geographical distribution of cities and industries in the United States. (Semple, American History and Its Geographic Conditions, chapter xvi.)

12. Agricultural industries in the United States. (Bishop and Keller, Industry and Trade, part ii. Smith, Commerce and Industry, chapters i, in, iv, v, and vi.)

13. Animal industries in the United States. (Bishop and Keller, Industry and Trade, part iii. Smith, Commerce and Industry, chapter ii.)

14. Power. (Smith, Commerce and Industry, chapter ix.)

15. Mineral industries in the United States. (Bishop and Keller, Industry and Trade, part iv. Smith, Commerce and Industry, chapters viii, xiii, xiv, and xv.)

16. Manufacturing industries in the United States. (Bishop and Keller, Industry and Trade, part v.)

17. Trade routes of North America. (Smith, Commerce and Industry, chapter xvi.)

18. The foreign trade of the United States. (Dryer, Elementary Economic Geography, chapter xxxii. See also any other recently published text on this general field.)