[623] The Nation, loc. cit. The quotation which was objectionable to the writers of the article was found on pages 167-169 of the textbook.
[624] The Nation, loc. cit. See Southworth, A. T., The Common Sense of the Constitution of the United States (Boston, 1924), pp. 91-92.
[625] The Nation, loc. cit. Hughes, R. O., Text-Book in Citizenship (Boston, 1923).
[626] The Nation, loc. cit.
[627] The Nation, loc. cit. Hughes, op. cit., pp. 510-511.
[628] The Nation, loc. cit. Hughes, op. cit., pp. 510-511.
[629] Letter under date of December 7, 1925, from the editor of “Service Talks,” published by the Philadelphia Rapid Transit Company. Burch, Henry Reed, American Economic Life (New York, 1921), p. 330.
[630] American Bankers Association, “Books devoted wholly or in part to the subject of Banking.” The books mentioned were not all social study books, arithmetic and bookkeeping textbooks being included.
[631] “Talks on Banking and Elementary Economics,” prepared by the Public Education Commission, American Bankers Association, New York.
[632] Educational News and Editorial Comment, “Social Studies in Public Schools,” The School Review, Vol. XXVII (1919), pp. 205-212. National Industrial Conference Board, A Case of Federal Propaganda in Our Public Schools, pp. 4, 11. The lessons were prepared under the direction of Charles H. Judd, Director of the School of Education of the University of Chicago, and Leon C. Marshall, Dean of the School of Commerce and Administration in the same university.