289 290 291 292 293 294 295 296 297 298 299 300 301 302 303 Publications of the Bureau of Standards. Circular No. 24. 5th ed. Bulletin of the Public Library of the city of Boston. Issued quar- The College of Engineering and Engineering Experiment Station of the University of Illinois. A pictorial description. University of Illinois Bulletin. Jan. 6, 1919. No. 19. Urbana, 1919. unp, 6x9, illus. *2700. Un3.065 Employment: a list of books in St. Paul Public Library. unp, 34x8. *096.St248em Thrift and savings: a selected bibliography. April, 1919. Bulletin of The Russell Sage Foundation Library. No. 34. New York, 1919. 4p, 6x9.*096.T4155 Proceedings of the 2d annual convention of Better Letters Association, Oct. 9-12, 1918. Worcester [c1918]. 128p, 6x9. *08. B466. 1918 Standard cotton mill practice and equipment, with classified Direct cost of the present war. E. L. Bogart. Preliminary economic British War Administration. J. A. Fairlie. Preliminary economic war... The Securities Department wishes to bring to the attention of members of the organization the following: We do a general investment banking business and specialize in the securities of companies under the management of our organization and in the securities of companies which we have investigated. The resources of a large organization are at all times available to investors who desire information concerning investments or service in connection with the purchase and sale of securities. STONE & WEBSTER Members of the organization are invited not only to avail themselves of this investment service, but also to help in broadening its usefulness by calling it to the attention of others. STONE & WEBSTER JOURNAL JUNE, 1919 EDITORIAL COMMENT On Making Democracy Safe for the World A reader tells us that we ought to advocate an educational draft comparable to the military draft we employed when we went to war with Germany. The suggestion is doubtless facetious, but it is not devoid of point. The civil affairs of a nation are far more important than the military affairs, yet far less concentrated effort on the part of the whole people is brought to bear upon them. Wars are merely occasional, while civil government and industry demand attention day after day and affect every department of life. The histories treat almost exclusively of war. The conflicts are described with more or less minuteness, but comparatively little is said about the intervals between them. Yet it is these intervals that have always counted most in the development of the race. A war occurs, a good deal of blood-letting takes place, and we think that some great end bas been attained. For example, Germany went to war against France in 1870, defeated her, exacted a huge indemnity, and we say that the FrancoPrussian War made the German Empire. There never was a more mistaken notion. What made the German Empire was the forty years of concentrated mental effort, patient study of facts, careful co-ordination of effort, persistent scientific research in every department of life and industry, etc. The war may have furnished the starting point, but even that is doubtful. For the spectacular occurrences of history have in almost every instance been effects rather than causes. For years prior to 1870 things were preparing for a great advance and the Franco-Prussian War was but an incident in that movement. |