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The Negro Year Book Publishing Company
TUSKEGEE INSTITUTE, ALABAMA
ROBERT E. PARK, President
EMMET J. SCOTT, Treasurer
MONROE N. WORK, Secretary
AGRICULTURE, 305-315.
Negro farmers increasing, 305; Farm property rapidly increasing, 306; Relative
value of cash and share tenancy, 307; Principal crops raised by Negroes, 308;
Farm Demonstration Work, 308; Farm Tenure, 311.
F NEGRO TOWNS AND SETTLEMENTS, 316-318.
NEGRO IN BUSINESS, 318-334.
First Negro Insurance Company, 318; Fifty years' business progress, 318; Some
Negro Business Men, 320; Business Leagues, 322; Business League Directory,
322; Negro Banks, 330; Bank Directory, 332.
CRIME, 335-338.
Differences in number of prisoners considered Vitiate comparison of Crime
Rates, 335; Rate of Crime higher in the North, 335; Negro Crime Rate Lower
than Rate for Emigrant Races, 336; Lynchings, 336.
HEALTH, 338-354.
Mortality Statistics, 338; Number of Deaths per 100,000 from certain
diseases, 340; Health Charts, 341; Physicians, 355; Medical Associations, 356;
Hospitals, 358; Necrology, 361.
POPULATION, 364-389. 1
From 1790-1910, 364; Map, percentage of Negroes in total Population,
365; Black and Mulatto population, 366; Sex, 366; Marital conditions, 367;
Negro Population in North and South, 367; in South by States, 369; Migration,
371; Urban and Rural Population, 372; Black Counties, 373; Population in
cities, 377; Negroes of Voting and School Age and Illiterates by States, 388.
NATIONAL ORGANIZATIONS, 390-393.
Educational, 390; for economic advancement, 390; for professional ad-
vancement, 391; for political advancement, 391; in the interest of women, 392;
for general advancement of the Negroes, 392; for improving social conditions,
393.
SOCIAL SETTLEMENTS FOR NEGROES, DIRECTORY OF, 393-395.
FRATERNAL ORGANIZATIONS, 395-400.
General statement concerning, 395-396; the principal organizations, 396-400.
PERIODICAL PUBLICATIONS, 400-417.
Number, 400; Religious, 401; School, 405; Organs of National Associations, 406;
Magazines of General Literature, 407; Fraternal, 408; Newspapers, 409.
BIBLIOGRAPHIES, 418-455.
Bibliographies, 418; Collections of Books by Negroes on Negro, 418; Anti-
Slavery discussions, 419; Pro-Slavery discussions, 421; Slave Trade, 422; Coloni-
zation, 423; Slave narratives, 424; Slavery in Particular States, 425; Histories
including Slavery controversy, 425; Economic and social conditions in South,
426; Reconstruction Period, 426; Present conditions, 428; Publications of Com-
mittee of Twelve, 430; Special Studies relating to Negro, 430; Books by Negro
writers, 434; Articles in current periodocals on Negro, 437; On education, 437;
On Economic Conditions, 449; On Crime, 445; On Health and S
On Suffrage, 448; On Religion, 450; On Race Problem, 451:
relating to the mind of the Negro, 455.
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