Community Civics and Rural Life by Arthur William Dunn
page 117 of 586 (19%)
page 117 of 586 (19%)
![]() | ![]() |
|
|
file of which SHOULD be in your public library.
THE JUNIOR RED CROSS NEWS, American Red Cross, Washington, D.C. For the work of the Pan American Union and the Red Cross, consult your public library; and write to the Pan American Union and the American Red Cross, both in Washington, D.C., for descriptive publications. For the Hague Conferences and the Hague Tribunal, consult any good modern encyclopedia, and your public library. Write for materials to the American School Citizenship League, 405 Marlboro St., Boston, and the World Peace Foundation, Boston. CHAPTER IX THE HOME "NO NATION CAN BE DESTROYED WHILE IT POSSESSES A GOOD HOME LIFE." The home is the smallest, the simplest, and the most familiar community of which we are members. In many respects it is also the most important. The quotation with which this chapter opens suggests this. It will appear at many points in our study. |
|


