[Titles of Articles are printed in heavier type. The names of authors of articles are printed in small capitals]
and Choate, Mr., 206. Christianity, 330.
Alone, On Being Letting, 433. Amateur Revolt in Our Theatre, The, 302; "Provincials," 302-
303; growth of Amer- ican drama, 303-306;| decline, 306-307; rea-
Christianity and Pac- Correspondence schools, ifism, 55; three kinds of 282
pacifism, 55-58; Jesus Cost of War, The, 243; and peace, 58-61;
Christianity not incon- sistent with war, 61-63.
307; Broadway Civil War, 203.
taste, 308-309; pro- CLARK, MARY V., 'The
labor power, 243-245;
war debts, 245; future wealth, 245-247.
Coveting, 439. Crime, 384-401.
tests, 309; amateurs, Business of Getting Criminology, Old and
310; vital drama, 311- 312; Drama Leagues and experiments, 312- 314. Ambition, 283. Angels, 191-192. Aristocracy, 248-261. Art, 126-128, 365-377. Authority, 30.
Bell, Clive, 366, 376. BERGENGREN,
'You Can Do It,' 282. Birth Control, 211.
Birth-rate, 258.
Brazil, 429.
Broadway, 308.
BUCK, P. M., JR., 'The Great False Prophets,'
Married,' 98.
Class Conflict, The and the War, 11; labor and the state, 11-15; dis- orders in Everett, Cal- umet, San Francisco,
New, 87; Carlyle's ideas on crime, punishment, and prison reform, 87- 94; punishment still has its value, 94-97. Criticism, 112.
16-21; labor's open de- Curran, Mrs. John, 408- fiance of law, 21-25; in- 411.
dustrial benefits the Democracy, I, II, 250- war will bring, 25-30;|
spiritual awakening, 30- Diaz, 161.
Closed shop, 19, 26, 28. Coddling murder, 384; homicides in America
numerous and increas- 406, 412.
ing because of delay Dreiser, Theodore, 126. and uncertainty of pun- Duma, 34-38. ishment, 384-387; arti- Earth's Supreme Mo- ficial protection of crime by law, 387-393; a gov- ernment's duty, 394; sentimental and spine- less public opinion, 395-
ment, 180; men wanted, 180-181; women not loved, 182-184; sex de- termination will re- duce the number of women, 184-188. EATON, W. P., "The Amateur Revolt in Our Theatre,' 302. Edmonds, Judge, 189. ses- Education, 64, 130-132;
Married, The, 98; American society, 98- 99;excess of women, 99- 101; polygamy, 101- 102; a matrimonial COLEGROVE, trust, 103-106; proper The Farmer and the education for matri- Socialists, 287. mony, 106-108; at- Coleridge, 116-117. traction of opposites, Colleges, summer
Carnot, 259-260. Carranza, 162, 164. Chamberlain, H. S., 248,
252, 259. Chenoweth, Mrs., 413,414.
sions, 133-144; and, 426. COLTON, A. W., 'A Man of Feeling,' 76. Conciliation boards, 177. Conscience, 31. CORNELSON, C. A., Lost Ideal,' 64.
marriage and, 106. Efficiency, 28, 29. Elevation, 129. Elliot, Hugh, 355-362. El Paso, 157, 163. ELWARD, J. F., Coddling Murder,' 384.
En Casserole, 203, 423
Enchantment, 218. Everett, 16. Evil, 280. Evolution, 343-364. Fact, 281.
Farmer, The, and the Socialists, 287; Karl Marx, 288; small farms, 288-289; division of opinion among Social- ists, 289-291; gap be- tween farmers and wage-earners, 292-295;
state, 263-266; Rous- Kant, 351. seau's return to nature KIRKLAND, and its result, 266–271;| Wordsworth 271-272; Ruskin's creed, 272-
275; Tolstoi's return to the primitive and its futility, 275-280; vision and fact, 281. Greeks, 329. GUERARD, A. L., 'France and "The Race," 248.
'Hold Izzy!' 214; 'On Being and Letting, Alone,' 433; 'With the Why-Nots,' 436. Labor, commodity, 24; lawlessness, II. Labor power, 243. Labor problem, 168-179. Lapouge, V. de, 248, 252, 253- Law, 387-395.
agrarian movements, Gutchkov, Alex., 37, 42. Leaders, 66, 74.
296-299; distribution, HAMMOND, C. B., Chris- Let Us Finish Up Our
299; Republicans and Democrats, 300-301.
Fashion, 331. Fishing, 220.
Fiske, John, 349, 351, 353, 354, 362. Flexner, Abraham, 132. Flower, The, and the Gardener's
HAMPTON, MRS. KATE W. AND MRS. EDMUND NASH, 'A Psychic Mis- cellany,' 402.
Job, 1; democracy vs. despotism, 1-4; German humor and morals, 5-7; war situation, 8-10. LEWIS, E. R., 'Political Formulas,' 145.
HANSEN, E. C., ""Nor Liberty, 267, 273.
Hohenzollerns, 2-9. Hold Izzy! 214.
Formulas, 145-156.
France, 254-258.
France and "The Great
Race," 248; three races,
HOLT, HENRY, 'Birth Little Theatres, 311. Control,' 211; 'Herbert Lodge, Sir Oliver, 402. Spencer,' 343; 'Let us Lost Ideal, A., 64; clas- Finish up Our Job,' 1; 'Mr. Choate,' 206; 'On
249; democracy, 250; Smoking 213 Mutual
Nordic or Teutonic, superiority, 251-253; lesson of French his- tory, 254-258; Xantho- cratic theory and jus- tice, 258-261. France, Anatole, 115, 127. Frederick the Great, 2. Free speech, 14, 15.
sical education best fits men for life, furnishing them with accumulated human principles, 64- 75. LYON, LUCILLE G., Wars 'Earth's Supreme Moment,' 180.
Help,' 423; This War and the Civil War,' 203; 'When Will Cease?'223. Home Ties, 432. Homer, 119-125. Howard, John, 90. Huertia, 161. Human
6-8; menace in Russia, Hyslop, J. H., 413-416. 36, 41, 46; militarism, Individual, 264, 273. 224, 227-232; sharper Industrial
GILMORE, LAURA E., I. W. W., 14-18. 'Recollections of Judge Izzy, 214. Edmonds' Daughter,' Jacobi, Dr., 212. 189. JASTROW, JOSEPH, 'Man- ners and Morals,' 326. Jesus, 58, 69. Job, 425-426.
Gobineau, Count de, 248,
252. Government regulation,
JORDAN, D. S., "The Pass- ing of Don Luis,' 157. JOSE, FELIX, 'Home Ties, 432.
27. Grant, Madison, 248, 253, 258. Great False Prophets, The, 262; reformers, Justice, 91, 260, 263-266; 263; tragedy of Plato's criminal, 384-401.
McMINN, G. R., 'Pic- nickers in Academe,' 133.
Makeshifts, 48-54. Man of Feeling, A, 76; sketch showing how a tenant's unguarded ex- pression of content- ment with his home led his landlord to increase his rent; the villagers' opinions; the outcome, 76-86. Manners and Morals (an
Unconventional Dia- logue), 326; manners versus morals, 326-329; Greeks and Romans, 329-330; Christianity, 330-331; conscience, 331-332; profession and practice, 332-333; _lit- eralism of morality,
333-334; true marriage of manners and morals, 335-336; democracy, 337-338; stock moral- ity,
338-340; limita-
tions of morality, 340-| 342. Marriage, 98-111, 378. Marx, 288.
Men, value, 180. MERRITT, W. G., "The Class Conflict and the War,' II. Mexico, 157-167. Military rulers, 227-234. Millbank Penitentiary, 86. Milton, 70. Milukov, Paul, 42, 45, 46. Mind, 407, 410. Morality, 326-342. MORE, P. E., "Taste and Tradition,' 112. Mutual Help, A Propo- sition of, 423. NASH, MRS.
See HAMPTON, MRS. KATE W. "Nation of Sharpers," The, Once More, 429. Nature, 268, 271, 353-
355. Non-resistance, 280.
of Painting," 365; Syn- chromists, 365-368; emotion and its expres- sion, 368-370; pictures, 370-372; likeness and suggestion, 373; anal- ogous of music with painting, 373-376; form, 376; humanity's world, 377.
Pilgrim, The, and Psy- chology, 315; humorous. sketch of the transfu- sion of contents of Race or Birthplace? 202. books adjacent to one Race theories, 248-261. another, shown espe- Railroad strike, 25. cially by what hap- Rashdall, Dr. H., 94, 96. pened to Pilgrim's Pro- Recollections of Judge gress standing between Edmonds' Daughter, Life and Philosophische 189; Edmonds, 189; Studien, 315-325. Mrs. Gilmore, 190; vi- Piper, Mrs., 404, 417. sion fulfilled, 190-191; Plato, 262-266. angels, 191-192; tele- Political Formulas, 145; kinetic manifestations value, 145; danger, 146; and experiences, 192- thinking by formulas, 194; clairvoyance and 146-148; direct legisla- mind reading, 194-196; tion and mob action, all sorts of spirits, 197. 149-151; instances of Reformers, 70, 262.
reasoning by axioms Religion, War and, 235- rather than by facts, 242.
151-154; facts the ulti-Renaissance, 65.
mate test, 154-156. Polygamy, 101.
Populism, 296–297. Poverty, 440.
"Nor Anything That Is POWERS,
Russia,' 33. Optimism, The Basis of, 423: Ouija board, 408. Ourselves as Others See Us, 418. Pacifism, 55. Painting, 365-377- Passing of Don Luis, The, 157; Mexican revolu- tion, 157-159; interven- tion, 159-161; social conditions, 161-163; border raids, 163-165; making friends with Mexico, 166-167. Peace, Jesus', 61. Pelham, George, 413-417. Philosophy, 343-364. Picnickers in Academe, 133; college summer
F. P., "The Basis of Optimism,'
423. Powys, J. C., 112, 115. Prison reform, 86. Prisoner's letters, 419. Progress, 74. Provincialism, 302-303. Psychic Miscellany, A, 402; opinion, 402; telepsychic telekinesis; veridical dream; Mrs.
""Quite from the
Mark of Painting,"" 365. Romans, 329. Rousseau, 267–271. Ruskin, 272-275. Russia, New, 33; revolu- tion and the Duma, 33- 38; the nation organiz- ing, 38-40; reactiona- ries and spies, 40-42; excess of freedom, 42- 43; Councils of Work- men and Soldier Depu- ties, 43-47-
Kate W. Hampton, SALLS, J. S., 'Enchant- 403-408; Patience ment,' 218.
Worth; The Sorry Tale; SANFORD, E. C., "The Mrs. Curran, 408-411;| Pilgrim and Psychol- veridical dreams, 412- ogy,' 315.
413; superusual knowl- San Francisco, 19. edge, George Pelham; Santa Catalina, 48. Dr. Hyslop, 414-417. Scaliger, 120-122. Psychic phenomena, 189– SCHULZ, G. F., "The
Flower and the Gar- Psychology, 315–325. dener's Second As- Public opinion, 395-401.| sistant,' 208. Punishment, 89-97, 384- Science, 73, 241. Sex, 180.
Slang, 198. Smoking, On, 213. Socialists and Farmers,
Solitude, 433. Some of You Please Tell Us, 221.
Sorry Tale, The, 408, 411. Sour Grapes, A Dis-
sertation on, 440. Spencer, Herbert, 343; Blackwood's, 343; esti- mates of Spencer, 344;
law of taste, 117; Home and Virgil, 117-125; universality of
239; holy war, 240; science, 241; genuine religion, 242.
art, 126-128; elevation, War, The, and the Col- 129; education vs in- dolence, 130-132. Telekinesis, 403. Teloteropathy, 416. Teutonic race, 249-261. Theatre. See Drama. THURSTON, MISS E. P., 'Dissertation, A, on 373. Sour Grapes,' 440; When Will Wars Cease? 'Wordly Wise if not Wisely Worldly,' 430.
War, This, and the Civil War, 203. WATERS, MIRIAM VAN, 'The Squaw Habit of Mind,' 48.
vogue, 345; universal Tolstoi, 275-280. evolution, 346-348; a Tradition, 69-71, 118, disciple's diary, 349 119, 130.
Youthful Spinster,' 378. Unions, The, and The
Weinberg, Louis, 365, 371,
223; Messrs Woods and Baltzly; historic "slump" in wars, 224- 227; German military education, 227-230; Russia; Japan, 230- 231; present character of war, 232; dynasties, Labor Problem, 168;| 233-234. normal result of union- Why-Nots, With the,436. ism, 168; defects, 169; William, Kaiser, 2, 3. wage question, 170- Women, 98-111; mind, 173; factory system, 48; single, 380; value, 173-174; uncomprom- 182.
ising attitude, 175-176; Wordsworth, 271-272. industrial organiza- Worldly Wise if not tion, 176-179. Wisely Worldly, 430. USHER, A. P., "The Un- Worth, Patience, 408- ions and the Labor 411. Problem,' 168.
351; philosophy before TUELL, ANNIE K., "The Spencer, 351-353; facts of nature, 353-354; Hugh Elliot and the relative value of Spen- cer's works, 355-362; defect and worth of Spencer's philosophy, 362-364. Squaw Habit of Mind, The, 48; adventures in a cruise about Santa Catalina Island reveal the sex predicament, 48-54. Standards, 112. State, Plato's, 264-266. STEWART, H. L., 'Crim- inology, Old and New,' 87. STORK, T. B., 'The Cost of War,' 243. Strikes, 27. Subscribing, 423. Summer courses, 133-144.. Synchromism, 365-368. Taste and Tradition, 112;
standards of taste, 112- 116; Coleridge, 116- 117; permanence of the
Wright, McDonald, 367, 376.
Van Dyke, Henry, 425. VAN RIPER, B. W., 'War Xanthocrats,
and Religion,' 235. Villa, 162–164. Virgil, 120-125. Voice from the Past, A, 198. Wages, 171. War, 233-234; cost, 243-
You Can Do It, 282; cor- respondence
282-283; value of ambi- tion, 283-285; Solomon, 285-286. Youthful Spinster, The, 247; situation, 1-10. 378; marriage now-a- War and Religion, 235; days not taken for dogmatism, religious granted, 378-380; bless- and national, 236-237; ing of middle-aged orthodoxy and patriot- maidenhood, 381-383. ism alike in spirit, 238-Zola, 115, 126.
No 15. JULY-SEPTEMBER, 1917
The Editor
Mrs. W. O. Robb.
EN CASSEROLE: A Proposition of Mutual Help - The Basis of Opti- mism - The War and the Colleges The "Nation of Sharpers" Once More-Worldly Wise if not Wisely Worldly - Home Ties - On Being and Letting Alone With the Why-Nots - "Nor Anything That Is His" (An Author's Confession) - A Dissertation on Sour Grapes
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