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The Forum

EDITED BY

HENRY GODDARD LEACH

VOLUME LXXII

JULY, 1924-DECEMBER, 1924

THE FORUM PUBLISHING COMPANY

247 PARK AVENUE

NEW YORK CITY, N. Y.

1924

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Graded Cape

Four Years of Equal Suffrage, 37.
France, England and America, 476.
Free, Edward. Exploring the Atom, 505.
Frisbe, Robert Dean. Fei-Hunting in

Polynesia, 92.

Fundamental (Verse), 338.

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Guilt of the Republican Party, The, 537. Gypsy Folk, 169.

Hallinan, Charles Thomas. Religion on a Yacht, 215.

Hamilton, Alice. Protection for Women Workers, 152.

Harriman, Mrs. J. Borden. Women in Washington, 45.

Hart, Albert Bushnell. Making Friends with Unrighteousness, 734.

Henderson, Archibald. The Triumphs of Relativity, 13; Ulysees and Einstein, A Dialogue, 453.

Henry Ford, To (Verse), 21.

Hinchman, Anne. Winter (Verse), 733. Holbrook, Weare. The Corn-Belt Renaissance, 118.

Hunter, Allan Armstrong. The Stirring of Youth, 787.

Hunters, The (Verse), 648.

Industrial Democracy a Delusion, 469.
Is Einstein Wrong?-A Debate, 13.
Is Einstein Wrong? (A Symposium), 277.
Is Mars Dead or Alive? 221.
Issues of the Campaign, The, 534.

Jeffrey, Edward C. The Origin of Life (A Symposium), 100.

Jonson, Ernst. Industrial Democracy a Delusion, 469.

Kaempffert. Waldemar. Is Mars Dead or Alive? 221.

Kent, Frank. Scare 'Em, 804.

Kenton, Edna. Four Years of Equal Suffrage, 37.

Kennedy, G. A. Studdert. The Despair of Democracy, 629.

La Follette Delusion, The, 682.

La Follette and His Platform, 673.

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Mosley, Jefferson. The Secret at the Crossroads, 577.

Mr. Aba Gonegaga Calls, 386.

Mr. Gonegaga Reads the Papers, 544.
Mr. Gonegaga Says Au Revoir, 690.
Mullen, Kate. A Poor Folks' Child (A
Near Short Story), 60.

Need of a New Party, The, 673.

Negro Migrations, The-A Debate, 593. Negro Migrations, The (A Symposium), 854.

New Coincidence, The, 365.
New Impressions, 322, 489.
New Italian Journey, A, 239.

New Trends in the Theatre, 520, 665, 794.
Northward to Extinction, 593.

Old Man Edwards (Verse), 815.
Opinions About Books, 139, 282, 427, 571,
715, 859.

Origin of Life, The (A Symposium), 100.
Our Holier-Than-Thou Policy, 740.
Our Neglected Crown Colony, 175.
Our Rostrum, 137, 273, 415, 562, 708, 849.
Our Unfair Discrimination, 296.

Paradise, Viola, Snapshots in Albania, 353. Passing of Dowd, The, 763. Passing of the Caliphate, The, 608. Payne, George Henry. After the Conventions, 247; Mr. Aba Gonegaga Calls, 385; Mr. Gonegaga Reads the Papers, 544; Mr. Gonegaga Says Au Revoir,

690; The Great Conservative Victory, 832; Where Shall the Progressive Go? 110. Pedestrian, The, Footpath and Highway, 121, 259, 399, 548, 693, 834. Peffer, Nathaniel. Caliphate, 608.

The Passing of the

Pezet, A. Washington. A Political West Point, 84; The La Follette Delusion, 682.

Phelps, William Lyon. Anne Sedgwick, American Novelist, 515.

Pickens, William. Migrating to Fuller Life, 600.

Political West Point, A, 84.

Politics of Wheat, The, 497.

Poor Folks' Child, A (A Near Short Story), 60.

Porcher, Mary Wickham. Wish (Verse), 766.

Powel, Hartford, Jr. More and Better
Cows, 811.

Protection for Women Workers, 152.
Psychology of Voting, The, 804.

Radziwill, Princess C. Anatole FranceThe Genesis of His Fame (An Unpublished Biographical Anecdote), 827; Unpublished Letters of Dostoevski, 51, 206. Religion in a Ford, 330.

Religion on a Yacht, 215.

Renewal of Youth and After, The, 373.
Republican Candidates, The, 530.
Rich Folks' Child, A, 183, 339.

Robbins, Tod. A Bit of a Banshee (A
Short Story), 767.

Romany Riddles (Verse), 628.

Root, Robert Kilburn. Sport versus Athletics, 657.

Rubin, Herman. Youth by Radiation, 650.

Scare 'Em, 804.

Scoville, Samuel, Jr. White Ibis at Cape May, 229.

Search, The (Verse), 831.

Secret At the Crossroads, The (The

Forum Prize Short Story for 1924), 577. Sedgwick, Anne Douglas. The Little French Girl, 126, 262, 402, 552. Shapley, Harlow. The Origin of Life (A Symposium), 100.

Shaw, George Bernard, Ulysees and Einstein, A Dialogue, 453.

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Should We Naturalize the Japanese? Symposium), 566.

(A

White, Hal Saunders. Strangen 66.

Should Women Have Equal Rights?

(A

Symposium), 421.

White Ibis at Cape May, 229. Why Coolidge Should Be Elec

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Why Farmers Damn the Leag Winter (Verse), 733.

Wish (Verse), 766.

Women in Washington, 45. Worker Emancipated, The, 463

Youth by Radiation, 650.

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ties, FLORENCE JAFFRAY HARRIMAN was one of the first New Yorkers to become identified with the Woman Movement and has followed it through its various phases. With much brilliance and charm she has gathered around her in Washington many notable men and women, - and her house has long been a real centre for men and women in public

of a novelty, in place of the usual short story. "A Rich Folks' Child," by Mary Dixon Thayer, will be found to afford a striking analogy and contrast.

AL SAUNDERS WHITE is at present

Assistant Professor of English at the University of Montana. After graduating at Bowdoin in 1917, and obtaining the Henry W. Longfellow Fellowship in Belles Lettres, he studied at Brasenose College, Oxford, and spent three years in England. He has written a good deal of poetry, and is now at work on a series of prose sketches.

life. Her recent volume From Pinafores Howly, ambidextrous. His magazine

to Politics had a very friendly reception.

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OUIS GINSBERG is a new contributor of verse to THE FORUM. Although he is still in his twenties, he has produced a volume of poems, The Attic of the Past (Small, Maynard), and is now preparing a second volume, and finishing a first novel. Mr. Ginsberg is a graduate of Columbia, and a teacher of English in Paterson, N. J.

KATE MULLEN is a Connecticut woman

was for a number of years teacher in the New Haven Normal School.

She left teaching to become an organizer for woman suffrage and was active in organizing the business women of the State for better conditions. At the beginning of the War she did recreation work for the 102d regiment, but the War having destroyed many of her illusions, she left everything behind her to go Out West to think things out. She did publicity work for Anne Martin of Nevada in her campaign for the Senate and later became a "colyumnist" on

OWARD MINGOS is, to speak figuratively,

articles are supplementary to his drawings, and vice versa. His chief hobby is aeronautics, a subject which he knows in practice as well as in theory. The somewhat startling facts for which he vouches are based upon authentic information to which not every writer has access. Mr. Mingos has found that it is a long, long way from a Philadelphia art school to the easy life of an artistic and journalistic free lance, journey punctuated by periodical terms of hard labor in metropolitan newspaper

offices.

a

M
ARTIN CONBOY has been for twenty
years associated with the New York
law firm, Griggs, Baldwin, and Baldwin,
and is a prominent member of the Ameri-
can Bar Association. During the war Mr.
Conboy was director of the draft board
for the city of New York. As President of
the Catholic Club he is well qualified to
answer the much-discussed question "Can
a Catholic be Elected President."

the San Francisco has spent several years in French Indo-China. He is now living near Papeete, Tahiti, the scene of the sketch which he contributes to this issue.

DOBERT DEAN FRISBIE is an American

"Journal" under the name of Almiral Bailey. About this tme she added to her experience by marrying. In California she was interested in abolishing the prosecution of the criminal syndicalism law and

wrote articles for that purpose in the W

"Nation" under the name of Catherine Hofteling. In her own estimation, her greatest achievement was in becoming the mother of her daughter. She is now living in Seattle and is writing short stories of New England life.

"A Poor Folks' Child" is offered, by way

EARE HOLBROOK was born and grew up in the corn belt which is so widely celebrated in the novels which he pleasantly satirizes. Since graduating from the University of Iowa, five years ago, he has been engaged in newspaper work, and during the past year has contributed stories and articles to various monthlies.

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