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ABBOTT, GRACE. The Child Labor Problem, I.,
223.

Abercrombie, Lascelles: Poet and Critic, 319.
Academic Hour of Trial, The, 286.
Alliance, The New Holy, 199.

Amendment, The Child Labor, I., 223; II., 238.
American Inflation, Foreign Effects of, 209.
America's Immigration Policy, 63.
Americas, The Bridge Between the, 40.
Art of Prose, The, 98.

ASHFORD, BAILEY K. The Bridge Between the
Americas, 40.

Books Reviewed:--Benjamin Constant, by

Elizabeth W. Schermerhorn, 157; Poincaré, by

Sisley Huddleston, 157; Life and Letters of

Mary Putnam Jacobi, by Ruth Putnam, 157;

Willard Straight, by Herbert Croly, 157; The

Biological Foundations of Society, by Arthur

Dendy, D.Sc., F. R. S., 168; The Growth of

Civilization, by W. J. Perry, 168; The Neces-

sity of Art, by A. Clutton Brock, Percy Dear-

'mer, A. S. .Duncan-Jones, J. Middleton

Murry, A. W. Pollard and Malcolm Spencer,

168; History of Political Thought, by Ray-

mond G. Gettell, 175; Roman Private Life, by

Walton Brooks McDaniel, 175; The Purple or

the Red, by Charles Hitchcock Sherrill, 175;

History of the Tory Party, by Keith Feiling,

175; The Southern Oligarchy, by William H.

Skaggs, 175; American Democracy Today,

by William Starr Myers, 175; Democracy and

Leadership, by Irving Babbitt, 175; Hispanic-

American Relations with the United States,

by William Spence Robertson, 175; Interna-

tional Law and Some Current Illusions, by

John Bassett Moore, 175; La Prisonnière, by

Marcel Proust, 182; L'Equipage, by Joseph

Kessel, 182; La Maison Natale, by Jacques

Copeau, 182; Deux Hommes, by Georges Du-

hamel, 182; Aricie Brun, ou Les Vertus

Bourgeoises, by Emile Henriot, 182; The Coal

Industry, by A. T. Shurick, 189; The Black

Golconda: The Romance of Petroleum, by

Isaac F. Marcosson, 189; Human Origins: A

Manual of Human Prehistory, by George

Grant MacCurdy, Ph.D., 349; George Mac-

Donald and His Wife, by Greville MacDonald,

352; Letters to Three Friends, by William

Hale White, 352; The Groombridge Diary,

by Dorothy V. White, 352; Memoirs of an

Editor, by Edward P. Mitchell, 359; The
Story of an Independent Newspaper, by
Richard Hooker, 359; The American Consti-
tution as It Protects Private Rights, by
Frederic Jesup Stimson, LL.D., 365; Recent
Changes in American Constitutional Theory,
by John W. Burgess, LL.D., 365; Federal
Centralization, by Walter Thompson, Ph.D.,
365; American State Government, by John
Mabry Mathews, Ph.D., 365; Child Labor and
the Constitution, by Raymond G. Fuller,
365; Non-Voting, by Charles Edward Mer-
riam and Harold Foote Gosnell, 365; Ameri-

ca's Interest in World Peace, by Irving

Fisher, 365; The Monroe Doctrine, by Alejan-

dro Alvarez, 365; A History of Political

Theories, by Students of the late William

Archibald Dunning, LL.D., 365; The Lessons

of History, by C. S. Leavenworth, M.A., 365;

Walter De La Mare, by R. L. Megroz, 372;

A Passage to India, by E. M. Forster, 375;

Arnold Waterlow, by May Sinclair, 375;

The Needle's Eye, by Arthur Train, 375;

Chris Gascoyne, by A. C. Benson, 375;

The Red Riders, by Thomas Nelson Page,

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1-28-66

DANE, CLEMENCE. Flapdragon, 341.

INDEX

EDITOR, THE. The Paramount Issue, 1; A
Correction, 10; The Great Lesson of the Elec-
tions, 193; Henry Cabot Lodge, American
Scholar and Statesman, 195.

Elections, The Great Lesson of the, 193.

English Prose Tradition, 118.

GAINES, CLARENCEH.:-Books Reviewed: Ben-
jamin Constant, by Elizabeth W. Schermer-
horn; Poincaré, by Sisley Huddleston; Life
and Letters of Mary Putnam Jacobi, by Ruth
Putnam; Willard Straight, by Herbert Croly,
157; A Passage to India, by E. M. Forster;
Arnold Waterlow, by May Sinclair; The
Needle's Eye, by Arthur Train; Chris Gas-
coyne, by A. C. Benson; The Red Riders, by
Thomas Nelson Page, 375.

GARIS, ROY L. America's Immigration Policy,

63.

GORMAN, HERBERT S.:-Book Reviewed: Walter
De La Mare, by R. L. Megroz, 372.

KELLOGG, VERNON:-Book Reviewed: Human
Origins: A Manual of Human Prehistory, by
George Grant MacCurdy, Ph.D., 349.
KIRKLAND, WINIFRED. The Promise of the
Present Dark Ages, 134.

LAUZANNE, STEPHANE. A New Invasion of
France, 254.

Law and the Changing Order, 18.

Lesson of the Elections, The Great, 193.
Letters to the Editor, 193.

LODGE, HENRY CABOT: American Scholar and
Statesman, 195.

MACLEISH, ARCHIBALD. Cathedral, 156.
MCCREARY, F. R. The North East Corner, 93.
Mexican Problem Solved, The, 51.

Mexico: The Mexican Problem Solved, 51.
MORGAN, SHEPARD. Foreign Effects of Ameri-
can Inflation, 209.

Mother of the Violinist Listens, The, 154.

Ora Pro Nobis, 310.

SEDGWICK, JOHN HUNTER. The New Holy Al-
liance, 199.

18341

SHERWOOD, MARGARET:-Books Reviewed: The Biological Foundations of Society, by Arthur Dendy, D.Sc., F. R. S.; The Growth of Civilization, by W. J. Perry; The Necessity of Art, by A. Clutton Brock, Percy Dearmer, A. S. Duncan-Jones, J. Middleton Murry, A. W. Pollard, and Malcolm Spencer, 168.

SMITH, ROBERT M. The Philosophy in Thomas Hardy's Poetry, 330.

SPEYER, LEONORA. The Mother of the Violinist Listens, 154.

Stage, The Doctor on the, 147.

THORPE, GEORGE CYRUS. The Mexican Problem Solved, 51.

WARNER, EDWARD P. The Academic Hour of Trial, 286.

WHITNEY, MARIAN P. The Doctor on the Stage, 147.

WILLIAMS, STANLEY T.:-Books Reviewed: George MacDonald and His Wife, by Greville MacDonald; Letters to Three Friends, by William Hale White; The Groombridge Diary, by Dorothy V. White, 352.

YOUNG, STARK. Ora Pro Nobis, 310.

NORTH AMERICAN REVIEW

SEPTEMBER, 1924

THE PARAMOUNT ISSUE

COOLIDGE OR CHAOS

BY THE EDITOR

ONCE upon a time an obviously apposite and somewhat searching question was propounded to the richest man in the world. It was this:

"To what do you ascribe the unequalled success of your endeavors?"

Mr. Rockefeller looked meditatively across the lawn for a moment and then replied quietly and gravely:

"We never deceived ourselves."

It was a simple answer, but he seemed to consider it sufficiently comprehensive and said no more.

The most apt deduction of the present time, we should say, would be that there is deeper philosophy in business than in politics.

How dearly do our men of mystery, now termed Boards of Strategy, cherish illusions! Witness the confident assertions now being made by the representatives of the three candidates for President respecting the determination of approximately thirty millions of voters who will go to the polls two full months hence. Mr. Coolidge is to "sweep the country"; Mr. Davis is to "win in a walk"; even Mr. La Follette's prospective poll has increased from five millions to fifteen millions in a fortnight. All this conforms strictly to political tradition. To strengthen the weak-hearted, to stiffen weak knees, to point the way to the

Copyright, 1924, by North American Review Corporation. All rights reserved.
1

VOL. CCII.-No. 824

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