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LIEUT.-COMMANDER THE HON. J. M. KENWORTHY, R.N., M.P.,

has been a Member of the British House of Commons since 1919, Lieutenant-Commander in the Royal Navy, late of the Admiralty War Staff at London, and Assistant Chief of Staff at Gibraltar. He is an old acquaintance to REVIEW readers.

REV. WILLIAM ADAMS BROWN, D.D.,

Professor of Systematic Theology, Union Theological Seminary, is widely known for his broad theological tolerance and scholarly studies in matters religious. He is author of numerous volumes relating to aspects of Christianity and religious teachings.

REGINALD E. HOSE,

a graduate of Jesus College, Cambridge, has held the position of Secretary to the Liquor Control Board of British Columbia since 1921 at the time when the Government Liquor Act of that Province became effective.

"ENGINEER",

who appears for the first time in this REVIEW under this pseudonym, is an authority in his subject and known to the Editor. ARCHIBALD DOUGLAS TURNBULL

is a graduate of the U. S. Naval Academy, but resigned after eighteen years in the service. During the war he served in command of escort vessels on the coast of France and England, and also on the staff of Admiral Sims, at London Headquarters. He is at present at work upon a biography of John Stevens, father of the founder of Stevens Institute, inventor and engineer.

BURGES JOHNSON,

for some time Assistant Professor in the Department of English at Vassar College, goes to Syracuse University this autumn as Director of Public Relations and Professor of English.

MRS. WILLIAM LOWELL PUTNAM,

a sister of Amy Lowell, is author of Master Lights and XXVIII Sonnets.

MARIE GOEBEL KIMBALL

is a young writer on American social history whose contributions to the study of Jefferson and Madame de Staël have already been recognized in the most recent books on these subjects. The present essay contains hitherto unpublished letters of William Short, sometimes called Thomas Jefferson's only "son."

ERNEST LUDWIG,

formerly Consul-General of Austria-Hungary and Hungary, acted as negotiator for his Government with the British Plenipotentiary of the Entente Powers in Budapest, and was also a Delegate to the Peace Conference. Mr. Ludwig has written many books in many languages, the most recent being The League of Nations seen through Hungarian Eyes.

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THE NORTH AMERICAN REVIEW ADVERTISER

[graphic]

"He has arrived at

absolute masterhood"

"One reader, at least, finished 'The Silver Spoon' with a feeling that, as a novelist, Mr. Galsworthy has few living peers. He has arrived at absolute masterhood, beyond all doubt."-EDWIN BJORKMAN

From photograph

taken in America Arnold Genthe

"He is in the very plenitude of his powers"

"The Silver Spoon' is the most interesting novel he has ever written. I could not lay it down. He is in the very plenitude of his powers."-WM. LYON PHELPS

John Galsworthy's

The Silver Spoon

Now in its second hundred thousand

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CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS, FIFTH AVENUE AT 48th STREET, NEW YORK

When writing to advertisers kindly mention The North American Review

CORNELIA JAMES CANNON (MRS. WALTER B.)

is a graduate of Radcliffe College. She is a familiar contributor to this REVIEW, as an important essayist.

H. PHELPS PUTNAM,

a Yale graduate, now living in Massachusetts, has a sensitivity and economy of means which indicate a poet's power of unusual quality.

JEANNETTE MARKS,

author of Genius and Disaster, is poet and essayist, as well as head of the Department of English Literature at Mount Holyoke College.

JOSEPH AUSLANDER,

formerly instructor at Harvard University, has published two volumes of verse, Sunrise Trumpets and Cyclops' Eyes. Many of his poems are also widely known through publication in periodicals.

MARY SINTON LEITCH

is author of a volume of verse, The Waggon and the Star, which brought her warm praise from discriminating critics. An early work was the translation of The Love Letters of Bismarck.

WILLIAM A. DRAKE,

now editing the Department of Foreign Literature in the Sunday Book section of The Herald-Tribune, was formerly on the editorial staff of Vanity Fair.

STARK YOUNG,

one of the Editors of The New Republic, is the author of The Flower in Drama, Three Fountains, Glamour and Theatre Practice.

MARY SARGENT POTTER,

daughter of Professor Sargent of Harvard University, and wife of the late Dr. Nathaniel Bowditch Potter, is a former contributor to this REVIEW.

PHILIP WHITWELL WILSON,

the distinguished English publicist for some years past attached to the editorial staff of The New York Times, needs no introduction to REVIEW readers. CLARENCE H. GAINES, Professor of English at St. Lawrence University, has long been one of the editors of the REVIEW. JOHN HUNTER SEDGWICK is a graduate of Harvard. He has lived abroad a great deal and written extensively on literary and political matters there and here. WILLIS FLETCHER JOHNSON, is Contributing Editor of this REVIEW, and GEORGES LECHARTIER is the well-known French journalist who contributes to Le Petit Parisien, the Journal des Débats and Le Correspondant. One of his books was crowned by the French Academy.

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Published quarterly by the North American Review Corporation

PUBLICATION OFFICE, RUMFORD BUILDING, CONCORD, NEW HAMPSHIRE
Editorial and Subscription Office, 9 East 37th Street, New York City
WALTER BUTLER MAHONY, President; CHARLES BATES DANA, Secretary

he price of THE NORTH AMERICAN REVIEW, published quarterly, is one dollar a single copy, or four
llars a year, in the United States, Porto Rico, and the Philippine Islands. Subscribers in Canada
ould add to the yearly subscription price 20 cents for postage, and those in foreign countries 30 cents.

Entered as second-class matter December 18, 1920, at the Post Office at Concord, N. H.
under the Act of Congress of March 3, 1879

LIST OF CONTRIBUTORS

WILLIAM GREEN,

since 1924 President of the American Federation of Labor, was for two terms member of the Ohio Senate, and has served as delegateat-large and alternate at three National Democratic Conventions. He is a member of the American Academy of Political Science and author of Ohio's Workmen's Compensation Law.

HARTLEY WITHERS,

beside his editorship of The Economist, has been City Editor of The London Times and Morning Post, and acted as Director of Financial Enquiries in the Treasury. Mr. Withers, an authority of the first rank on matters of finance, has written numerous volumes dealing with the subject, which include Our Money and the State, The Case for Capitalism and Bankers and Credit.

STÉPHANE LAUZANNE,

former member of the French High Commission to the United States, and the accomplished Editor-in-Chief of Le Matin, is a familiar contributor to THE REVIEW.

THEODORE H. PRICE,

Editor and Proprietor of Commerce and Finance, is one of the foremost authorities on cotton. Mr. Price contributes frequently to many periodicals on economic subjects.

MAJOR SHERMAN MILES, U.S.A.,

has served on the General Staff in Washington. He was Military Attaché in the Balkans during the Balkan Wars, and in Russia during the World War from 1914-1916. He was with the General Staff, American Expeditionary Force, and later was detailed to the American Peace Commission for work in Central Europe.

RT. HON. SIR JAMES O'CONNOR, K.C.,

was called to the Inner Bar in 1908, and to the Bar, Middle Temple, in 1925. He was Lord Justice of Appeal (Ireland) from 1918 to 1924. His publications include The Licensing Laws of Ireland, and The Irish Justice of the Peace.

FRED HAWTHORNE,

grandson of Nathaniel Hawthorne, many of whose writings were reviewed in this REVIEW, is one of the authorities on the game of tennis. He is now on the staff of The New York Herald Tribune.

GRACE HAZARD CONKLING,

Associate Professor of English at Smith College, is the author of Afternoons of April, Wilderness Songs and Flying Fish, and a welcome contributor to THE NORTH AMERICAN REVIEW.

W. L. MACDONALD,

a graduate of the University of Toronto, and a Doctor of Philosophy from Harvard, is now Associate Professor of English at the University of British Columbia at Vancouver.

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