Abbot, Miss Edith,313,319,329.Addams, Jane,48-50,54,319.Alcohol,213.Alcohol, Our: Its Use,163—use of the word intemperance,163—American drinking habits contrasted with English,163-174—social value of drinking,164—American public bars,165—improving the saloon,165-166—English public-houses,166-174—influence of women,169—the average English bar-maids,169-170—drinking in Scotland,170-171—effect of bar-maids in America,171—sense of home,172-173—Eileen,173-174.American Magazines,261.Anonymity of writers for thisReview,43.Arbitration,10,20.Aristocracy, Natural,272—the one great question of to-day,272—Plato and his ideal republic,273-277—the natural growth of tyranny out of democracy,275-276—the method of escape which Plato saw,276-277—the political wisdom of Burke'sReflections,277—the need of leaders,277-279—Burke's definition of a true natural aristocracy,278-279—his ideas of prejudice, privilege, time and subordination,279-281—the part of imagination in Burke's ideas of government,281-282—Tom Paine's charge,281-282—picture of the demagogue,285-288—initiative and referendum; amending constitutions,286—attack on courts,287—Burke's portrait of men of light and leading,288—the demagoguery of an institution like the public press,289—the cure of democracy notmorebutbetterdemocracy,290—our need is to provide for a natural aristocracy,290—the cant of humanitarianism; the need of a class consciousness among the advanced,292-295—the real strength of socialistic doctrine and the real danger,293-294—duty of our higher institutions of learning to train the imagination,295-296.Athens,1.Atlantic,264."Aunt Kate," as spirit control,74-76.Automatic writing.SeeHeteromatic.Baby and the Bee,333.Barbarian Invasion, The,389—higher education is in the hands of barbarians,389—college education and college professors to-day,389-390—democratic education a process of measuring down,390-391—new sciences,391—academic managers and their policies,391-392—appeals for money and advertising features,392—the cant of a university's obligation to the community,392-393—inter-collegiate athletics a key to the meaning of social obligations,393—amateur sport a business enterprise of college authorities,393-396—football,394—the argument for athletics as opposed to study,395—rich barbarian alumni,396—teachers' colleges, their character and relation to the college proper,397-398—graduate schools,398—material for college professors,399—illiteracy,399—average quality,400—the Ph.D. and his "contribution to knowledge,"401—the scientific theory of academic organization,402—college presidents,403—the "educator,"403—the howling wilderness of academic halls,404—money and publicity,404—need of an aristocratic institution of learning,405—and of culture and finer manhood in colleges and universities,405.Bee.See'Baby and the Bee.'Bergson, Henri, as president of Society for Psychical Research,63,106-107—on psychic phenomena,107-111.Boss rule,138.Bourne, Senator,32-33.Bradford, Mary C.,321,330.Breckinridge, Prof. Sophonisba P.,313,319,329.Bronson, Miss Minnie,313,318,329.Brougham, H. B., 'A Needed Unpopular Reform,'133—'The Machinery for Peace,'200—'How Woman Suffrage Has Worked,'307.Bryan, W. J.,3,4,5,124-129.Burke, Edmund, his political ideas and their present applicability,272-273,277-284.Burrows, Charles W., 'Our Government Subvention to Literature,'415.Burton, Dr., on tobacco,145,162.Butler, Samuel,123.Cabinet, The Unfermented,124—composition of Pres. Wilson's cabinet and experience of its members,124-125—public observation and expectations,126—Bryan,126-129—his Chautauqua lectures,128—the cabinet's confidence in the president,129-130—its unity,130—Wilson's power,131-132.Capitalism, The Soul of,227—capitalism compared to feudalism,227-228—capitalism a predominant and significant fact in modern life,228-229—the paradoxical conception of a soul in capitalism,229—commercialization; "business" vs. "sentiment,"230—capitalism a respecter of the liberties of men,231—personal prejudices out of business hours still rule,232—discrimination in business exceptional; Mr. Henry Ford,232—toleration necessitated by business tends to break down national, racial and religious prejudices,233—this toleration is interested and not ethical,234—yet liberty based on capitalistic toleration is broad and substantial,234—precapitalistic liberty,235—class liberty,235—the laborer's great gains in personal liberty,236—capitalism the real source and cause of the fraternity of labor,237-238—the natural race antagonisms among laborers,238—moral gain of labor disputes,239—solidarity in American and in foreign laborers,239—anti-militarism in the laboring class,239—the soul of capitalism begins to emerge as toleration, liberty and fraternity,240—Socialism,241—Karl Marx cited,241—the initial ugliness of capitalism,241-242—the struggle of good and evil in the non-economic field and its outcome,243—Holberg,244—a broader and more liberal humanity the evolving soul of capitalism,244.Cattell, Prof.,399.Charles II,122.Chesterton, G. K., unconscious testimony against tobacco,156.Child labor, facts and misrepresentation as to extent,259-260.Classification.SeePigeon-Holes.Climbers, Some Deserving,439.Colleges, What is the Matter with the American?214.See also'Barbarian Invasion, The';Schooling.Consumers' League,261-262.Cost of living,12,261-262.Criticism, A Model of Divinatory,435.Crookes, Sir Wm.,64,68,69.Cross-Correspondence,104.Decencyand the Stage,214.DeForest, Mrs. Nora Blatch,330,331.Delaisi, Francis,187.Delineator, The,256,258.Demagogues,4-5—Roosevelt as an example,285-288.Democracy,34—what it has done for higher education,389.Democrat Reflects, The,34—disillusionment,34,35—questionings as to real nature of democracy,36,37—plutocracy,37—democracy in education,38—in religion and art,39,40—in manners and dress,40,41—in the home,41—Plato on democracy,42—ridiculous side of the idea,42—mediocrity,43,44—democracy as a machine,44,45—character the Supreme end,46."Doctor Foster went to Gloucester,"435.Dog, in Rich's sitting,79.Dorr, George, with Myers control,103.Dowsing,67.Drama.SeeDecency.Dramatic power of mediums,82.Dreams,65-66,109.Drink.SeeAlcohol.Education.SeeSchooling;Colleges; 'Barbarian Invasion, The.'En Casserole,212,431.Farnam, Henry W., 'Our Tobacco: its Cost,'145.Feminism, abundant results of woman's influence in legislation,332.Fires resulting from smoking tobacco,147-152.Fite, Warner, 'The Barbarian Invasion,'389.Football,394.Ford, Henry,232.Foster, the medium,68.Franklin, Fabian, 'The Majority Juggernaut,'22—Social Untruth and the Social Unrest,'252.Freedom.SeeLiberty.George, Henry,27-28.George, Mrs. A. J.,310,328.Germany, peace policy,200;trust legislation,406.Ghost stories,65.Glynn, Governor,142.Government management,16.Greeks, The, on Religion and Morals,358—relation of religion and morals,358-359—the Greek attitude toward reason,359-360—its psychological development,360—the eleusinian mysteries; Dionysus,361—hypnosis, ecstasy, enthusiasm,362—orphism and immortality,362-364—Aristotle on the Eleusinia,364—Oriental cults: Unthraism,365—origin of the Christian sacraments and the theology of St. Paul to be found in these mysteries,365-366—the doctrine of the early church modified by Greek ideas; the Nicene Creed,366-367—"faith,"367—Hippolytus and Plato,368—the influence of Greece on dogma,368-369—Christian exegesis also of Greek origin,369—its principle,370—Plato's exegesis,371—the ethics of Christianity as related to Stoicism and Cynicism,371-373—religion and morals among the Greeks differentiated,372—Plato'sRepublic,373—religion and morality have suffered from too close a union,374.Gurney, Edmund, as control,80.Hamilton, Clayton, 'Our Alcohol: its Use,'163.Hancock, John,122.Heteromaticwriting,69-70,99-104.Hodgson, Dr. Richard,64—first Piper report,71-79—second Piper report,83-90—argument for spiritism,87-88—as control,93-103.Holberg,244.Holland, Mrs., heteromatic writing,99-103—with Hodgson control,100.Holt, Henry, 'The New Irrepressible Conflict,'1—'Prof. Bergson and the Society for Psychical Research,'63—'Tobacco and Alcohol,'212—'Answering Big Questions,'214—'Decency and the Stage,'214—'Simplified Spelling,'218,440—'Special to our Readers,'431—'A Specimen of Uplift Legislation,'434—'Some Deserving Climbers,'439.Home, the medium,67,68.Hours of labor,13."Howard" family and G. P.,84-87.Hull House.SeeAddams, Jane.Humanitarianism, current cant deprecated,292."Humans,"439.Hypnotism,65,109.Immortality, faith in, possible justification for,106.Imperator,70,90,91—inconsistent names,105.Infant mortality,266.Intemperance, strict sense of the word,163.See alsoAlcohol.Interstate Commissions, Commerce and Trade,408,413-414.Irrepressible Conflict, The New,1—minority vs. majority,1—Seward's Irrepressible Conflict and others,1-2—class legislation,2,5—value of the superior man,2—growing disturbances from the man behind,2-3—greenbacks start a crazy cycle,3—Bryan and Silver,3-4—ideals of the average man,4—Jack Cade, Bryan and Roosevelt,4—two greatest demagogues in history,5—rightful owners of wealth,5—Marshall's "Economics of History,"5-6—Francis A. Walker on profits of employers,6-7—source of wealth,7-8—Socialism,8—taxes mainly for the benefit of the non-taxpayers,9—arbitration,10,20—progress of the average man,11-15—Karl Marx and his "increasing misery" theory,11—rising wages,12-15—cost of living,12—decreasing hours of labor,13—government management,15-16—the way to peace,15-21—improvement in human nature,18—mutual help,18-19—trade unions,20,21—education and individual improvement,19-20.James, Prof. Wm.,64—finds Mrs. Piper,71—with "Aunt Kate,"74-76—with G. P.,84—argument on spiritism,89,91-92,93,94-98—with Hodgson control,97-98.Jerry, uncle of Sir Oliver Lodge,81.Jesus Christ,121.Johnson, Alvin S., 'The Soul of Capitalism,'227.Jordan, David Starr, 'The Standing Incentives to War,'185.Journalism, American,216.Kakuzo, Okakura,117.Kellogg, Vernon L., 'What is the Matter with the American Colleges?'214—'The Baby and the Bee,'333.Knickerbocker Press,259.Labor, antagonisms,238—gain of disputes,239.LaFarge, John,117,119.Language, some new words,439.Larned, J. N., on the newspaper,424.Legislation, specimen,434.Letters as posthumous evidence of spiritism,104-106.Liberty, breadth and strength of that which comes from capitalism,234—Puritan and precapitalistic,235.Lieber, Francis,204.Lincoln, A., anecdote,124—tactfulness,122—war rules,204.Lindsey, Judge Ben. B.,58—on woman suffrage in Colorado,330.Literature, Our Government Subvention to,415—book production in the United States compared with that of other countries,415-417—decrease of book sellers,418—growth of periodicals,419—as the effect of a low rate of postage,419-421—increase of bulk and circulation in periodicals and newspapers,420-421—disproportionate postage rates,422-423—number of periodicals,423—quality of newspapers,424