—great disproportion between bad and good literature,424—picture of the pabulum in the popular magazine,425—injustice of postal rates further illustrated,426—profits of a publisher,427—facts kept from the public,427—lobby,427—the Home University Library,429—why not carry books cheaply?430.Lodge, Sir Oliver,64,73,93;sitting with Mrs. Piper,79-81.MacCunn, Prof. John,272,273.McNamara dynamitings,268.Majority Juggernaut, The,22—initiative and referendum,22-23—cause of existing impatience with governmental methods,23-24—direct rule of the people,24-25—need of resistance to the immediate desire of the majority in settling certain momentous questions,25-31—Henry George and the single tax,27-28—difference between representative rule and direct rule,29-30—mob rule,31-32—Senator Bourne's position,32-33—inherent error of the direct-rule propaganda,32-33.Martin, E. S., 'The Unfermented Cabinet,'124.Marx, Karl,11,235,241.Materialization,67.Mather, F. J., Jr., 'Two Neglected Virtues,'112—'Wanted: Proportionate News,'216—'The Right to be Amused,'297.Microbophobiac, The Story of a,175.Morality, Greek,358.Morality, The New,47—Miss Jane Addams as its exponent,48—her works,48-50,54—revolution from mediæval religion to humanitarianism,49-52—lessened sense of personal responsibility,52—modern social sympathy,53-59—change of view in the church,56—results of humanitarianism,56,57—confusion of moral standards and relaxation of morals,58,59—remedy,60—permanent worth of character and its relation to social justice,61,62.More, Paul Elmer, 'The New Morality,'47—'Natural Aristocracy,'272.Moses, Rev. W. Stainton,68,69-71—in Newbold sittings,90.Mott, Lucretia,307,318,332.Murphy, Chas. F.,134,135,142.Myers, F. W. H.,64,65,66,68,69,99—as control with Dorr,103—with Mrs. Holland,103-104—posthumous letter,105."Near,"440.New Jersey reform,139-143.New York City, causes of fires,150—numerous elective offices,136.Newbold, Prof. J. R., sittings with Mrs. Piper,90.Newell, in Rich's Piper Sitting,78.News, Wanted: Proportionate,216.Newspapers,421,424.Nys, Ernest,209.Page, Walter H.,415.Paine, Tom, on Burke,281,282.Palladino, Eusapia,67.Patterson, Wm. B.,259.Peace, present phase of movement,197.Peace, The Machinery for,200—peaceful policy of Germany and Great Britain,200—the work of the First Hague Conference,200,202,203—arbitration and American arbitral proceedings previous to the Hague Conferences,201-202—Roosevelt's objection,202—work of the Second Hague Conference,200,202,203-206—Francis Lieber, President Lincoln, and the Brussels Conference of 1874,204—naval war,204—International Prize Court,204,208—Declaration of London,204—machinery for pacific settlement of international disputes,205—international commissions,205—Hague Court of Arbitration, composition,205-206—work of the Third Hague Conference in 1915,206-209—Casablanca case,207—tendency to compromise,207-208—Supreme Court of Arbitral Justice,208-209—Ernest Nys,209—arguments for war,209-211—industrial and scientific substitutes for war,210-211—Prof. Soddy cited,211."Pelham," George,83-90,92,97,99—Mrs. Piper recognizes portrait,86.Periodicals.SeeLiterature.Perris, Geo. H.,187.Personality, secondary,76.Peter Ibbetson,80.Phinuit, Dr.,71—his French,73-77.Pigeon-Holes, The Case for,343—method,343—classification of ideas,343-344—value to civilization,345-346—method and efficiency,346—the machine age,346-347—value of system in scholarship and religion,347-348—the other side of the case: limitations to the use of system and classifications,349-354—men and truths not easily classified,349—the multitudinous differences in things,350—different points of view,351—mutations of the human spirit,351—wholeness of truth,352—system a violence to nature,352—its injustice and tyranny,353—an obstacle to progress,354—the judicial view of the case,355-357—limitations and qualifications in the employment of method,355—an art after all,356—the Golden Mean and human quality,356-357.Piper, Mrs.,67—sittings with Hodgson,74-75—with Rich,76-79—with Lodge,79-81—Hodgson second report,83—George "Pelham,"83-90.Plato, character of hisRepublic,371,373—picture of the change from license to tyranny,275-276.Podmore, Frank,64—conversion,99.Postal rates on periodicals,419.Psychical Research, Prof. Bergson and the Society for,63—formation of the society, early members, publications,64—thought-transference,64-65—"Phantasms of the Living,"65—zoömagnetism and telekinesis,66—Home, the medium,67,68—Eusapia Palladino,67—U. S. Moses,68,69-71—Myers on Moses,69—Sir Wm. Crookes,68,69—American S. P. R., Hodgson, James, and Mrs. Piper,71—Phinuit, etc.,71-73—reports of sittings,74-76—T. Rogers Rich; telepathy or what?76-79—Piper English sittings; Sir O. Lodge,79-80—Gurney sittings,80-81—telepathy and teloteropathy insufficient to explain Piper phenomena,82—George "Pelham" sittings,83-85—Hodgson and spirit hypothesis,85-89—Wm. James's reluctant admissions,89-98—W. R. Newbold,90—Imperator and followers,90-91—death of Hodgson,93—Hodgson as control,93-99—spirits very human,96—character of future world,96—Prof. James,97-98—conversion of Frank Podmore,99—heteromatic writing of Mrs. Verrall and Mrs. Holland,99-102—Mrs. Verrall's heteromatic writing,99—Mrs. Holland's cipher writing,100—automatic verse,101-102—letter and its strong evidence,102—on death of Myers,102-103—his appearances,103—notorious stanza,104—happiness of controls,104—Cross-Correspondence,104—two strongest points against spiritism,104-105—failure in regard to sealed letters and Moses inconsistencies,105—indication of phenomena,106—Prof. Bergson's estimate of the Society,106-107—on indifference of learned world,107—on parallelism,107-108—on hypnosis and dreams,109—on survival of individuality,109-110—on telepathy,110-111.Putnam, Emily J., 'The Greeks on Religion and Morals,'358."Q," Hodgson's friend, as control,74.Questions, Answering Big,214.Raisin, Jacob S.,259.Rector, "Spirit" control,70,90,91,92,93,94,97.Reform, A Needed Unpopular,133—secret oligarchies in chief cities and states of the United States,133-138—Tammany,133-135—too many offices under direct control of the people,135-137—the town meeting of New England,137—politicians and bosses as plunderers,137-138—moral awakening,138—reform in New Jersey,139-143—Ex-Senator James Smith,139-140—Woodrow Wilson as Governor of New Jersey,139-140—conduct of elections and the short ballot,140—the direct primary principle,141—the problem of cumbersome political machinery,142-144—executive responsibility,142-143—commission government in cities,143-144—judiciary appointments,143.Religion, Greek,358.Rich, T. Rogers, with Mrs. Piper,76-79.Right to be Amused, The,297—new doctrine of human rights,297—its reaction on women,298—the right to be amused distinguished from the ordinary pursuit of pleasure,298-299—the hungry defiant faces of modern women,299-300—the American woman in the nineteenth century,300-301—the peculiar right of the good looking American woman,302—the modern girl's detachment from responsibilities,302-303—little done for right education of girls,303—American writers of fiction who picture woman as a mere ornament,304—the fault of the American man that she is so,304-305—the effect of the projection of women into business and social reforms,305—woman's need of companionship; true marriage,305-306.Roosevelt, T.,4,5,118,119—demagoguery,285-288—misleading talk compared with previous conduct,269—opposition to arbitration,202.Ross, Prof. E. A.,264.St. Paul,122.Saloon.SeeAlcohol.Schooling, Our Sublime Faith in,375—demands made on our schools,375—criticisms,376—putting everything on the schools,377—the main purpose of popular education,377-378—public welfare,378—religion, morality and knowledge as subjects for teaching,379—the knowledge desirable,379-380—morality, character-building, and the development of the social conscience,380-381—religion and the difficulty of teaching it,381-383—the present development of the spirit of lawlessness,383-386—diminishing respect for law among the better class; capitalists,384-385—its evil effect,385—time to take thought,385—what the schools can do,386—the social conscience, the social instinct, and the good of the whole,386-388—prevention,388—social-minded character,388.Seager, H. R., 'Trust-Busting as a National Pastime,'406.Seward's phrase "The Irrepressible conflict,"1.Shaw, Dr. Anna,310.Showerman, Grant, 'The Democrat Reflects,'34—'The Story of a Microbophobiac,'175—'The Case for Pigeon-Holes,'343.Simplified Spelling,218,440.Smith, James, in New Jersey,139-140.Smith, Munroe, on publishers privileges,427.Socialism,8—future of,244—real strength,293.Social justice,54-62.Social Untruth and the Social Unrest,252—legitimate and illegitimate portrayal of existing social evils,252-253—nature of present social problems,253—danger of deceiving the public,254—how well-meaning reformers play into the hands of the Socialists,254-255—illustrations of well-meant exaggeration, distortion and misleading presentation of present evils,256-269—instance of rubbishy story,256-258—exaggerated statements cited about extent of child labor,259-261—case of misrepresentation on the part of the Consumers' League as to the rising price of food in restaurants,261-263—reformers' indifference to facts,262-264—further illustrations,264-269—Prof. E. S. Ross's misleading article in theAtlanticon the suppression by the press of important news,264-265—misrepresentation as to infant mortality,266-267—Mr. Alfred Russel Wallace's inability to weigh facts in his zeal for reform,267-268—loose thinking consequent on the McNamara dynamitings,268—Mr. Roosevelt's misleading talk compared with his previous conduct,269—the dangerous unrest consequent upon all this distortion and deception,269-271.Society for Psychical Research (S. P. R.),63-111.Sociological Nightmare,245.Soddy, Prof.,211.Speer, Dr. Stanhope,69.Spiritism, Hodgson's argument for,87-88,104-106—James on,89,91-92,93,94-98,104.Stage.SeeDecency.Steel industry,410,412.Sumner, Dr. Helen M.,320.Tammany,133-135.Taxation,9,27-28.Telekinesis,66-67.Telepathy,64-65,82—Bergson on,110.Thomas, Calvin, 'Our Sublime Faith in Schooling,'375—'A Model of Divinatory Criticism,'435."Thon,"440.Thought-transference.SeeTelepathy.Tobacco,212.Tobacco, Our: Its Cost,145—value of factory product,145—annual amount spent for tobacco,146—comparisons,146-147,161—loss of life and property through fires caused by smokers,147-152—forest fires thus caused,151-152—land required for tobacco culture,152-153—cost to railroads,153—cost of cleanliness,153-154—effects on physical health,154-155—effect on mental development,155—loss of time,156—weakening of the social sense,156-157