Chapter 18

—effect on efficiency and the will power,157—credit side of the account,158-159—taxes and duties,158—euphoria,158-159—habit,159—the social balance sheet,159-160—further considerations and conclusion,161-162—Dr. Burton cited,145,162.Toleration,234,240.Townsend, Mrs. Geo. W.,312.Trent, W. P., 'A Sociological Nightmare,'245.Trust-Busting as a National Pastime,406—trust legislation in Germany,406—in America,406-407—dangerous bills proposed,407—inconsistent railroad policy,408—Interstate Commerce Commission and rate fixing,408—prohibiting combinations,408—advantage of combination,409-412—Union Pacific-Southern Pacific separation,408—telephone and telegraph separation,409—the steel industry and advantages of combination,410-412—regulated competition and regulated monopoly,412-413—merits of an Interstate Trade Commission,413-414.Universities, duty of,295;See alsoColleges.Uplift Legislation, A Specimen of,434.Virtues, Two Neglected,112—reticence and tact out of fashion,112-113—face value of talkativeness,114—unpopularity of reticence and tact due to their being "head" virtues,115-116—increasing value in complicated society,116—taciturnity,116-117—Okakura Kakuzo,117—John LaFarge,117,119—American garrulity,118—one merit of Pragmatism,118—Roosevelt,118-119—incompatibility of free talk and tactfulness,119—the gentle arts of tact,119-120—feminine and masculine tact,120—shy people,121—tact of Jesus,121—of St. Paul, John Hancock, Lincoln, Charles II,122—tactlessness of Dr. John Rubens,122-123—relativity of tact,122-123—Samuel Butler quoted,123.Verrall, Mrs., heteromatic writing,99.Visions,65.Wages,12-15.Walker, Francis A.,6-7.Wallace, Alfred Russel,267.Walsh, Mrs., Kate, as spirit control,74-76.War, The Standing Incentives to,185—modern war system of "peace by preponderance,"185-186—its elements and advocates,186-187—war traders and war trusts,187-188—papers by G. H. Perris and Francis Delaisi,187-188—British, French and German companies interested in war,187-190—war scares,189—war-syndicates in the United States,191—money-lenders,191—exploiting companies,191-192—hereditary aristocracy,192—false education,192—the responsibility of the individual citizen,193—national debts,194—hollowness of the system,194—repudiation,194—causes of national decline,195—disease and vandalism,196—our proper line of attack on the war system,197—present phase of the peace movement,197—arbitration and conciliation,198—America's position,198-199.Wealth,7.Wilde, Miss, posthumous letters,104-106.Williams, Talcott,421.Wilson, Woodrow, character of his cabinet and administration,124—Governor of New Jersey,139-140.Wofsmiths,377.Woman Suffrage, How [it] has Worked,307—the indictment against man by the suffragists of 1848 in their "Declaration of Sentiments,"307-308—woman's emancipation has come about chiefly without the ballot,308-309—married woman's position at present in New York State,308-309—other States and the industrial position of women,309-310—educational privileges that have been gained by woman without the ballot,310—her rights and privileges in Protestant churches,310—so many results achieved without the ballot indicate that it is not needed,311—suffragists contend that much remains to be done,311-313—joint guardianship laws,311-312—method by which the New York law was obtained,312—strife of "antis" and "pros,"313—contentions and replies in parallel columns regarding various state laws for the protection of wage-earning women,313-318—Miss Bronson vs. Miss Abbott and Prof. Breckinridge,313,318-319,329—statements on both sides of the controversy show amelioration not due to exercise of ballot,318-319—nevertheless it is still contended that the ballot is the quickest and surest way,319—Dr. Helen M. Sumner on the pay of women in Colorado,320—hours of work in Massachusetts and in Utah,320—laws of Colorado (a woman suffrage State) and of Pennsylvania (a male-suffrage State) in regard to the protection of women and children compared in parallel columns,321-326—the minimum wage question,327—the real argument of the American Woman Suffrage Association itself appears to be against suffrage extension,327-328—statistics showing small percentage of women who go to the polls,328-329—women generally show less interest in registering and in voting than men,329—the bearing of this fact on law enforcement,329-330—Judge Lindsey's testimony,330—more persons have laws beneficial to women and children under male suffrage than under equal suffrage,331—no distinctive results of woman suffrage in the Union where it has been granted in part or in whole,332—results from the indirect influence of women,332.Zoömagnetism,66-67.


Back to IndexNext