327. The situation in American writing: seven questions (Part II). Partisan Review 6,no.5:103-05 Fall 1939.
328. A small boy looks at his world. Woman’s Home Companion 53:19-20, 42, 45 July 1926. Tar (with revisions).
329. Small town notes. Vanity Fair 30:58, 120 June 1928; 32:72, 106 April 1929; 32:48, 110 July 1929 (reprinted: London Mercury 20:473-76 September 1929, under title “Small town notes: ashamed”); 33:72, 110, 114 September 1929.
330. So you want to be a writer? Saturday Review of Literature 21:13-14 December 9, 1939; condensation in Reader’s Digest 36:109-11 January 1940.
331. “Sold!” To the tobacco company. Globe 2:30-35 July 1938; condensation in Youth Today 2:28-30 September 1939 under title “Sold.”
332. A soliloquy. Agricultural Advertising 9:25 April 1902. (Signed “Anderson”)
333. The South. Vanity Fair 27:49-50, 138 September 1926. HT.
334. Statements of belief II; further credos of America’s leading authors. Bookman (N.Y.) 68:204 October 1928. Reprinted (without title) in Herrmann, Eva. On parade, caricatures ... edited by Erich Posselt, contributions by prominent authors. New York, Coward-McCann, 1929. p.10.
335. Stewart’s on the square. New Yorker 10:77-80 June 9, 1934.
336. Stolen day. This Week April 27, 1941, p.6, 23.