- Reformer, contemptuous attitude of, [49];
- sweeping condemnations of, [57];
- alliance with business interests of, [61].
- Revolutionary War, [36], [37].
- Revolutionist, [232].
- Repressive legislation, [54];
- human element in, [55].
- Royce, Josiah, [32].
- Ruskin, [235].
- Russia, [68];
- the mir, [67];
- attitude toward workmen, [122];
- the army of, [230].
- Self-government, difficulties and blunders of, [32];
- crux of local, [35];
- skepticism for ideals of, [39];
- must deal with unsuccessful, [62];
- scope of, [63];
- forms of democracy for, [88];
- immigrants’ first lesson in, [95];
- clearly not yet attained, [108];
- popular government oppressor of, [104];
- might profit by industrial experience, [121].
- Shakespeare, [9].
- Social, evolution, [211];
- morality in, [213].
- Socialism, based on internationalism and industrialism, [114].
- Socialist’s attitude to present government, [86].
- St. Francis, [21].
- Teamsters’ strike, war element in, [132];
- employers’ position as to arbitration in, [134];
- alliance between employers’ and unionists’ offices in, [135];
- inexperience of merchant employers in, [136];
- social results of, [141].
- Tolstoy, [3], [4], [209], [225], [230], [231], [233], [234].
- Tribal law, [11].
- Tribal Morality, [18].
- Trades unions imitate city government, [94];
- teach immigrants self-government, [95];
- power for amalgamation of, [97];
- attitude toward violence, [98];
- causes for loss of sympathy for, in Stock Yards Strike, [101];
- human appeal in, [102];
- gratitude of immigrant toward, [107];
- devotion to, might be turned to national life, [118];
- organized by Russian government, [122];
- contemporaneous movement difficult to judge, [125];
- success not sole standard of, [128];
- present a time of crisis for, [129];
- attitude toward strike, [130];
- social result of strike on, [144];
- struggle for recognition, [145];
- attitude toward improved machinery, [148];
- uncomprehending victim of, [195].
- War, defence of, [26];
- prophecy of subsidence of, [23];
- moral equivalent for, [24];
- ideals in peace confusing, [110];
- phraseology of new union, [130];
- crime traceable to Spanish, [143];
- new social problems not to be settled, [206];
- attempts to justify by past records, [210];
- substitutes for virtues of, [217];
- contrast between labor and, [234].
- Warfare, cost of, [4];
- customary method of settling labor disputes, [135];
- recognition of good in, [212];
- civilization substitutes law for, [219];
- ideals of labor substituted for those of, [224];
- disappearance of, [229].
- Webb, Mrs. Sidney, [191].
- Whitman, Walt, [45].
- Wilcox, Dr. Charles F., [54].
- Wilcox, Delos F., [117].
- Women, duty toward municipal government, [28], [185], [208];
- conventions a snare to, [186];
- franchise only for educated, [188];
- effect of machinery on work of, [190];
- increasing employment of, [189];
- necessity for protection of working, [191], [196];
- necessity for franchise for, [191], [197];
- relation to clothing manufacture, [192];
- lack in education of, [197], [202], [206].
BY THE SAME AUTHOR
DEMOCRACY AND SOCIAL ETHICS
By JANE ADDAMS, Hull-House, Chicago. 9 + 281 pages, 12 mo., cloth, leather back, $1.25 net. Citizen’s Library.
“Miss Addams is clear. She has not been precipitate in the preparation of her book. She has reconsidered, corrected, and recorrected it, spoken with temperance and courtesy.... As gentle, as patient, as sincere, and as astute as Jane Addams herself is the philosophy set forth in these pages.... The processes of Miss Addams’ thought are interesting to thousands. The sense that none of us is living up to the best idea of democracy is upon each of us.... Miss Addams is bound to receive a respectful hearing. As a leader who ever prays to lead aright, a sociologist who is willing to test her theories in a practical and personal way, a theorist who is not ashamed to own when she has been mistaken, a friend who will remain true to her friend no matter what may arise, and a person of leisure and power, who has the civic interest at heart, she has come to be prized as one of the chief of citizens.”—Chicago Tribune.
“Its pages are remarkably—we were about to say refreshingly—free from the customary academic limitations.... In fact, are the result of actual experience in hand to hand contact with social problems.... No more truthful description, for example, of the political ‘boss’ as he thrives to-day in our great cities has ever been written than is contained in Miss Addams’ chapter on ‘Political Reform.’ The whole chapter will be accepted as a realistic picture of conditions as they are to-day in the city of Chicago. The same thing may be said of the other chapters of the book in regard to their presentation of social and economic facts.”—Review of Reviews.