—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 also [Colleges].
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].


FOOTNOTES:

[1] See Simkhovitch: Marxism versus Socialism, pp. 122f.

[2] According to the State Census of 1904 as compiled in a Bulletin of the National Census issued in 1907. The corresponding data for the Census of 1910 are not yet arranged.

[3] Abstract of 13th Census, p. 442.

[4] The gross passenger receipts with payments for excess baggage, etc., in the fiscal year ending June 30, 1913, were $666,554,927, omitting railroads whose operating expenses were below $100,000. Provisional report of Interstate Commerce Commission "For the Press."

[5] According to W. Morgan Shuster, the people of Persia practically gave up smoking as a protest against the concession of a tobacco monopoly to an English Company. See The Strangling of Persia, p. xvii.

[6] T. S. Woolsey, Yale Review, March, 1913.

[7] The total amount spent for all purposes under insurance for sickness, accidents, invalidity and old age in Germany was 804,000,000 Marks or less than $200,000,000 in 1910. Statistisches Jahrbuch für das Deutsche Reich, 1912, p. 372.