September 1924
In This Issue
Explore the September 1924 print edition below. Or to discover more writing from the pages of The Atlantic, browse the full archive.
Articles
The Little French Girl
Colonial Women of Affairs
Social Discovery
The Portrait of an Editor
Are Comparisons Odious?
So This Is Tammany Hall!
Cornelia Discusses an Eligible Young Man
Meditations of a Mother-in-Law
Two Ivory Cupids
The Spinners
Ferguson--Rex
Diversions of a Lost Soul
Our Mrs. Bodfish
The Tea Party
Anarchy or Order: A Study in the Sociology of Authority
Omar's Grave
The Soldier Vote
Profiteering Under a Communist Régime
Political Progress in the Netherlands Indies
Is America Imperialistic?
My Chinese Chrysanthemums
In Defense of an Honest Liar
Junk
The Contributors' Column
The Atlantic's Bookshelf
The Contrast
Appreciating the national popularity of reading clubs and circulating libraries, the Editor of the Bookshelf has compiled a list of the most prominent books, fiction and non-fiction, that have appeared in the last twelvemonth. This list has been selected from the suggestions of the nine librarian advisers of the Atlantic; it will be sent with our compliments to all chairmen and committees of reading clubs. Requests should be addressed to the Editor of the Bookshelf, Atlantic Monthly, 8 Arlington Street, Boston, Mass.
Country People
The New Decalogue of Science











