THE MIND OF THE MAJORITY MANY a person of reflection and maturity has visited the United States recently, attracted by the epochal significance of attempts now in progress to reconstruct the...
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WEEK BY WEEK The Trend of Events NO DOUBT the most impressive consequence of recent events is the probability that, in the near future, labor will shy away from the "weapon" of the sympathetic...
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HONEST OPTIMISM By CHARLES MORROW WILSON AGRICULTURE for years has been sick. It has undergone economic surgery. The public at large, friends or relatives of the great basic profession, have been...
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Leave the Window Open Leave the window open: Soon a bird will fly In from the leafy branches, And winds blow from the sky. Sit in the sunny orchard And watch the ripe fruit fall: You will not...
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WALL STREET RECANTS By GEORGE K. McCABE Reviewing recent stock exchange legislation, Professor McCabe calls attention to the fact that the rule necessitating the registration of securities to make...
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THE CHALLENGE OF THE CONGRESS By C. C. MARTINDALE NEXT October, the Thirty-second International Eucharistic Congress is to be held, God willing, at Buenos Aires. There is always a danger of the...
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SEVEN DAYS' SURVEY The Church.-On July 23, the centenary of the birth of James Cardinal Gibbons, memorial exercises were held in Washington in the small park where the Cardinal Gibbons statue was...
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COMMUNICATIONS CATECHIST OR ANTHROPOLOGIST New York, N. Y. TO the Editor: Because of the wide publicity given by the press to Dickens's "Life of our Lord," there is danger that Catholics who have...
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THE PLAY By RICHARD DANA SKINNER What Can We Do? IT IS about six years since, in a mood of hope and optimism, I tried to describe in this department a reasonable business basis for Catholic...
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BOOKS Music as Oblation Protestant Church Music, by Archibald T. Davison. Boston: E. C. Schirmer Company. THOUGH the contemporary movement for the re form of music sung in the Christian Church...
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