Chapter 31 of 43 · 3971 words · ~20 min read

Part 31

_A. D._ Arts and Decoration. _A. Merc._ American Mercury. _A. W._ All’s Well. _Adv._ Adventure. _Ain._ Ainslee’s Magazine. _Am._ American Magazine. _Am. B._ American Boy. _Am. H._ American Hebrew. _Asia_ Asia. _Atl._ Atlantic Monthly. _B. E. T._ Boston Evening Transcript. _Blue Bk._ Blue Book Magazine. _B’nai_ B’nai B’rith Magazine. _Book. (N. Y.)_ Bookman. (New York.) _Books_ Books. (New York Herald-Tribune.) _C. D. N._ Chicago Daily News. _C. E. P._ Chicago Evening Post Review of Books. _C. G._ Country Gentleman. _C. R. Rep._ Cedar Rapids Republican. _Cath. W._ Catholic World. _Cen._ Century Magazine. _Charm_ Charm. _Chic. Trib._ Chicago Tribune Syndicate Service. _Col._ Collier’s Weekly. _Com._ Commonweal. _Cos._ Cosmopolitan. _D. D._ Double Dealer. _Day_ The Day. _Dear. Ind._ Dearborn Independent. _Del._ Delineator. _Des._ Designer. _Dial_ Dial. _Echo_ Echo. _Elks_ Elks Magazine. _Ev._ Everybody’s Magazine. _F. F._ Farm and Fireside. _For._ Forum. _Fron._ Frontier. _Gal._ Golden Galleon. _G. H._ Good Housekeeping. (New York.) _Gol._ Golden Book. _Guar. (Am.)_ Guardian. (Philadelphia.) _H. C._ Hue and Cry. _Harp. B._ Harper’s Bazaar. _Harp. M._ Harper’s Magazine. _Hear_ Hearst’s International. _Hol._ Holland’s Magazine. _I. A._ Inter-America. _I. L. M._ Iowa Literary Magazine. _Ind._ Independent. _Int._ International Book Review. _Int. Arts_ International Arts. _J. F._ Jewish Forum. _J. T._ Jewish Tribune. _L. H. J._ Ladies’ Home Journal. _L. Rev._ Literary Review of the New York Evening Post. _Leonardo_ Leonardo. _Lit. R._ Little Review. _Liv. A._ Living Age. _Ly._ Liberty. _McC._ McClure’s Magazine. _McCall_ McCall’s Magazine. _MacF._ MacFadden Fiction-Lover’s Magazine. _MacL._ MacLean’s Magazine. _Men. J._ Menorah Journal. _Mid._ Midland. _Mod. Q._ Modern Quarterly. _Mod. R._ Modern Review. _Mun._ Munsey’s Magazine. _N. A. Rev._ North American Review. _N. Rep._ New Republic. _N. Y. Sun_ New York Sun. _N. Y. Times_ New York Times Book Review. _N. Y. Trib._ New York Herald-Tribune. _Nat. (N. Y.)_ Nation. (New York.) _O. R._ Open Road. _Opp._ Opportunity. _Outl.(N. Y.)_ Outlook. (New York.) _Pear. (Am.)_ Pearson’s Magazine. (Chicago.) _Pict. R._ Pictorial Review. _Pop._ Popular Magazine. _Red. Bk._ Red Book Magazine. _Rev._ Reviewer. _S. E. P._ Saturday Evening Post. _S. S._ Smart Set. (New York.) _S. W._ Southwest Review. _Sat. R._ Saturday Review of Literature. (New York.) _Scan_ American-Scandinavian Review. _Scr._ Scribner’s Magazine. _Sea._ Sea Stories Magazine. _Sh. St._ Short Stories. _Strat._ Stratford Monthly. _Sun._ Sunset Magazine. _Tr._ Transatlantic Review. _Tri._ Trident. _V. F._ Vanity Fair. _Va._ Virginia Quarterly Review. _W. H. C._ Woman’s Home Companion. _W. M._ Worker’s Monthly. _W. T._ Weird Tales. _W. W._ Woman’s World. _W. Tom._ World Tomorrow. _Wave_ Wave. _World_ New York World. _Y. I._ Young Israel. _Yale_ Yale Review. (161) Page 161. (2:161) Volume 2, Page 161.

II. BOOKS

_Aces_ Aces. _Aces B._ More Aces. _Aiken_ Aiken. Bring! Bring! _Arlen C._ Arlen. Mayfair. _Aumonier C._ Aumonier. Overheard. _Austin B._ Austin. “13.” _Austin C._ Austin. William Austin, the Creator of Peter Rugg. _Barbey_ Barbey d’Aurevilly. The Diaboliques. _Becke C._ Becke. Yorke the Adventurer. _Bennett_ Bennett. Elsie and the Child. _Bierce C._ Bierce. The Monk and the Hangman’s Daughter. _Boyd B._ Boyd. Points of Honor. _Bramah B._ Bramah. The Specimen Case. (English edition.) _Buck_ Buck. Afterglow. _Busch_ Busch. Selected Czech Tales. _Cabell E._ Cabell. Straws and Prayer-Books. _Child B._ Child. Fresh Waters. _Cobb F._ Cobb. Alias Ben Alibi. _Colette_ Colette. Cats, Dogs and I. _Connell C._ Connell. Variety. _Conrad B._ Conrad. Tales of Hearsay. _Contact_ Contact Collection of Contemporary Writers. _Coppard C._ Coppard. Fishmonger’s Fiddle. _Copy B._ Copy, 1925. _Corvo_ Corvo. In His Own Image. _Cotton_ Cotton. Wall-Eyed Caesar’s Ghost. _Dargan_ Dargan. Highland Annals. _Eaton A._ Eaton. The Best Continental Short Stories of 1923–24. _Eaton B._ Eaton. The Best French Short Stories of 1923–24. _Finger C._ Finger. Bushrangers. _Flaubert_ Flaubert. Three Tales. _Fox_ Fox. Il Conte. _Freeman_ Freeman. The Freeman Book. _French K._ French. Great Sea Stories. Second Series. _Galsworthy D._ Galsworthy. Caravan. (English Edition.) _Georgian C._ Georgian Stories, 1925. _Gobineau_ Gobineau. Five Oriental Tales. _Gonzales A._ Gonzales. The Captain. _Gonzales B._ Gonzales. Laguerre. _Gorky D._ Gorky. Story of a Novel. _Gray_ Gray, “Dawgs.” _Harper_ Harper. Harper Prize Short Stories. _Hartley_ Hartley. Night Fears. _Harwood_ Harwood. Judgment Eve. (English edition.) _Hastings_ Hastings, Clough, and Mason. Short Stories. _Hearn B._ Hearn. Japanese Fairy Tales. _Hemingway B._ Hemingway. In Our Time. _Herrick_ Herrick. Wanderings. _Howard_ Howard. Three Flights Up. _Hummel_ Hummel. Subsoil. _Humphrey A._ Humphrey. The Best Love Stories of 1924. _Ibáñez B._ Blasco Ibáñez. The Old Woman of the Movies. _Jacqueline_ Jacqueline, and other Stories. _Jewett_ Jewett. Best Stories. _Komroff_ Komroff. Komroff. The Grace of Lambs. _Kuprin C._ Kuprin. Gambrinus. _Lawrence C._ Lawrence. St. Mawr. _Lynch_ Lynch. The Best Ghost Stories. _Macardle_ Macardle. Earth-Bound. _Machen B._ Machen. The Shining Pyramid. _Mann_ Mann. Death in Venice. _Mansfield D._ Mansfield. The Little Girl. _Maupassant J._ Maupassant. The Horla. _Maupassant K._ Maupassant. Saint Anthony. _Mayne B._ Mayne. Inner Circle. (English Edition.) _New Dec. D._ New Decameron. Volume 4. _Newman_ Newman. The Short Story’s Limitations. _O’Brien L._ O’Brien and Cournos. The Best British Short Stories of 1924. _O’Brien M._ O’Brien and Cournos. The Best British Short Stories of 1925. _O’Brien N._ O’Brien. The Best Short Stories of 1924. _O’Flaherty_ O’Flaherty. Spring Sowing. (English edition.) _Ogawa_ Ogawa. Rose and Witch and other Stories. _O’Shaughnessy_ O’Shaughnessy. Married Life. _Osip_ Flying Osip: Stories of New Russia. _Peterkin_ Peterkin. Green Thursday. _Pilniak_ Pilniak. Tales of the Wilderness. _Poole B._ Poole. The Little Dark Man. _Prize F._ O. Henry Memorial Award. Prize Stories of 1924. _Remizov_ Remizov. The Clock. _Rhys B._ Rhys and Dawson-Scott. Twenty-Three Stories by Twenty and Three Authors. _Rice_ Rice. Winners and Losers. _Robinson_ Robinson. Contemporary Short Stories. _Sackville-West B._ Sackville-West. Seducers in Ecuador. _Seitz_ Seitz. Monogatari. _Sitwell_ Sitwell. Triple Fugue. _Smith_ Smith. The Little Karoo. _Squire_ Squire. The Grub Street Nights’ Entertainment. _Street B._ Street. Mr. Bisbee’s Princess. _Van Dyke_ Van Dyke. Half-Told Tales. _Verga_ Verga. Little Novels of Sicily. _Verhaeren_ Verhaeren. Five Tales. _Watson_ Grant Watson. Innocent Desires. _World_ Johnston. The World’s Best Short Stories of 1925.

ADDRESSES OF MAGAZINES PUBLISHING SHORT STORIES

I. AMERICAN MAGAZINES

Adventure, Spring and Macdougal Streets, New York City. Ainslee’s Magazine, 79 Seventh Avenue, New York City. All’s Well, Gayeta Lodge, Fayetteville, Ark. American Boy, 142 Lafayette Boulevard, Detroit, Mich. American Hebrew, 19 West 44th Street, New York City. American Magazine, 250 Park Avenue, New York City. American Mercury, 730 Fifth Avenue, New York City. American-Scandinavian Review, 25 West 45th Street, New York City. Argosy All-Story Weekly, 280 Broadway, New York City. Asia, 627 Lexington Avenue, New York City. Atlantic Monthly, 8 Arlington Street, Boston, Mass. Blue Book Magazine, 36 South State Street, Chicago, Ill.

## Bookman, 244 Madison Avenue, New York City.

Catholic World, 120 West 60th Street, New York City. Century Magazine, 353 Fourth Avenue, New York City. Charm, 50 Bank Street, Newark, N. J. Chicago Tribune, Chicago, Ill. Collier’s Weekly, 250 Park Avenue, New York City. Cosmopolitan, 119 West 40th Street, New York City. Country Gentleman, Independence Square, Philadelphia, Pa. Delineator, Spring and Macdougal Streets, New York City. Designer, 12 Vandam Street, New York City. Dial, 152 West 13th Street, New York City. Double Dealer, 810 Baronne Street, New Orleans, La. Echo, 1837 Champa Street, Denver, Colorado. Elks’ Magazine, 50 East 42d Street, New York City. Everybody’s Magazine, Spring and Macdougal Streets, New York City. Farm and Fireside, 250 Park Avenue, New York City. Forum, 247 Park Avenue, New York City. Frontier, Garden City, Long Island, N. Y. Good Housekeeping, 119 West 40th Street, New York City. Guardian, 720 Locust Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Harper’s Bazar, 119 West 40th Street, New York City. Harper’s Magazine, 49 East 33d Street, New York City. Holland’s Magazine, Dallas, Texas. Hue and Cry, Woodstock, N. Y. (In summer months only.) Independent, 9 Arlington Street, Boston, Mass. International Arts, 3 Christopher Street, New York City. Jewish Tribune, Marbridge Building, New York City. Ladies’ Home Journal, Independence Square, Philadelphia, Pa. Liberty, 247 Park Avenue, New York City. Little Review, 27 West 8th Street, New York City. McCall’s Magazine, 236 West 37th Street, New York City. McClure’s Magazine, 80 Lafayette Street, New York City. MacLean’s Magazine, 143 University Avenue, Toronto, Ont., Canada. Menorah Journal, 167 West 13th Street, New York City. Midland, Care of Mr. John T. Frederick, Iowa City, Iowa. Modern Quarterly, 318 North Exeter Street, Baltimore, Md. Munsey’s Magazine, 280 Broadway, New York City. New Republic, 421 West 21st Street, New York City. Open Road, 284 Boylston Street, Boston, Mass. Opportunity, 127 East 23d Street, New York City. Outlook, 381 Fourth Avenue, New York City. Pearson’s Magazine, 157 East Ohio Street, Chicago, Ill. Pictorial Review, 216 West 39th Street, New York City. Popular Magazine, 79 Seventh Avenue, New York City. Red Book Magazine, North American Building, Chicago, Ill. Reviewer, Chapel Hill, N. C. Saturday Evening Post, Independence Square, Philadelphia, Pa. Scribner’s Magazine, 597 Fifth Avenue, New York City. Sea Stories Magazine, 79 Seventh Avenue, New York City. Short Stories, Garden City, Long Island, N. Y. Southwest Review, Dallas, Texas. Sunset, 460 Fourth Street, San Francisco, Cal. Woman’s Home Companion, 250 Park Avenue, New York City. Woman’s World, 107 South Clinton Street, Chicago, Ill. World Tomorrow, 104 East 9th Street, New York City.

II. BRITISH AND IRISH MAGAZINES

Adelphi, 18 York Buildings, Adelphi, London, W. C. 2. Blackwood’s Magazine, 37 Paternoster Row, London, E. C. 4. Blue Magazine, 115 Fleet Street, London, E. C. 4. Bystander, Graphic Buildings, Whitefriars, London, E. C. 4. Calendar, 1 Featherstone Buildings, High Holborn, London, W. C. 1. Cassell’s Magazine, La Belle Sauvage, Ludgate Hill, London, E. C. 4. Chamber’s Journal, 38 Soho Square, London, W. C. 1. Colour Magazine, 53 Victoria Street, London, S. W. 1. Corner Magazine, La Belle Sauvage, Ludgate Hill, London, E. C. 4. Cornhill Magazine, 50a Albemarle Street, London, W. 1. Coterie, 68 Red Lion Street, London, W. C. 1. Criterion, 24 Russell Square, London, W. C. 1. Dublin Magazine, 2–5 Wellington Quay, Dublin, Irish Free State. Empire Review, Macmillan and Co., Ltd., St. Martin’s Street, London, W. C. 2. English Life, 9 East Harding Street, London, E. C. 4. English Review, 4 Dean’s Yard, Westminster, London, S. W. 1. Eve, Great New Street, London, E. C. 4. Fortnightly Review, 11 Henrietta Street, London, W. C. 2. G. K.’s Weekly, 20–21 Essex Street, Strand, London, W. C. 2. Gaiety, 10 Adam Street, Adelphi, London, W. C. 2. Grand Magazine, 8–11 Southampton Street, Strand, London, W. C. 2. Graphic, Graphic Buildings, Whitefriars, London, E. C. 4. Green Magazine, Fleetway House, Farringdon Street, London, E. C. 4. Happy Magazine, 8 Southampton Street, Strand, London, W. C. 2. Home Magazine, 8 Southampton Street, Strand, London, W. C. 2. Hutchinson’s Adventure Story Magazine, 34–36 Paternoster Row, London, E. C. 4. Hutchinson’s Magazine, 34–36 Paternoster Row, London, E. C. 4. Hutchinson’s Mystery Story Magazine, 34–36 Paternoster Row, London, E. C. 4. Illustrated London News, 172 Strand, London, W. C. 2. Irish Statesman, 84 Merrion Square, Dublin, Irish Free State. John o’ London’s Weekly, 8 Southampton Street, Strand, London, W. C. 2. London Magazine, Fleetway House, Farringdon Street, London, E. C. 4. London Mercury, 229 Strand, London, W. C. 2. Manchester Guardian, 3 Cross Street, Manchester, England. Nash’s and Pall Mall Magazine, 1 Amen Corner, Paternoster Row, London, E. C. 4. Nation and Athenæum, 10 Adelphi Terrace, London, W. C. 2. New Age, 38 Cursitor Street, Chancery Lane, London, E. C. 4. New Leader, Napier House, 24–27 High Holborn, W. C. 1. New Magazine, La Belle Sauvage, Ludgate Hill, London, E. C. 4. New Statesman, 10 Great Queen Street, Kingsway, London, W. C. 2. Novel Magazine, 18 Henrietta Street, London, W. C. 2. Outlook, 167 Strand, London, W. C. 2. Outward Bound, Edinburgh House, 2 Eaton Gate, London, S. W. 1. Pearson’s Magazine, 17 Henrietta Street, Covent Garden, London, W. C. 2. Premier, Fleetway House, Farringdon Street, London, E. C. 4. Queen, Bream’s Buildings, London, E. C. 4. Quiver, La Belle Sauvage, Ludgate Hill, London, E. C. 4. Red Magazine, Fleetway House, Farringdon Street, London, E. C. 4. Romance, Long Acre, London, W. C. 2. Royal Magazine, 17 Henrietta Street, Covent Garden, London, W. C. 2. Saturday Review, 10 King Street, Covent Garden, London, W. C. 2. Sketch, 172 Strand, London, W. C. 2. Sovereign Magazine, 34–36 Paternoster Row, London, E. C. 4. Spectator, 13 York Street, Covent Garden, London, W. C. 2. Sphere, Great New Street, London, E. C. 4. Story-Teller, La Belle Sauvage, Ludgate Hill, London, E. C. 4. Strand Magazine, 8–11 Southampton Street, Strand, London, W. C. 2. T. P.’s and Cassell’s Weekly, La Belle Sauvage, Ludgate Hill, London, E. C. 4. Tatler, 6 Great New Street, London, E. C. 4. Time and Tide, 88 Fleet Street, London, E. C. 4. Truth, 10 Bolt Court, Fleet Street, London, E. C. 4. 20-Story Magazine, Long Acre, London, W. C. 2. Weekly Westminister, 12 Cursitor Street, Chancery Lane, London, E. C. 4. Windsor Magazine, Warwick House, Salisbury Square, London, E. C. 4. Woman, 34–36 Paternoster Row, London, E. C. 4. Yellow Magazine, Fleetway House, Farringdon Street, London, E. C. 4.

THE BIOGRAPHICAL ROLL OF HONOR OF AMERICAN SHORT STORIES

OCTOBER, 1924, TO SEPTEMBER, 1925

NOTE. _Only stories by American authors are listed. The index figures 1 to 11 prefixed to the name of the author indicate the last Roll of Honor in which his work has been included. The figure 1 refers to 1914, the figure 2 to 1915, etc. The Roll of Honor for 1914 appeared in the volume for 1915. The list excludes reprints._

ADAMS, DAVID ERNEST. Born in Wilton, New Hampshire, 1891. Educated at Phillips-Andover Academy and Dartmouth College. Graduate of Union Theological Seminary. Married. Congregational Minister. Lives in Ware, Massachusetts. “Truth is Stranger----.”

(10) AIKEN, CONRAD (_for biography, see 1922_). Disciple. Last Visit. Strange Moonlight.

(10) “ALEXANDER, SANDRA.” (MILDRED ALEXANDER LEWIS.) (_For biography, see 1923._) Gift.

(11) ANDERSON, SHERWOOD (_for biography, see 1917_). Meeting South. Return.

(6) ANDREWS, MARY RAYMOND SHIPMAN (_for biography, see 1917_). Passing the Torch.

ANTHONY, JOSEPH. Born New York, 1897. B. A., Columbia, 1917. Author: “Rekindled Fires,” 1918; “The Gang,” 1921; “The Golden Village,” 1924. Began as reporter for the _Newark Evening News_, then went into publishing work with Harper and Brothers, the National Association of Book Publishers and the Century Company. Spent two years in London, 1921–23, as manager of Century Company’s foreign office. All writing done in intervals between various jobs. Lives in New York City. Kill or Cure.

(11) ASCH, NATHAN (_for biography, see 1924_). Gertrude Donovan.

(11) BEEDE, IVAN (_for biography, see 1924_). Haywired. Storm.

(3) BENEFIELD, BARRY. “Was born in a little, old mellow town in northeast Texas--oh, yes, there are old towns in Texas--by name Jefferson, in the piney woods, against the Louisiana border. There was some studying at school, much hunting and fishing down the bayou, a little teaching in the country districts, and then an ambitious leap to the State University at Austin. Followed newspaper work on _The Dallas_ (Texas) _News_ and on _The New York Times_. Thus prepared, he began writing advertisements and magazine fiction--mixed diet of what is called, foolishly, romance and realism. The record to date is some forty or fifty short stories, thousands of columns of advertisements and one novel, ‘The Chicken-Wagon Family.’ Works in New York City (advertisements), lives in Peekskill, New York (fiction).” Blocker Locke. Fiery Sweetness in the Air. Guard of Honor.

(11) BENÉT, STEPHEN VINCENT (_for biography, see 1920_). Harrigan’s Head.

(11) BERCOVICI, KONRAD (_for biography, see 1920_). Beggar of Alcazar. Flood. Law of the River. Millstones. Steel Against Steel. Storm. Tinsel. Vineyard.

BIDDLE, FRANCIS B. Born in Paris, 1886. Educated at Groton School, Harvard College, and the Harvard Law School. Formerly private secretary to Mr. Justice Holmes of the United States Supreme Court. Now Assistant United States Attorney in Philadelphia, where he is also engaged in private law practice. Aunt Jane’s Sofa.

BROWN, KENNETH IRVING. Born in Brooklyn, New York, 1896. Educated at Rochester public schools and the University of Rochester. In naval service during the war. Ph.D. Harvard University, 1924. Has had travelling fellowship from Harvard University. Now professor of Biblical literature at Stephens College, Columbia, Missouri. “‘The Christmas Guest’ relates an actual occurrence, but the background has been changed from Greece to Colombia. During the war I was for a time on a merchant vessel carrying Government cargoes. On one trip we brought home a load of lumber from the forests of Colombia, and during the course of that loading I visited the lumber camp described in the story.” Christmas Guest.

(10) BURT, MAXWELL STRUTHERS (_for biography, see 1917_). Beauty and the Blantons.

BURTIS, THOMSON. Man-Made Mutiny.

(5) BUTLER, ELLIS PARKER (_for biography, see 1918_). Idealist.

(3) “BYRNE, DONN.” (BRYAN OSWALD DONN-BYRNE.) Born in New York City, 1889. Educated at University College, Dublin, and in Paris and Leipzig. Married. Author: “Stories Without Women,” 1915; “Stranger’s Banquet,” 1919; “The Foolish Matron,” 1920; “The Woman God Changed,” 1921; “Messer Marco Polo,” 1921; “The Wind Bloweth,” 1922; “The Changeling,” 1923; “Blind Raftery,” 1924; “An Untitled Story,” 1925. Lives at Riverside, Connecticut. Blue Waves of Tory.

(10) CABELL, JAMES BRANCH (_for biography, see 1918_). Above Paradise. Mathematics of Gonfal.

CARVER, ADA JACK. Born in Natchitoches, Louisiana. Educated at the Louisiana Normal College, Judson College, and Columbia University. Married. Won first prize in the third short story contest held by Harper’s Magazine in 1924. Lives in Louisiana. Redbone.

(11) CLARK, VALMA. “Service.”

(11) COBB, IRVIN S. (_for biography, see 1917_). Nobody Sees the Waiter’s Face. Principle of the Thing. Standing Room Only.

(11) COHEN, BELLA (_for biography, see 1924_). Laugh. Yetta’s Fella.

(10) CORLEY, DONALD (_for biography, see 1923_). Manacles of Youth.

(11) CROWELL, CHESTER T. (_for biography, see 1924_). Devil Born in Them. Giovanni and the Goddess. Mary Fisher’s Philosophy. Pariah.

(11) DELL, FLOYD (_for biography, see 1924_). “Hallelujah, I’m a Bum.”

DICKENSON, MAY FREUD. Born in San Francisco. Educated in New York public schools and at Hunter College. Went on the stage and later married a mining engineer. Has lived in Alaska, Ontario, and India. Now lives in New York City. Mouse.

DINGLE, AYLWARD E. Born in Oxford, England, 1874. Went to sea in 1899 as apprentice in a sailing ship. Served at sea twenty-two years, during that time rising to command of square-riggers and steamers. Served in Boxer Rebellion and Boer War. Began writing in 1915. Is author of two novels and several hundred short stories. Lives in Bermuda, but spends all possible time cruising in a seventeen-ton schooner, “Gauntlet,” wherever fancy beckons. Blow the Man Down. Bound for Rio Grande.

(11) DOBIE, CHARLES CALDWELL (_for biography, see 1917_). Arrested Moment. Elder Brother. Hands of the Enemy.

(11) DREISER, THEODORE (_for biography, see 1919_). Glory Be! McGlathery.

DUDLEY, WALBRIDGE. Harvest.

FAGIN, N. BRYLLION. “I am thirty-three years old. Married. I have been errand boy, drug clerk, factory worker, government clerk at Washington, lecturer and college professor. I have received my education in the public and private evening schools of New York, at Michigan State College, at Chicago, Columbia, George Washington and Johns Hopkins universities. My first paid contribution appeared in the _Atlantic Monthly_ in 1918. My name did not appear. Since then I have contributed prose and verse to many magazines, popular and unpopular.” ‘Short Story Writing: An Art or a Trade?’ (Seltzer), 1923. A volume of youthful storiettes, ‘Of Love and Other Trifles’ (Rossi-Bryn), 1925. I live in Baltimore. Buttoned Up.

FISHER, RUDOLPH. Born in Washington, D. C., 1897. Educated in Providence public schools and at Brown University. Graduate of the Medical School of Harvard University, 1924. Married. Now engaged in medical research at Columbia University, as Fellow of the National Research Council. City of Refuge.

(9) FITZGERALD, F. SCOTT (_for biography, see 1922_). Absolution.

(11) GALE, ZONA (_for biography, see 1923)_. Dime.

(9) GEROULD, KATHARINE FULLERTON (_for biography, see 1917_). Army with Banners.

(9) GILKYSON, WALTER (_for biography, see 1922)_. Coward’s Castle.

(9) GRAEVE, OSCAR (_for biography, see 1922)_. Ferry Boat.

GREEN, PAUL. Born on a farm near Lillington, North Carolina. Has written stories, sketches, and plays of a section of the Cape Fear River country which he calls Little Bethel. At present, he is editor of The Reviewer and a member of the faculty of the University of North Carolina. Lives at Chapel Hill, North Carolina. Man Who Died at Twelve O’Clock.

(2) GREGG, FRANCES. Hunch-Back.

HACKETT, FRANCIS. Born in Kilkenny, Ireland, 1883. Educated at Clongowes Wood College, Kildare. Married. Came to America in 1900. Newspaper work in Chicago, 1906–09. Editor, Chicago Evening Post Literary Review, 1909–11. Associate Editor, New Republic, 1914–22. Author: “Ireland, a Study in Nationalism,” 1918; “Horizons,” 1918; “The Invisible Censor,” 1920; “The Story of the Irish Nation,” 1922; “Candor,” 1924. Lives in Paris. Unshapely Things.

HALL, JAMES NORMAN. Forgotten One.

(9) HECHT, BEN (_for biography, see 1918_). Lindro the Great.

(11) HEMINGWAY, ERNEST. Born Oak Park, Illinois. Married. Reporter on Kansas City Star before the War. Served on Italian Front during the War. Wounded, Croce di Guerra. Medaglia D’Argento, Valore Militare. Newspaper man in Europe since 1921. Written short stories since 1916. Amateur boxer and bull fighter. Author: “In Our Time,” 1925. Long story, “The Bull Ring,” translated and published serially in Der Querschnitt, 1925. Lives in Paris. Cross-Country Snow. Doctor and the Doctor’s Wife. Mr. and Mrs. Elliot.

HIBBEN, PAXTON. Born in Indianapolis, 1880. Educated at Princeton and Harvard. F. R. G. S., F. A. G. S. Admitted to bar, but has not practiced law. United States Diplomatic Service, 1905–1912. Secretary International Tribunal of Arbitration at The Hague, 1910. Candidate for Congress, 1914. War correspondent, Collier’s Weekly and Associated Press, 1914–1917; Leslie’s Weekly, 1920–1921. Special correspondent in Russia and Near East of Chicago Tribune, London Daily Chronicle, L’Humanité and United Press. Enlisted as private in United States Army in 1917; captain, 1919; served at G. H. Q., A. E. F. Decorated: Orders of St. Stanislas of Russia, Redeemer of Greece, Sacred Treasure of Japan. Author: “Constantine I and the Greek People”; “The Famine in Russia.” Lives in Indianapolis. Young Man with Great Possessions.

HOUSTON, MARGARET BELLE. Gold Picayune.

HOWARD, SIDNEY. Born in Oakland, California, 1891. Educated at the University of California. Studied play-writing at Harvard. With the American Ambulance in France and later aviator with the rank of captain. Since the War he has been on the staff of Life, The New Republic, Collier’s Weekly, International, and other magazines. Married. Author: “Swords” (play), 1921; “Three Flights Up,” 1924; “Bewitched” (play in collaboration with Edward Sheldon), 1924; “They Knew What They Wanted” (play), 1924; “Lucky Sam McCarver” (play), 1925. Has translated and adapted various European plays. Winner of Pulitzer Prize. Lives in New York City. Such Women as Ellen Steele.

(7) HUSSEY, L. M. (_for biography, see 1920_). Conclusion. Reunion.

(10) JITRO, WILLIAM C. G. (_for biography, see 1922_). Holiday.

(11) KNOWLTON, CLARKE (_for biography, see 1924_). Bridegroom.

(10) KOMROFF, MANUEL. “Born in New York City in 1890 under protest but in good humor. Tampered with schools and tried a college or two under the impression that education was the mark of a gentleman. Discovered his mistake. Travelled far across Siberia and parts of China, and edited an English newspaper in Russia during the Revolution. Married an Englishwoman in 1918 and tried to support her by doing editorial work on newspapers.

He began writing stories through sheer obstinacy and still has the same wife he started with. His first stories appeared in Reedy’s Mirror and The Dial after they had been rejected in other places, and in the face of everything he still keeps on writing when he finds time. He now works for a book publisher, but has an agreeable nature though a sharp and quick tongue.

In spite of his practical jokes his friends like him. He lives like a fool and by so doing hopes to die a wise man.” Beating of the Reed. Grace of Lambs. How Does it Feel to be Free?

(9) LARDNER, RING W. (_for biography, see 1922_). Haircut. Zone of Quiet.

(10) LEECH, MARGARET KERNOCHAN (_for biography, see 1923_). Little White Village.