After a cursory view of TIME’S summary of events, the Generous Citizen points with pride to:
Tangier untangled. (P. 8.)
A surprise for numismatists. (P. 21.)
Idahoans and Montanans. They live long and die little. (P. 21.)
A. A. A. S., the greatest of its kind. (P. 20.)
“Fair Time of Day” and “Happy Hours” from Buckingham. (P. 31.)
The sublime optimism of Mexicans. (P. 14.)
A Crown Prince committing a comme il ne faut pas. (P. 14.)
Mr. Udy intimate with an Emperor. (P. 10.)
Millionaires. They’ll pay their taxes anyhow. (P. 4.)
Apparent profits for the farmers. (P. 24.)
The Shah of Persia. One Winter’s day he said: “Bring me a wide-awake Yankee, I pray.” (P. 31.)
“Little Congressmen,” emulating their masters. (P. 6.)
Two gentlemen of the air. (P. 24.)
A vigorous editorial page—one of the few surviving. (P. 22.)
A gentlemanly revolution. (P. 12.) The virile American West. (P. 23.)
A not unlovable young man, downed in the end only by treachery. (P. 16.)
The gradual infiltration of American literature into carping Europe. (P. 17.)
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