March 1914

In This Issue
Explore the March 1914 print edition below. Or to discover more writing from the pages of The Atlantic, browse the full archive.
Articles
Newspaper Morals
"I know of no subject, save perhaps baseball, on which the average American newspaper, even in the larger cities, discourses with unfailing sense and understanding"
Patience
A poem
Three Words About the White Man
“We certainly were stunned to see the things we saw. And we were shamed at, the laughing people laughed at our loin-cloths of beaten bark. None but us on the big path worn that old thing of beaten bark. All wore the things bought of the white man. We felt shame. And none spoke our speech.”
The Repeal of Reticence
The Monroe Doctrine and Latin America
The Greater Art
The Education of the Girl
Wind-Songs
The Spirit of the Herd
War and the Interests of Labor
The Second Voice
The Other Side
Out From My Kindred
In the Mind of the Worker
The Wasted Years
Tammas
The Valuation of Railways
The Obvious Athlete
Drawing the Curtain
In Defense of the Hen
English as She Is Edited
A Footnote to the Single-Tax Discussion
