June 1922

In This Issue
Explore the June 1922 print edition below. Or to discover more writing from the pages of The Atlantic, browse the full archive.
Articles
Is Prohibition of Gas Warfare Feasible?
“It was stated that chemical warfare is ‘a cruel, unfair, and improper use of science.’ The answer to this statement is: ‘So is all warfare.’”
A Glance Toward Shakespeare
Public Opinion
Up Stream, an American Chronicle
Europe - Whither Bound?
The So-Called Human Race
Atlantic Shop-Talk
Being Born Alike but Different
America and the Opium Trade
India and the Opium Trade
Sir John, Miss Amy, Joseph, and Charles
The Waters of Bethesda
The Quare Women: Ii. Taking the Night
Deeper Misgivings
American-Born
Flapper Americana Novissima
The Open-Hearth Furnace: A Chapter in Steel. Ii
Gifts
Uan the Fey
Mine Own Familiar Friend
The Atlantic's Bookshelf
Adrienne Toner
The Beautiful and Damned
Janus-Headed Ireland
Golden Gate
Guilty!
French Naval Ideas
The Boy and the Pig When the Kings Are Gone
Who Killed the Chaperon?
Mountain Mania
If Crinoline Came Back
Of Sermons One Would Wish to Have Preached
The Food of the Poets
What Is in Bluebeard's Chamber?
The Contributors' Column
