Issue
Featured Articles
When Christmas Was Banned In Boston
Author: Dana P. Marriott
Many a book, a magazine, a play, a movie, has been banned in Boston. But Christmas?
A Cardsharp—or Vice Versa
Author:
A soldier in the American army being unfortunately surprised at a game of cards by a sergeant who owed him an old grudge, was carried before the colonel of the regiment, that he might be punished for gaming, against which general orders were very severe.
Providence Rides a Storm
Author: James Thomas Flexner
Had a tempest not thwarted his plans, George Washington might have lost the Revolution in the first major operation he commanded
Holiday Post Cards
Author:
Essay: What Is Important In History?
Author: Morris Bishop
The Great Meddler
Author: Gerald Carson
In Henry Bergh—a reformed dilettante who founded the A.S.P.C.A.—many saw a latter-day Saint Francis of Assisi. But others, especially the cruel or the thoughtless, regarded him as The Great Meddler.
Now That You Are Married Do Not Always Expect The Lover
Author:
We are not sure exactly what it is that married women tell their little sisters about marriage nowadays, but it is certainly not very much like the letter we publish here. It was written in a spidery hand from a home on the newly settled upper Mississippi to a young bride, Mrs. Oliver Ormerod, back in Liverpool, England, and the advice it gives says more than any long treatise about the apologetic, indeed timorous, position of women only a century and a half ago. Mrs. Ormerod was the greatgrandmother of our editor. She is shown in an old miniature about the time she married her Anglican minister, and before she reared a large family of sons.
Mr. Coolidge’s Jungle War
Author: Richard O’Connor
Forty years ago, American Marines tangled with a tough Latin-American guerrilla leader whose tactics against “the capitalists” would evoke an unhappy shock of recognition in Vietnam today.
The Army Of The Cumberland: A Panorama Show By William B. T. Travis
Author: Bruce Catton
Concerned lest history
overlook their triumphs, veterans of the Army of the Cumberland had them writ large -- on a canvas five hundred feet long.
of the Cumberland had them writ large—on a canvas
five hundred feet long
He Took The Bull By The Horns
Author: Jerrold J. Mundis
In the early days of the century, a fearless cowboy named Bill Pickett roused audiences on two continents by giving the fledgling sport of rodeo one of its most exciting events.