MIA: History: USA: Culture: Publications: The Liberator Table of Contents for all of Volume 5, 1922
The Liberator
Table of Contents for all of Volume 5, 1922
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Full Table of Contents for Vol. 5, No. 1, Issue 46, January 1922
- Cover: City scene, in orange and black, by Gropper
- [Ads] – 2
- [Ads] – 3
- Comment – 5
The Face of Gompers, by Michael Gold – 5
As to Discrimination – by Max Eastman – 5
What is Social Equality, by Walter F. White – 6
The Seattle Insurgents, by Bruce Rogers – 7
The Wheels of Injustice, by Michael Gold – 8
The American Type, by Claude McKay – 8
- Lament (poem), by Daytie Randle
- Announcement [no author] – 9
- Sacco and Vanzetti in Paris, by Ida O’Neil – 10
- At the Gates of Tombs (poem), Carl Sandburg – 12
- In You (poem), Alan Breese – 12
- Sing Cornbelt Men! (poem), Sherwood Trask – 12
- Baal-Moloch (poem), Florence Tanenbaum – 12
- Eternal Recurrence (poem), Rolfe Humphries – 12
- On to Harding, Then Home Again, by Michael Gold, drawings by William Gropper – 14
- The Singing Wives (poem), by Anna Wickham – 20
- All American, by Howard Brubaker – 21
- Dornroschen (poem), by E. V. F.L. – 21
- I Own a Slave, by Henry G. Alsberg – 24 [the page number should be “22” but the document has “24” printed]
- A Telegram (poem), by Max Eastman – 23
- Cherish My Love (poem), by Jarold Vinal – 23
- II (poem), by Jarold Vinal – 23
- Don Giovanni (poem), by Joseph Freeman – 23
- La Paloma in London (poem), by Claude McKay – 23
- Futility (poem), by Claude McKay – 23
- Migratory Workers’ Convention, by a Special Correspondent – 25
- The Russian Idea, by Floyd Dell – 26
- Our Bookkeeper, by Max Eastman – 28
- Books – 29
The Briary Bush [The Briary Bush, by Floyd Dell], by Heywood Broun – 29
” Dreams Out of Darkness,” by Jean Starr Untermeyer, by Joseph Freeman – 29
Soft-Pedalling for Peace [The Folly of Nations, by Frederick Palmer], by Hubert Harrison – 30
- CARTOONS
- Mr. Gompers, by Boardman Robinson – 4
- Waiting-Room, by John Barber – 8
- Balfour: “We grieve for the (British) dead but we don’t forget,” by Boardman Robinson – 11
- India Welcomes the Prince of Wales [no artist name] – 13
- The Conference on Far Eastern Questions, by Hugo Gellert – 18-19 [two-page]
- A blow at birth control [no artist name] – 24
- Soviet Envoys: for Persia the oily palm, for Russia the gate [no artist name] – 25
- Close Harmony, by Maurice Becker – 27
- ART
- From a Cut by Ilonka Karasz – 12
- Figure, by Hugo Gellert – 21
- Woodcut, by J.J. Lankes – 22-23 [two-page]
Full Table of Contents for Vol. 5, No. 2, Issue 47, February 1922
- Cover: Man running with broom and shovel, tones of black and orange, by Gropper
- [Ads] – 2
- [Ads] – 3
- A Christmas Party, by Max Eastman – 5
- Wanderlust (poem), by Helen Bower – 7
- So-Called, by Frederic Raper – 8
- To Our Friends [no author] – 8
- Keats 1821-1921 (poem), by Anna Nelson Reed – 8
- An Eclipse in Moscow, by Tom Barker – 9
- The Vindication of Mr. Thomas, by Charles T. Hallihan – 10
- The Hero, by Edmund Wilson Jr. – 12
- Febru-airy Nothings, by Howard Brubaker – 13
- The Password to Thought–to Culture, by Michael Gold – 14
- Shop-Talk (poem), by Anne Herendeen – 20
- Reflection (poem), by Gladys Bryant – 20
- To a Dancing Partner(poem), by Max Eastman – 20
- April Evening (poem), by Miriam Vedder – 20
- Relief for Vienna, by Frederick Kuh, drawings by Adolph Dohn – 21
- The Uncaging of Debs, by Charles P. Sweeney – 22
- Poems, by Lydia Gibson – 22
- There is a Wood (poem), by Bernard Raymund – 23
- The Stranger (poem), by Anne Herendeen – 23
- Love (poem), by Joseph Freeman – 23
- Crowds (poem), by Hazel Ball – 23
- Trees in Winter (poem), by Lydia Gibson – 23
- Indifference (poem), by Marya Zaturensky – 23
- The Little Lincoln, by Claude MacKay [sic] – 24
- Two Conversations, by Max Eastman – 27
- John Reed’s Book, by Nikolai Lenin – 28
- Humor and the Revolution [review of The Sense of Humor by Max Eastman], by Floyd Dell – 29
- Books – 31
The Medicine Man of Pasadena [The Book of Life, by Upton Sinclair], by Joseph Freeman – 31
My Dear Wells: Being a Series of Letters Addressed by Henry Arthur Jones to Mr. H. G. Wells Upon Bolshevism, Collectivism, Internationalism, and the Distribution of Wealth, reviewed by Joseph Freeman – 31
- [Ads] – 33
- A Correction, by the Editors – 34
- [Ads] – 35
- [Ads] – 36
- CARTOONS
- H.G. Wells, by Boardman Robinson – 4
- Viennese Waltz, by Adolph Dehn – 6
- Self-Portrait, by Wanda Gag – 7
- Up in the Air, by Hugo Gellert – 9
- Work like hell and be happy, by Gropper – 12
- A Suggestion for the New Peace Dollar, by Hugo Gellert – 13
- The Seven Who Were Hanged, by Muriel Hannah – 16
- John Bull to the Irish Bourgeois: “You Drive Him Now!” by Hugo Gellert – 18-19 [two-page]
- In Starving Vienna-Cabaret Parisien, by Adolph Dehn – 21
- ” Please Give for the Future!” by Adolph Dehn – 22
- A Drawing by Maurice Sterne – 24
- Hail, the Workers’ Party, by Boardman Robinson – 26
- ” But really, you have no classes in America!” by Gropper – 27
- Arthur Henderson, Labor M. P. [no artist name] – 28
- In the Cathedral, by John Barber – 30
- ART
- Woodcut of women, by Lydia Gibson – 20
- Ghosts [artist name illegible] – 23
- Woodcut by J. J. Lankes – 25
Full Table of Contents for Vol. 5, No. 3, Issue 48, March 1922
- Cover: Woman in hat, in orange and black tones, by Hugo Gellert
- [Ads] – 2
- [Ads] – 3
- Wanted: Pioneers for Siberia! by Michael Gold – 5
- Simon Gerty (poem), by Elinor Wylie – 8
- Poems by Class War Prisoners – 9
Death Bed (poem), by Charles Ashleigh – 9
Stone (poem), by Ben Gitlow – 9
Freedom (poem) [no author] – 9
Taps (poem), by Ralph Chaplin – 9
Vespers (poem), by Charles Ashleigh – 9
- A Polish Countess, by Henry Alsberg – 10
- Three Fables, Charles Oorum – 11
- The Living Dead (poem), by Ralph Chaplin – 11
- One Day’s Work, by George Granich – 12 Funeral Oration [no author name] – 14
- A Southern Holiday (poem), by E. Merrill Root – 15
- Wesley Everest (poem), by Ralph Chaplin – 15
- Americanizing Haiti, by Martha Foley – 16
- November 11th (poem), by Francis X. Biddle – 17
- What is Lacking in the Theatre, by Claude McKay, drawings by Hugo Gellert – 20
- Sonnet (poem), by Lydia Gibson – 22
- At the Corner (poem), by Hazel Hall – 22
- Absence (poem), by Claude McKay – 22
- On the Road (poem), by Claude McKay – 22
- The Farmer (poem), by E. Merrill Roo – 22
- Indeterminate Sentences, by Howard Brubaker – 23
- Prize Fights vs. Color, by Michael Gold – 24
- Liberator Bond for Sale [no author] – 26
- Liberator News [no author] – 26
- Books [reviews] – 27
Suggesting a Biography, by Max Eastman – 27
A Bourgeois Hero [The Lonely Warrior, Claude C. Washburn], by Merrill Denison – 29
More High-School Realism [Tales of Mean Streets, by Arthur Morrison], by Michael Gold – 29
[The Science of Eating, by Alfred W. McCann], by A.M. – 30
- [Ads] – 31
- [Ads] – 32
- [Ads] – 33
- [Ads] – 34
- [Ads] – 35
- [Ads] – 36
- CARTOONS
- Japan Has Promised to Evacuate Siberia–When? by Hugo Gellert – 4
- ” Thank Gawd, I’m a woikin’ horset” by Lundean – 7
- You Can Make It ... Boys! by Hugo Gellert – 8 Ya fed him wood alcohol! Ain’t ya ashamed of yerseIf? by Gropper – 10
- ” Say, dont call me a cockroach business man, ya hear? . . . by William Gropper – 11
- Where the Dividends Come, From George Grosz, Berlin – 12
- – and Where They Go to, George Grosz Berlin – 13
- ” Never mind Revolution. This country’d be alrite if we had our beer,” by William Gropper – 16
- ” Honest, Ray, it’s 14-karat gold!” From a lithograph by Boardman Robinson – 17
- Lenine at Genoa, by Boardman Robinson – 18-19 [two-page]
- Chekhov’s The Sudden Death of a Horse, by Hugo Gellert – 20
- Katinka, by Hugo Gellert – 20
- Tartar Dance, by Hugo Gellert – 21
- The Parade of the Wooden Soldiers, by H.G. – 21
- ” My word! How can one stand such low people?” by William Gropper – 23
- A Right Hook to the Jaw, by William Gropper – 24
- In-fighting, by William Gropper – 25
- Yesterday - Treat ’Em Rough, by Maurice Becker – 26
- Today - Treat ’Em Square! by Maurice Becker – 27
- ART
- An Art Student, by Wanda Gag – 6
- A Negro Girl, by Onorio Ruotolo – 14
- [Figures of animals], by Zoltan Hecht – 22
Full Table of Contents for Vol. 5, No. 4, Issue 49, April 1922
- Cover: Drawing of woman in white outline against red background, by Hugo Gellert
- [Ads] – 2
- [Ads] – 3
- The Hallucinations of Ivan Ivanovitch, by ex-Count A. B. Bohrischeff-Pushkin – 5
- Garvey as a Negro Moses, by Claude McKay – 8
- Theosophy on the High Seas: A Letter En Route from Max Eastman – 11
- A Letter from Mexico, by Maurice Becker – 12
- Futility (poem), by Bernice Lesbia Kenyon – 13
- Enigma, A Play by Floyd Dell – 14
- The Cannes-Cannes Conference, by George Slocombe – 17
- End of the Week (poem), by Michael Gold – 17
- The Peasant (poem), by Eugene Jolas – 17
- Man, X His Mark (Comment on an Exhibit of Drawings by Boardman Robinson), by Robert Minor – 20
- Poems by Joseph Freeman – 22
The Dancers – 22
Fantasia – 22
Pastoral – 22
Revolutionary Prelude – 22
Love at Dawn – 22
De Profundis – 22
- Thoughts of a Great Thinker, by Michael Gold – 23
- A Laughter-Dinner Speaker, by Howard Brubaker – 26
- Never Enslaved (poem), by Lydia Gibson – 27
- French Leave (poem), by Claude McKay – 27
- Portrait (poem), by Louise Bogan – 27
- A Happy Poet (poem), by Dorine Elsmie – 27
- I Was a Ship (poem), by Francis B. Biddle – 27
- Books (reviews) – 28
A Young Girl” s Diary [A Young Girl’s Diary, Prefaced by Sigmund Freud], by Joseph Freeman – 28
Charlie Chaplin Writes [My Trip Abroad, by Charlie Chaplin]], by Claude McKay – 28
Let’s Be Friends [Woo-king With the Working Woman], by Karl Pretshold – 29
The Negro as Poet [The Book of American Negro Poetry], by Walter White – 29
- [Ads] – 31
- [Ads] – 32
- [Ads] – 33
- [Ads] – 34
- [Ads] – 35
- [Ads] – 36
- CARTOONS
- Ghost of the dead ’Hun” ;... by Robert Minor – 4
- Spring is here, by Lydia Gibson – 6
- ” A little suffering purifies the soul, don’t you think?” by William Gropper – 7
- An Old Worker, by Onorio Ruotolo – 8
- ” Will There Be a Resurrection This Easter?” by Hugo Gellert – 10
- At a Socialist Dance in Yucatan , by Maurice Becker – 12
- The Fruits of Wilson Russian Policy, by William Gropper – 13
- Lost In the Storm, by Art Young – 15
- ” Gee, if I only get my hands on the guy who said two can live cheaper than one!” by Clive Weed – 16
- The Wage Cut Drive, by William Gropper – 18-19 [two-page]
- In the Street-car, From a lithograph by Boardman Robinson – 20
- Dr. Conference-” I’ll give him this anaesthetic, then he won’t suffer so,” by Boardman Robinson – 21
- The Mailed Fist Wins Temporarily, by Art Young – 23
- Mammy Harding Doesn’t Want Taxes on Capital, by Hugo Gellert – 24
- ” Paul, isn’t it horrifying that ’the perfume makers’ strike is still on?” by William Gropper – 25
- ART
- Houses, by Niles Spencer – 9
- Man and animal, by Bertram Hartman – 27
Full Table of Contents for Vol. 5, No. 5, Issue 50, May 1922
- Cover: Man wielding what looks like an anvil, against a black background
- [Ads] – 2
- [Ads] – 3
- Palm Sunday in the Coal Fields, by Michael Gold – 5
- Glands and the Hero, by Floyd Dell – 11
- Eastward Ho! by Tom Barker – 11
- Let’s Get Them Out, by Robert Minor – 14
- Spring Sonnets (poems), by Claude McKay – 16
Negro Spiritual – 16
The White House – 16
To the Intrenched Classes – 16
The Night Fire – 16
- The Italian Seamstress, by Arturo Giovannitti – 17
- Tahitian Holiday (poem), by Lydia Gibson – 20
- Song of a Woman (poem), by Jean Starr Untermeyer – 20
- Poems – 21
To An Outgoing Tenant, by Mary Carolyn Davies – 21
Design for a Perfect World, by Louis Untermeyer – 21
Complexity, by Judith Tractman – 21
- Bouquets for May Day – 22
Radical Tactics, by William Z. Foster – 22
Cut Loose (poem), by Loureine A. Aber – 22
India, by Basanta Koomar Roy – 22
” What’s The Use?” By Carlo Tresca – 22
Max Eastman on the Job [no author] – 22
Moonshine, by Howard Brubaker – 23
Mexico, by Roberto Haberman – 23
- He Who Gets Slapped, by Claude McKay – 24
- In a Southern Prison Camp, by Isaac H. Schwartz – 25
- Books (reviews) – 28
A Critic Faces Himself [Upstream, by Ludwig Lewisohn], by Pierre Loving – 28
A Prize Fighter Novelist [Emmett Lawler, by Jim Tully], by S. A. DeWitt – 28
White and Black in Texas [White and Black, by H. A. Shands], by Mary White Ovington – 28
- [Ads] – 29
- [Ads] – 31
- [Ads] – 32
- [Ads] – 33
- [Ads] – 34
- [Ads] – 35
- [Ads] – 36
- CARTOONS
- Strike! by Hugo Gellert – 4
- Mr. Public - “There’s another big coal strike on.” . . . by Clive Week – 6
- ” You’ll always carry us along, old $, you can’t fail!” by William Gropper – 7
- Cafe Scenes in Vienna, by Adolph Dehn – 10
- ” Oh, give a feller a chance; you’ve been good long enough!” by Art Young – 12
- Lloyd George hears there are no golf links at Genoa, by Hannah – 14
- Mexican peons, by Maurice Becker – 15
- ” Blow, breezes, blow,” by Lydia Gibson – 16
- Her First Spring Day, by Wanda Gag – 17
- The Circuit at Genoa, by Hugo Gellert – 18-19 [two-page]
- Old Adam in Bernard Shaw’s “Back to Methuselah,” by William Gropper – 25
- Desolation, by Adolph Dehn – 27
- ART
- A drawing, by C. Bertram Hartman – 21
- A drawing, by Boardman Robinson – 22
- A drawing, by Lydia Gibson – 22
- A drawing, by Hugo Gellert – 23
- A drawing, by Cornelia Barns – 23
Full Table of Contents for Vol. 5, No. 6, Issue 51, June 1922
- Cover: Drawing of woman’s face [no artist name]
- [Ads] – 2
- [Ads] – 3
- Down the Coast from Genoa, by Max Eastman, drawings by Sors and Crispi – 5
- Alone (poem), by Claude McKay – 8
- An Open Letter from Charles W. Wood to Hon Richard Enright and Hon. John F. Hylan – 9
Max Eastman (left), Marcel Cachin (right) and Correspondents of Isvestia and L’Humanite
in front of the Pallozo San Giorgio (photo) – 9
- The Wobblies Raid on the Seamen’s Union, by Dick Orson – 12
Andy’s Ship, by William Gropper – 122
- The Case of Nickolay Mansevich, by Stanley Boon – 14
- Red Roses for Hillman, by Michael Gold – 16
- April (poem), by Stirling Bowen – 24
- As Might High Ladies (poem), by Francis Murphy – 24
- Explanations and Apologies, by Floyd Dell – 25
- Kokomo Arraigned (poem), by Ralph E. Goll – 26
- The Constant Reader, by Howard Brubaker – 27
- Out of Texas, by Lucy Maverick – 28
Negro Girl, by Niles Spencer – 28
Negro Boy, by Hugo Gellert – 29
Caucasian Boy, by Maurice Sterne – 29
- The Poet Seeks a New Beauty (poem), by Marya Zaturensky – 30
- Mortgage:(poem) – Florence Tannenbaum – 30
- [Ads] – 31
- [Ads] – 32
- [Ads] – 33
- [Ads] – 34
- [Ads] – 35
- [Ads] – 36
- CARTOONS
- Tchicherin, by Sors – 4
- Charles Rappaport, Marxian,. . . by Crispi – 6
- Rakovsky, by Crispi – 7
- Tchicherin, by Crispi – 7
- George Slocombe, Correspondent of the London Daily Herald by Sors – 8
- Steam Shoveling, by Reginald March – 13
- Demonstration, by O. Nagel – 17
- The Oily Scramble, by Gropper – 18-19 [two-page]
- Storm in Connecticut, by Wanda Gag – 20
- Vintage Girl, by Maurice Sterne – 21
- Ginger Ale Jazz, by Cornelia Barns – 27
- ART
- Low Tide, by Stuart Davis – 14
- Consolation, by Hannah – 15
- A drawing, by O. Nagel – 24
Full Table of Contents for Vol. 5, No. 7, Issue 52, July 1922
- Cover: Men in sombreros, against orange background
- [Ads] – 2
- [Ads] – 3
- Class Struggle at Genoa, by Max Eastman – 5
- Rakovsky, Premier of Soviet Ukrainia (photo) – 6
- Dreadnought (poem), by E. Merrill Root – 9
- The Descending Knife, by John Nicholas Beffel – 10
- The Neophyte, by Stuart Chase – 11
- The New Forces (poem), by Claude McKay – 14
- Sundown In America (poem), by Charles Recht – 14
- Nocturne (poem), by Joseph Freeman – 14
- The Young Writer, by Michael Gold – 15
- City-Girl (poem), by Maxwell Bodenheim – 17
- This Is Amnesty Week [no author] – 17
- Russian Pictures, by Mary Heaton Vorse – 20
- Night Scene (poem), by Pascal D’Angelo – 23
- Banks and Bank Clerks, by Llewelyn Powys – 24
- An Immigrant (poem), by Maria Moravsky – 25
- High Fog (poem), by James Rorty – 25
- Wisdom (poem), by Lydia Gibson – 25
- Julibelous, by Howard Brubaker – 26
- Liberator News [no author] – 27
- Vanity, Vanity, by Charles Oorum – 27
- Antiquity (poem), by E. Merrill Root – 27
- To a Warrior (poem), by Pascal D’Angelo – 27
- George Gorsz, Artist-Communist, by Hi Simons – 28
- A Letter from Boardman Robinson – 29
- Onward, Christian Soldiers, by Lewis Gannett – 30
- [Ads] – 33
- [Ads] – 34
- [Ads] – 35
- [Ads] – 36
- CARTOONS
- The Vultures Are Still Waiting, by Hugo Gellert – 4
- The True Seat of Government, by Maurice Becker 7
- ” Here’s another petition, against child labor, Mr. Secretary,” . . . by Russell – 9
- Long Live the Long-dead Revolution! by Maurice Becker – 10
- [No title, street scene] [no artist name] – 12
- ” My God, what a face!!” by William Gropper – 13
- Proletarian Poet, by Hugo Gellert – 15
- The Knight of the Round Belly, by Robert Minor – 18-19 [two-page]
- Among the Bootleggers, by Cornelia Barns – 21
- The Machine Man, by J. Edgar Miller – 22
- Art and Revolution on Second Avenue, by Wilt Coyne – 24
- ” Oh, dear me! it must be so romantic to work in a sewer!” by William Gropper – 26
- Congressmen, by William Gropper – 29
- Still Waiting for the Vegetarian Millennium, by Stuart Davis – 32
- ART
- Simplicity Is Wisdom, Charmer, by Stanley Szukalski – 8
- A Drawing by Ben Benn – 16
- A drawing [no artist name] – 17
- Wind in the Trees, by Wanda Gag – 23
- Back to Nature! by Reginald Marsh – 25
Full Table of Contents for Vol. 5, No. 8, Issue 53, August 1922
- Cover: Swimming, in orange and black, about to dive off a diving board; blue background, by Gropper
- [Ads] – 2
- [Ads] – 3
- The Caucasus Under the Soviets, by John Dos Passos – 5
Dining alone, by Robert Henri – 6- Peace Reigns at Herrin, by Carl Haessler – 9
- Release (poem), by Judith Tractman – 10
- Seventeen (poem), by Gladys Oaks – 10
- Burial (poem), by Sylv [first name indistinct] Stragneff 10
- Two Critics of Russia, by Max Eastman – 11
Drawing of Pierre Monatte – 10- Evening Song (poem), by Stirling Bowen – 14
- Mojave (poem), by Beulah May – 14
- Birthright, by Claude McKay – 15
- A Rebel Grows Old (poem), by Gladys Oaks – 16
- The Hero, by Mary Heaton Vorse – 17
- Why Wear Clothes? by Stuart Chase – 23
Drawing of nude woman – 23- Drawing of man, by William Gropper – 26
- Moscow Contrasts, by Anise – 25
- Otto Soglow [no author] – 25
- Star Market (poem), by Pierre Loving – 25
- The Silly Season, by Howard Brubaker – 26
- Books [reviews] – 27
The Tyranny of Women [Aaron’s Rod, by D. H. Lawrence], by Joseph Freeman – 27
The Opinions of Anatole France [The Opinions of Anatole France, Recorded by Paul Gsell. Translated from the French by Ernest A. Boyd], by Floyd Dell – 28
Friends of American Freedom [Poems, by Ezra Pound; Bars and Shadows, by Ralph Chaplin], by Stanley Boone – 30
- [Ads] – 33
- [Ads] – 34
- [Ads] – 35
- [Ads] – 36
- CARTOONS
- The Angel of the Lords, by Hugo Gellert – 4
- Noon on the Hills, by Louis Ribak – 7
- Wood cut by J. J. Lankes – 8
- The Tipple, by Maurice Becker – 9
- Miners’ Homes, by Maurice Becker – 10
- Under the Elevated, by Otto Soglow – 12
- ” Oscar! Look vot a fat babee she is, ain’t he?!!” by William Gropper – 13
- She: “It must be just fine to see the world and get an education at the same time, like the Navy posters say!” by Cornelia Barns – 16
- Pershing Wants a Big Standing Army, by Hugo Gellert – 17
- Gompers to Capitalist Villain: “You have reduced me to beggary, Sir Marmaduke; . . . by Boardman Robinson 18-19 [two-page]
- ” Harding says it’s against the law to strike.” “Yeh, ’nd I guess it’s against the law to eat I” by Maurice Becker – 20
- ” Whad’ye doin’, drinkin’ it?” by Reginald Marsh – 21
- The Human Form Divine at Coney, by Reginald Marsh – 24
- The Crowning of Monsieur France, by William Gropper – 29
- ART
- Drawing of birds, by Reginald Marsh – 15
- The Boat Maker, by J.J. Lankes – 22
Full Table of Contents for Vol. 5, No. 9, Issue 54, September 1922
- Cover: Man crowned in leaves, gazing at a bottle; orange, brown and green tones; by Hugo Gellert
- [Ads] – 2
- [Ads] – 3
- Engaged, by Genevive Taggard – 5
- The Wanderer (poem), by Beulah May – 10
- Second Song of Release (poem), by Judith Tractman – 10
- The Jesus-Thinkers, by Michael Gold – 11
- Interior (poem), by Gladys Oaks – 12
- All Fools Address the Artful Wise (poem), by James Waldo Fawcett – 12
- Carma, by Jean Toomer – 13
- Remorse (poem), by Helen Frazee-Bower – 13
- A Sioux Dies In Prison (poem), by Ralph Chaplin – 13
- Dogs and Shadows in Japan, by Gertrude Haessler – 14
- Hoho-Mood (poem), by Stanley E. Babb – 21
- A True Poem (poem), by Anne Herendeen – 21
- For the Silent Defenders, by Art Shields – 22
- Song (poem), by Marya Zaturensky – 23
- Ringing the Dumbells, by Howard Brubaker – 24
- Georgia Dusk (poem), by Jean Toomer – 25
- Sonnet (poem), by David Abarbanel – 25
- The Sheepherder (poem), by Beulah May – 25
- To My Mother (poem), by Louis Ginsberg – 25
- Silhouette (poem), by Judith Tractman – 25
- In the World of Books – 26
Don Juan at Fifty [Casanova’s Homecoming, by Arthur Schnitzler], by Joseph Freeman – 26
Love In Alaska [Alaska Man’s Luck. A Romance of Fact, by Hjalmar Rutzebeck; My Alaskan Idyll, by Hjalmar Rutzebeck], by Floyd Dell – 29
New Facts and Stale Fancies [Shall It Be Again? by John Kenneth Turner], by Karl Pretshold – 30
Twenty-Nine Needles [Twenty-nine Tales from the French. Translated from the French by Mrs. Alys Eyre Macklin] [no author] – 31
- You Came to Me (poem), by Harold Vinal – 31
- [Ads] – 32
- [Ads] – 33
- [Ads] – 34
- [Ads] – 35
- [Ads] – 36
- CARTOONS
- Strike Violence That Doesn’t Get Into the Newspapers, by Russell 4
- Out of work, by Andree Ruellan – 7
- Midnight near the docks, by Otto Soglow – 8
- A Discussion on Communism, by Will Coyne – 10
- In Business for Himself, by Maurice Becker – 11
- Social Unrest In the Harem, by Russell – 15
- Four cartoons by Russell – 18-19 [two-page]
- Movie Training, by A. Rose – 22
- ” G’wan, whadd’ye worryin’ about?” by Reginald Marsh – 24
- How gaily the bachelor writes of Love! by A. Rose – 26
- How dreary the love tales of the married man! by A. Rose – 27
- A Freudian Session, by William Gropper – 28
- ” My boss can put your’n in his pocket, Lizzie . Brown!” by Stuart Davis – 30
- ART
- Dawn, by Adolph Dehn – 6
Full Table of Contents for Vol. 5, No. 10, Issue 55, October 1922
- Cover: Factory scene in tones of blue, black and orange, by Adolph Dehn
- [Ads] – 2
- [Ads] – 3
- Labor Liquidates Revolution, by J.B. Salutsky [J.B.S. Hardman] – 5
- The Battle-Fields (poem), by Max Eastman – 8
- The Ox, by Regis Gignoux – 9
- Gay Vienna, by Frederick Kuh – 10
- Words from a Calaboose, by Pierre Loving – 13
- Apologies [no author] – 13
- The ’Jesus-Thinkers,’ by Upton Sinclair – 15
- To The Liberty Bell (poem), by Edna St. Vincent Millay – 15
- Modern History in Michigan, by Stanley Boone – 16
- Tariffied, by Howard Brubaker – 17
- Silences (poem), by David P. Berenberg – 17
- Autumn (poem), by Stirling Bowen – 17
- Running Water (poem), by Miriam Allen deFord – 17
- Art in Starving Germany, by William Schack – 20
- Revery (poem), by William Sehaek – 21
- Loss (poem), by Else Baroness von Freytag-Loringhoven – 21
- In the World of Books – 22
[Eloquent Death, by John Peale Bishop and Edmund Wilson Jr.], by Floyd Dell – 22
The Dung-Heap of Civilization [The Enormous Room, by E. E. Cummins], by Pierre Loving – 23
Maeterlinck in a Fog [The Great Secret, by Maurice Materlinck, translated by Bernard Miall], by A. Kandel – 24
The Dictatorship of Happiness [La Dictature du Bonheur, by Henri Bru], by Benj Amin Ginsburg – 24
How To Make A Million Dollars [The First Million the Hardest, by A. B. Farquhar], by George Granier – 25
- Mezzotints (poem), by Sylvia Stragnell – 26
- O Proletariat! (Poem), by Rose Pastor Stokes – 26
- A Knife in the Back, by Karl Radek – 27
- Chill (poem), by Else Baroness von Freytag-Loringhoven – 29
- Becky, by Jean Toomer – 30
- Some Changes [no author] – 30
- On Virtue [Psychoanalysis and Love, by Andre Tridon], by Joseph Freeman – 31
- [Ads] – 32
- [Ads] – 33
- [Ads] – 34
- [Ads] – 35
- [Ads] – 36
- CARTOONS
- Progress, by Art Young – 4
- Inflammatory propaganda [no artist name] – 6
- ” After all, life is wonderful, when you come to think of it,” by William Gropper – 7
- ” Yes, Henry is gone-and impractical to the last. Coffins will be 20 per cent cheaper next month,” by Adolph Dehn – 11
- Second Avenue promenade, by A. Rose – 12
- A Middling Good Haul, by Reginald Marsh – 14
- [A drawing], by Wanda Gag – 17
- Just One More Fling, by William Gropper – 18-19 [two-page]
- Emancipated, by Hugo Gellert – 20
- ART
- Cider mill, by J. J. Lankes – 10
- On Her Thirty-fifth Birthday, by Hugo Gellert – 15
- Drawing by Maurice Becker – 16
- Waters at Evening, woodcut by J. J. Lankes – 22
- Drawing by L. Kravis – 25
- A drawing by Maurice Becker – 31
Full Table of Contents for Vol. 5, No. 11, Issue 56, November/December 1922
- Cover: Woman’s face in orange, against a blue background, by Frank Walts
- [Ads] – 2
- [Ads] – 3
- [Ads] – 4
- [Ads] – 5
- Editorials – 6
We Haven’t Cracked Under the Strain – 6
Revolutionary – 6
The Elections – 6
A Capitalist Manifesto – 6
The Communist International – 7
Pardon of the Russian Social Renegades – 7
Vladivostok to Constantinople! – 7
When Thieves Fall Out – 7
A Political Psychoanalyst – 8
Italy Learns – 8
Gene Debs and Bernard Shaw – 10
Sons of Big Guns – 10
The Capitalist Radical – 10
- Bernard Shaw and the Revolution [letters between the Liberator and Shaw] – 11
- A Little Communist Joke [no author] – 11
- Saved Again! [no author] – 11
- Russia’s Embattled Liberators, by Eugene V. Debs – 12 He’s Well Again, by Hugo Gellert – 12
- We Want a Labor Party, by Robert Minor – 13
- The Recruiting Sergeant, by Ben Lucien Burman – 17
- A Look at the Elections, by C.E. Ruthenberg – 18
- Dialogue in a Grave (poem), by Louis Untermeyer – 19
- Exhalation (poem), by Sylvia Stragnell – 19
- Santa Marianova, by Eugene Lyons – 20
- John Reed and Raymond Lefebvre (poem), by Simon Felshin – 25
- Toward Amalgamation, by Stanley Boone – 26
- Mountain Pool (poem), by Bernice Lesbia Kenyon – 27
- Nocturne (poem), by Dorine Elsmie – 27
- Let’s Have Some Liberty, by Edward Pyle – 28
- Jobbers in Justice, by Karl Pretshold – 29
- Sellebration, by Howard Brubaker (poem) – 32
- Books (reviews) Babbit and My Russian Friend [Babbitt. A Novel, by Sinclair Lewis], by Floyd Dell – 33
- What’s All the Shootin’ For? [Gargoyles, by Ben Hecht], by Gertrude Weil Klein – 34
- The English of Her [The Garden Party, by Katherine Mansfield], by Pierre Loving – 35
- The Adventures of a Liberal [The Last Mile, B.J. Frank McAlister], E.L. – 35
- Who Said Wilsonism! by John Kenneth Turner – 36
- Spring Night At Lachaise’s (poem), by Jean Starr Untermeyer – 36
- [Ads] – 37
- Isadora Duncan on Russia, by Nancy Markoff – 38
- Culture and Revolution [no author] – 38
- [Ads] – 39
- [Ads] – 40
- [Ads] – 41
- [Ads] – 42
- [Ads] – 43
- [Ads] – 44
- CARTOONS
- All Hail Soviet Russia! by Lydia GIbson – 5
- The Rake’s Progress, by Art Young – 9
- Drawing, by Lydia Gibson – 10
- Drawing by Adolph Dehn – 13
- Vive M’sieu Clemenceau! by Adolph Dehn – 14
- Midnight with the ponies . . . by Frank Walts – 15
- The Grave-Diggers, by William Gropper – 18
- The Dying Wage, by Robert Minor – 18-19 [two-page]
- In a Berlin cafe, by Adolph Dehn – 24
- Done for, by William Gropper – 30
- ART
- Madonna and Child, by William Gropper – 17
- A woodcut by J.J. Lankes – 19
Page created 17 March 2015