The Cover
Stand from under, children; papa has a few screws loose and may suffer a loss of balance, dispersing steel pipes and himself across the greensward. Befall what may, the children will go right on awesomely thinking that fathers are wonderful beings who can do anything, a touching but goofy aspect of child psychology. Maybe mamma could have done this job in half the time without risk of injury, but a woman's place is in the home. when the swingery does stand up, Reddy, junior, and his friends will use it until a dreadful bare spots worn in the lawn; then, fed up with swings, they will go play in the street. Amos Sewell, who watched a real live parent suffer like this, says he knows what papa is saying to those screws, but it is something only screws should hear.
In this issue
Vol. 228, No. 51
Short Stories
Boys are Afraid of Girls . . . John de Meyer
The Merry Widow of Flatbush . . . William Heuman
Marriage Was Her Rocket . . . Robert Standish
The False Step . . . James Hensel
Articles
Doctors Should Tell the Truth . . . I. Phillips Frohman, M.D., as told to Sidney Shalett
How We built Our Pool . . . Donald S. Stroezel
The Face of America: "Howdy, Folks!" . . . Photograph by D.W. Curtis
I Say Pro Golf isn't So Tough . . . Lloyd Mangrum, as told to Charles Price
Magic Eyes for Fighting Men . . . Milton Lehman
They Lock Hot Weather Out . . .
The Day it Rained Money . . . Harold H. Martin
The Happy Genius . . . Eleanor Harris
Cities of the World: (No. 21) Athens . . . Ernest O. Hauser
Serials
The Fall of Edie Markham (Second of three parts) . . . Harriet Frank, Jr.
Counterfeit Cavalier (fourth of eight parts) . . . Clarence Budington Kelland
Other Features
Letters
Editorials
Post Scripts
Verse
Keeping Posted