ROSE WILDER LANE BIBLIOGRAPHY A Work in Progress

Compiled by Nancy Cleaveland and Susan Wittig Albert

SFB San Francisco Bulletin SFC San Francisco Call JRCB Junior Red Cross Bulletin SEP Saturday Evening Post LHJ Ladies Home Journal WD Woman’s Day PC Pittsburgh Courier KCP Kansas City Post

1909 “Seals.” Junior Section, SFC, 27 Feb. 1909: 1. “Romances of the Wires.” Junior Section, SFC, 4 Feb. 1909: 4. “Santa Cruz: The Playground of California.” SFC 28 May 1909: 17.

1910 “Listen, Girls Who Work: Bank Account on 60 Per.” KCP, 19 April 1910: 1. “Crowds Increase at Each Session of Pure Food Show.” KCP 19 April 1910: 2. “Columbia Shoe Dealer Casts Aspersions Upon Size of Milady’s Boot.” KCP 4 May 1910: 9. “Bower of Roses Is to Greet Return of Anna Lee Owen.” KCP May 1910. “Husband Declares His Wife Spanked Him: She Says She Didn’t.” KCP May 1910. “Mount Washington Hen Lays Comet Egg.” KCP May 1910: 6. “Anna Lee Owen is Back at Her Desk In Marks’ Office.” KCP 5 May 1910: 9. “May Become High Luxury in Future.” KCP 5 May 1910: 5. “Heroism of 2 Men Saves 150 Persons When Boat Sinks.” KCP 19 May 1910). “200 Babies Vie for Honor at Contest at Pure Food Show.” KCP 20 May 1910: 8. “Crowing, Cooing Babies Compete at the Grocers’ Pure Food Show.” KCP 20 May 1910: 8.

1913 “Beauty Hints for Soil Workers.” Fort Wayne IN Journal-Gazette, 30 June 1913: 9-3. “Beauty Hints for Soil Workers.” The New Castle PA News, 30 June 1913: 8-3. “Keep Self Attractive.” Marble Rock IA Journal. 4 Dec 1913: 3. “Keep Self Attractive.” Stevens Point WI Daily Journal, 5 Dec 1913: 5.

1914 “Babe of Bartlett’s Alley.” SFB, 1914.

1915

“Why Are Men?” SFB, 18 and 25 Jan 1915. “The Poor Male Biped Is Unable to Conceal the Sign ‘Sold’ With Which He is Labeled.” SFB, 23 Jan 1915. “A Decanted Dictionary.” SFB, 26 Jan 1915. “Getting Acquainted With Strangers.” SFB, 27 Jan 1915. “Where is the Real Bohemian?” SFB, 29 Jan 1915. “Villains of Fiction.” SFB, 1 Feb1915. “Being the True Story of a Young Wife, With a Moral on the Side.” SFB, 3 Feb 1915. “Surprise Questions; Extempore Answers.” SFB, 4 Feb 1915. “Cussedness? No, Merely, Synapses.” SFB 9 Feb 1915. “What Does Woman, Believer in the Extremely Improbably, See in the Beauty Hints?” SFB, 11 Feb 1915. “Quarrels of the Proverbs.” SFB, 12 Feb 1915. “Smith Put Next.” SFB, 13 Feb 1915. “Beauty Versus Brains.” SFB, 15 Feb 1915. “Love in a Cottage.” SFB, 18 Feb 1915. “For This, Yes, This is Musical Comedy.” SFB, 19 Feb 1915. “The Thinness of Male Deceit.” SFB, 23 Feb 1915. “To Make a Long Story Short.” SFB, 15 Feb 1915. “The Queer Things We, Us and Company Take For Granted from the Third Person Plural.” SFB, 1 March 1915. “A Jitney Romance.” SFB, 4 March-13 April 1915. “Pay No Heed; Just be Kind.” SFB, 3 April 1915. “Always Kind; Out of Race.” SFB, 10 April 1915. “The Radical Club.” SFB, 17 April 1915. “The Money Makers Club.” SFB, April-June 1915. “Story of Art Smith.” SFB, 19 May-21 June 1915. Reprinted as Art Smith’s Story: The Autobiography of the Boy Aviator. San Francisco: SFB, 1915. “Tragedy of Romance Is That Youth Thinks It Will Always Endure.” SFB, June 1915. “Ed Monroe, Man-Hunter.” SFB, 11Aug 11-15 Sep 1915. “The People in Our Apartment House.” SFB, 25 Sep-22 Oct 1915. “Behind the Headlight.” SFB, 9 Oct-15 Nov 1915. “Behind the Screens in Movie Land.” SFB, 24 Oct-12 Dec1917. “Henry Ford’s Own Story.” SFB, Nov 1915. Reprinted as Henry Ford’s Own Story. New York: Ellis O. Jones, 1917. “Charlie Chaplin’s Own Story.” SFB, 1915. Reprinted as Charlie Chaplin’s Own Story. Indianapolis: The Bobbs-Merrill Company, 1916. “The Art of Fong Jung.” SFB, 1915. “The City That’s Upside Down” (poem) in “The Tuck’em Corner,” SFB, 1915. “She Dies Young, Refuses to Stay Dead, and Persists in Playing the Ghost.” SFB, 1915. “The Art of Fong Jung.” SFB, 1915. “The Open House.” SFB, 1915.

1916 “Soldiers of the Soil.” SFB, 23 Feb-3 June 1916. “A Nurse’s Story.” SFB, 31 March-3 April 1916. “The Stenographer.” SFB, 8 July-4 Aug 1916. “Who Killed John Harding?” SFB, 26 Aug-18 Sept 1916. “The Building of Hetch Hetchy.” SFB, 4 Oct-14 Nov 1916. “Bringing the Records to Berta.” SFB, 22-27 Nov, 1916.

1917 “Out of Prison.” SFB, 2 Feb15 March 1917. “Garden: The Giver of Life.” Oakland CA Tribune, 8 April 1917: 57. “The City at Night.” SFB, 30 April-16 May 1917. “Myself.” SFB, May–June 1917. “Memories of East Retained by Syrians Here.” Syracuse NY Herald, 13 July 1917: 24. “And Peter,” sequel to “Myself.” SFB, Aug-Oct 1917. “Behind the Scenes in Movie Land.” SFB, 25 Oct-12 Dec 1917. “Life and Jack London.” Sunset 39, Oct 1917-May 1918.

1918 “The Food Question.” SFB, Jan 1918. “Twinkle, Twinkle Little Stars!” Sunset 40, Jan1918: 38-41. “Magazine Writer Visits Arbuckle, Finds Him Serious.” Manitoba (Winnipeg) Free Press, 16 Feb 1918: 59. “Mars in the Movies.” Sunset 40 Feb 1918: 39-42. “How I Became a Great Actress.” Sunset 39 April 1918: 35-38. “Santa Clara Farmers, Become Men, Tell Pilgrim How It Was Done.” San Jose Mercury Herald, 18 May 1918: 6. “Drab Peace Spirit.” SFC & Post, 12 Nov 1918: 14. “The Girls They Leave Behind Them.” Sunset 41, Nov 1918: 36-8. “, by Herself.” Sunset 41 Nov 1918: 26. “The Embattled Farmers.” SFB, 1918. “Diverging Roads.” Sunset, Oct-Nov-Dec 1918. Reprinted as Diverging Roads. New York: The Century Company, 1919.

1919 “America Enters Jerusalem.” LHJ 36 April 1919: 7-8. “Flowing Kava Bowl” (with Frederick O’Brien). Asia 19 July 1919: 638-44. “My Darling Hope” (with Frederick O’Brien). Asia 19 July 1919: 692-3. “A Bit of Gray in a Blue Sky.” LHJ 36 Aug 1919: 33. “Atuona Goes to Church” (with Frederick O’Brien). Asia 19 Sep 1919: 830-5. “Strange as Foreign Places.” McCall’s 49 Sep 1919. “Out of the East Christ Came.” Good Housekeeping 69 Nov1919: 38 ff. “The Passing of the Men of Ahao” (with Frederick O’Brien). Asia 1919. White Shadows in the South Seas (with Frederick O’Brien). New York: Grosset & Dunlap, 1919.

1920 “The Joys of a Journey Home” (article about Kansas City). Le Grand IA Reporter XI 12 March 1920, reprinted from SFC. “The Joys of a Journey Home” (article about Topeka). Le Grand IA Reporter XI 19 March 1920, reprinted from SFC. “Mother Number 22,999.” Good Housekeeping 70 March 1920: 22-3. “Making of Herbert Hoover.” Sunset 44 1920: April-June. Reprinted as The Making of Herbert Hoover. New York: The Century Co., 1920. “The Untold Story” (with Sarah Bernhardt, translated by RWL). McCall’s May 1920: 14ff. “O Lalala the Gambler” (with Frederick O’Brien). Century 98 Aug 1919: 446-454. “The Bubble.” McCall’s Sep 1920. “To the Unknown.” McCall’s Oct 1920). Reprinted in Lowell MA Sun 27 Nov 1920: 6. “Basil the Monk.” JRCB Nov 1920. “The Children’s Crusade.” Good Housekeeping 71 Nov 1920: 20ff. “Stanyke’s Christmas Eve.” JRCB Dec 1920. “Hearts Unreasoning” (with Sarah Bernhardt, translated by RWL). McCall’s Dec 1920: 8ff. “Insidious Enemy.” Good Housekeeping 71 Dec 1920: 30ff.

1921 “Temptation.” (with Sarah Bernhardt, translated by RWL). McCall’s Jan 1921: 9ff. “Come With Me to Europe.” SFC & Post Feb–July 1921. “Heart of the Rose” (with Sarah Bernhardt, translated by RWL). McCall’s Feb 1921: 10ff. “Daughter of Normandy” (with Sarah Bernhardt, translated by RWL). McCall’s March 1921: 9ff. “A Letter From Europe.” American Red Cross. Reprinted in Olean NY Evening Herald 25 May 1921: 3. “The Untold Story.” McCall’s May 1921: 14ff. “Polish Women Win Power and Promise to Organize Army.” The Indianapolis IN Star 4 Sep 1921: 46. “Red Cross Worker Writes of Picturesque Balkan Peasant.” San Jose CA Mercury Herald 3 Nov 1921: 16. “Red Cross Worker Describes Unique Invasion of Europe.” San Jose CA Mercury Herald 4 Nov 1921: 9. “Balkan Peasant an Aristocrat.” Indianapolis IN Sunday Star 6 Nov 1921: 1ff. “The Boy Cobbler of Albania.” JRCB Nov 1921. “My Uncle Ter-Barsegh (with Aman Ohanian, translated by RWL). Asia 21 Dec1921: 998-999. “World’s Strangest People.” SFC & Post 18 July-15 Sep1921. Reprinted as Peaks of Shala. New York: Harper & Brothers, 1923.

1922 “Innocence.” Harper’s 144 April 1922: 577-84. “Dancer of Shamakha.” Asia 22 April-Aug 1922. “Adventures of Rose Wilder Lane.” SFC & Post June-Sep 1922. “Gray Sweaters Work Miracles: What American Garments are Doing for Albania.” Pinedale WY Roundup 7 Sep 1922: 5. “Ragusa the Sleeping Beauty.” World Traveler XIV Oct 1922: 8-10ff. “Sadik Hassen of the Mati.” JRCB Dec 1922. “Day in Sarajevo.” World Traveler XIV 1922.

1923 “Unknown Albania.” World Traveler XV March 1923: 20ff. “World Travelogues.” SFC & Post March-Oct 1923. “No Land Great While Its Women Go Veiled.” Kansas City Star 13 May 1923: 10. “Budapest For a Bath.” World Traveler XV May 1923: 20ff. Reprinted in Amy Lauters’ The Rediscovered Writings of Rose Wilder Lane, Literary Journalist. Columbia MO: University of Missouri Press, 2007. “Cling to Ancient Custom: Albanian Tribal Laws Govern Behavior as They Have Done Throughout the Centuries.” Kingston (NY) Daily Freeman 14 June 1923: 17. Reprinted in Le Grand (IA) Reporter 15 June 15 1923: 7. “Padre Luigi of Kiri.” Harper’s 147 June 1923: 17-27. “Peasant and Priest in Soviet Armenia.” Asia 23 July1923: 494-498. “Edelweiss on Chafa Shalit.” Harper’s 147 Nov 1923: 762-768.

1924 “Egypt Smiles.” World Traveler XVI Jan 1924: 9ff. “Baalbek: Built by Giants.” World Traveler XVI March 1924: 19ff. “The Business of Being a Bonne.” World Traveler XVI April 1924: 30ff. “Under the Spell of Brittany.” World Traveler XVI April 1924: 7ff. “Autumn.” Harper’s Monthly Magazine 149 June 1924: 82-7. “Veal Cutlets.” Harper’s 149 Sep 1924: 542-543. “Pumpkin Pies and Panthers.” SEP 1 Nov 1924. “An Armenian Christmas.” Tyrone PA Daily Herald 22 Dec 1924: 7 “Of a Pilgrimage to Mecca.” Independent 113, 27 Dec 1924: 567-568. “An Adventure With Bandits.” World Traveler XVI Dec 1924: 14ff. “Christmas in Erivan.” Good Housekeeping 79 Dec 1924: 48ff.

1925 “The Hill Billy Comes to Town.” Country Gentleman 90, 17 Jan 1925: 6ff. “What the American Woman Thinks: New Women in Turkey.” Woman Citizen 7 Feb 1925: 15. “Footprint.” Country Gentleman 21 March 1925:10ff. “If I Could Live My Life Over Again.” Cosmopolitan 78 March 1925: 32ff. “Portrait.” Woman Citizen 9, 18 April 1925: 23. “Handsome Is As Handsome Does.” Country Gentleman 90, 15 April 1925: 4ff. “The Five-Tined Fork.” Country Gentleman 90, 9 May 1925. “Thirty-Mile Neighbors.” Country Gentleman 90, 16 May 1925: 5ff. “That Foreigner at Lathrop’s.” Country Gentleman 90, 27 June 1925. “The Blue Bead.” Harper’s 151 June 1925: 34-46. “A Place in the Country.” Country Gentleman 90, 15 Aug 1925: 3ff. “Snake in the Grass.” Country Gentleman 90, 15 Aug 1925: 4ff. “Across the Editor’s Desk.” Sunset 55 Aug 1925: 53. “Drought.” Country Gentleman 90 Oct 1925 14ff. “The Screen Door.” Harper’s Magazine 151 Oct 1925: 630-631. “Hill Billy Pride.” Country Gentleman 90 Dec 1925: 15ff. He Was a Man. New York: Harper & Brothers, 1925.

1926 “Prairie Hollow Singing.” Country Gentleman 91 Feb 1926: 15ff. “My Beauty Beliefs.” Frederick MD Daily News 8 May 1926: 9. “Frolic At Smilin’ Jim’s.” Country Gentleman 91 May, 1926: 10ff. “I, Rose Wilder Lane, Am the Only Truly Happy Person I Know, And I Discovered the Secret of Happiness the Day I Tried to Kill Myself...” Cosmopolitan 79 June 1926: 42ff. “In Zenobia’s City.” World Traveler XVII Aug 1926: 36ff. “The Walnut Tree.” Country Gentleman 91 Sep 1926. “Thanksgiving.” Country Gentleman Nov 1926: 6ff. Hill-Billy. New York: Harper & Brothers, 1926. A Man of the Hills. London: Thornton, Butterworth Ltd., 1926.

1927 “Crude War Methods Used in Albania.” San Antonio TX Light 2 Jan 1927: 5. “What the Albanians Think of America.” Travel 48 Feb 1927: 21-25. “Yarbwoman.” Harper’s 155 July 1927: 210-21. “And on Earth, Peace, Goodwill.” Country Gentleman 92 Nov 1927: 13.

1928 “How Can You Hold the Man You Love?” Pictorial Review 29 May 1928: 18. “One Thing in Common.” LHJ 45 Sep 1928: 5. “Easy Idealism.” Letter to the editor, Forum 1928. “Good Roads.” Country Gentleman 93 Oct 1928: 6ff. “How I Wrote Yarbwoman.” The Writer 1928. Cindy:A Romance of the Ozarks. New York: Harper & Brothers, Publishers, 1928.

1929 “Portrait.” Woman’s Journal 14 Jan 1929: 34. “Harvest.” Harper’s 158 Jan 1929: 226-38. “Gypsy Trail.” LHJ 46 Feb 1929: 14-15. “Ruction In Eden.” Country Gentleman 94 (March, 1929). “Innocence.” Fitchburg MA Sentinel 6 Aug 1929: 11. “Winding Road.” LHJ 46 Nov 1929: 16.

1930 “I Live in a Small Town.” Pictorial Review 31 Feb 1930: 4ff. “Village Maiden.” Redbook v. 55 no.1, May 1930: 64 “Reynard Runs.” North American Review 230 Sep 1930: 354-60.

1931 “Autobiographical Sketch.” Good Housekeeping 92 Feb 1931: 82. “A Man in the House.” Good Housekeeping March 1931: 64-7. “Paid In Full.” Country Gentleman 101 May 1931: 7. Rolling Stone: The Life and Adventures of Arthur Radclyffe Dugmore (with Lowell Thomas). Doubleday, Doran, 1931.

1932 The Dog Wolf.” Good Housekeeping 94 March 1932: 50-53ff. “Old Maid.” SEP 205 23 July 1932. “Immoral Woman” LHJ 49 Sep 1932:14-15. “Let the Hurricane Roar.” SEP 205 22 Oct, 29 Oct, 1932. Reprinted in Country Gentleman May, June, July, 1943. Memoir of a Soldier of Fortune: Raphael de Nogales (with Lowell Thomas). Doubleday, Doran, 1932. This Side of Hell: Dan Edwards, Adventurer (with Lowell Thomas). Doubleday, Doran, 1932. Little House in the Big Woods (with Laura Ingalls Wilder). Harper & Row, 1932.

1933 “Long Skirts.” SEP 207 April, 1933. “Country Jake.” SEP 208 26 Aug 1933: 8-9. “A Little Flyer in Inflation.” Harper’s 167 Sep 1933: 484-490. “Wheat and the Great American Desert.” SEP 23 Sep 1933: 10-11ff. “Hired Girl.” SEP 206 11 Nov 1933: 10-11. “State’s Evidence.” Country Gentleman 103 Nov 1933: 16 “It’s the Sentiment.” LHJ 50 Dec 1933: 6-7. “Letter to the editor.” Better Homes and Gardens Dec 1933: 19. “Portrait.” Better Homes and Gardens Dec 1933: 19. Let the Hurricane Roar. New York: Longmans, Green and Company, 1933. Old Gimlet Eye: The Adventures of Smedley D. Butler (?with Lowell Thomas). Farrar and Rinehart, 1933. Farmer Boy (with Laura Ingalls Wilder). New York: Harper & Row.

1934 “Object Matrimony.” SEP 1 Sep1934: 5ff. “Pie Supper.” American Magazine 118 Oct 1934: 36ff. “Vengeance.” Liberty Feb 1934: 28-33.

1935 “Thankless Child.” SEP 207 2 Feb 1935: 8-9. “Review of The Folks by Ruth Suckow.” Oakland (CA) Tribune 28 April 1935: 8. “Nice Old Lady.” SEP 208 6 July 1935: 12-13. “Who’s Who and Why.” SEP 208 6 July 1935: 30. “Good Fences.” Country Gentleman Aug 1935: 8ff. Old Home Town. Longmans, Green and Company, 1935. Little House on the Prairie (with Laura Ingalls Wilder). New York: Harper & Row, 1935.

1936 “Happy Ending.” Harper’s Bazaar Jan 1936: 44ff. Reprinted in Fiction Parade/Golden Book Feb 1937. “Credo.” SEP 208 7 March 1936: 5-7ff. Abridged in Reader’s Digest 28, May 1936: 1-6. “Journey’s Beginning.” SEP 209 12 Sep 1936: 12-13. “Horse-and-Buggy Days.” SEP 209 21 Nov 1936: 27ff. “The Dreadful House.” Country Gentleman May 1936: 14ff. “A Woman’s Place is in the Home.” LHJ 53 Oct 1936: 3ff. “Christmas Reunion.” Good Housekeeping 103 Dec 1936: 44ff. Born to Raise Hell: The Life Story of Tex O’Reilly, Soldier of Fortune (with Lowell Thomas). Doubleday, Doran, 1936. Give Me Liberty (expanded from “Credo” SEP 208 7 March 1936). New York: Longmans, Green, 1936.

1937 “Silk Dress.” LHJ 54 Aug 1937: 11-13. “Home Over Saturday.” SEP 210 11 Sep 1937: 5-7. Reprinted by William Anderson, 1974. “Portrait.” SEP 210 4 Sep 1937: 88. “The Song Without Words.” LHJ 54 March 1937: 11-13.

1938 “Free Land.” SEP 210 5 March 1938: 5; 12 March:18; 19 March: 20; 26 March:16; 2 April: 20; 9 April: 24; 16 April: 26; 23 April: 27. “Should We Help Our Children Marry?” WD March 1938. “Fathers Make the best Mothers.” WD April 1938: 6ff. Letter to the editor. The New York Times 5 June 1938: 112. “West of Danbury.” Connecticut Nutmeg 23 June 1938: 1. “Don’t Send Your Sons to College.” WD Aug 1938: 4ff. “Don’t Be Afraid to Upholster.” WD Oct 1938. Letter to the editor. The New York Times 15 Dec 1938. “American Jews.” American Mercury 45 Dec 1938: 501-502 Free Land. New York: Longmans, Green and Company, 1938.

1939 “Free Land” (excerpt). Scholastic 34 11Feb 1939: 11-12. “Own Your Own Home.” WD Jan 1939: 7ff. “American Revolution, 1939.” SEP 311 7 Jan 1939: 23ff. “Drive Like a Woman!” Good Housekeeping 108 Jan 1939: 30ff. “Biographical note, portrait.” Scholastic 34 11 Feb 11, 1939: 12. “Who Shall Say When We Shall Go to War?” Good Housekeeping 108 March 1939: 169ff. “We Women Are Not Good Citizens.” WD March 1939. “War: What Women of American Can Do to Prevent It.” WD April 1, 1939: 4-5. “Why I am For the People’s Vote on War.” Liberty 16:13 1April 1939:11-12. “Shall We Save It Again?” Letter to the Editor. Forum and Century CI May 1939: VII. “Come Into My Kitchen.” WD June 1939. “Country Life.” Cosmopolitan June 1939. “Long May Our Land Be Bright.” Cosmopolitan Aug 1939. “Don’t Tell Me How to Live My Life.” WD Sep 1939: 6-8. “Christmas Customs.” WD 2 Nov 1939. “We Who Have Sons.” WD Dec 1939: 4ff. “And on Earth, Peace, Goodwill.” Country Gentleman 1939.

1940 “Your Handwriting Never Lies.” WD 3 Feb 1940: 52. “We Go to a Wedding.” WD June 1940. “Crochet an Heirloom Coverlet.” WD June 1940. “Minnesota Farm Boy.” WD July 1940. “Wishing You a Merry Christmas.” WD July 1940. “America Tells Her Story in Needlework, Patchwork.” WD Aug 1940. “Everybody’s Making Hooked Rugs.” WD Sep 1940. “Holiday Tablecloth, Cross Stitch.” WD Oct 1940. “All Men Are Liars.” WD 1940.

1941 “Knitted Bedspreads that are News.” WD March 1941: 34-35. “The Story of American Needlework.” WD March 1941. “A Question for Americans.” Christian Century 58 23 April 1941: 558-559. “This is Crewel Work.” WD April 1941. “This is Hooking.” WD June 1941. “This is Cross-Stitch.” WD July 1941. “County Fair.” WD Aug 1941. “This is Knitting.” WD Aug 1941. “This is Appliqué.” WD Sep 1941. “This is Quilting.” WD Oct 1941. “This is Crochet.” WD Nov 1941. “This is Weaving.” WD Dec 1941.

1942 “This is Needlepoint.” WD Jan 1942. “This is Outline.” WD Feb 1942. “The Story of American Needlework.” WD March 1942. “My House In The Country.” WD May 1942:12-13. “Today’s Crewel.” WD May 1942. “Today’s Appliqué.” WD June 1942. “Today’s Quilting.” WD July 1942. “Rose Lane Says.” Column for the Pittsburgh Courier. “Freedom Has Many Meanings but only the Individual Has the Power to Generate It.” PC 21 Nov 1942: 15. “Fascism Can Be Licked Only When Each Person Accepts His Responsibility.” PC 28 Nov 1942: 15. “Miss Lane Finds Hero in Elevator Operator Who Goes Forth to Die for Freedom.” PC 5 Dec, 1942: 15. “The South Should Find Another Subterfuge to Deny the Vote if the Poll Tax Bill Passed.” PC 12 Dec 1942: 15. “By an Ingenious Method of Reasoning, Christians Say Men are Equal in Heaven but Not on Earth.” PC 19 Dec 1942: 15. “Professional Thinkers Have Divided Equality Into Many Categories, but They Omit Human Equality.” PC 26 Dec 1942: 12.

1943 “Wake Up America! Is Social Security Possible Without Regimentation?” The Evening Standard 26 June 1943: 2. “Let the Hurricane Roar” (condensation). Reader’s Digest 43 Dec 1943: 117-133. “Rose Lane Says.” Column for the Pittsburgh Courier. “Human Energy and Individual Freedom Have Made America Great.” PC 2 Jan 1943: 7. “Now is the Time to Think About ‘Planned Economy; for Post-War World.” PC 9 Jan 1943: 7. “History of France Shows Little Support for a Real Democracy.” PC 16 Jan 1943: 15. “The Little Man’s Delusion Creates Tyrants and Makes Possible the ‘Enemy of Mankind.’” PC 23 Jan 1943: 12. “‘Social Gains’ Make Them Slaves and They Demand Recognition of their Human Rights.” PC 30 Jan 30 1943: 15. “Copies of the Courier Could be Used to Educate Whites Along the Lines Suggested by Schuyler.” PC 6 Feb 1943: 6. “The Term ‘Negro’ Presents a Dilemma in the Fight for Human Equality.” PC 13 Feb 1943: 6. “‘Race’ and ‘Class’ are Delusions Based on Old World Beliefs.” PC 20 Feb 20 1943: 6. “There are No Fantasies About Human Equality: God Made All Equal.” PC 27 Feb 1943: 6. “Every American Should Help to Destroy the Old Superstition That All Men Are Not Created Equal.” PC 6 March 1943: 6. “Post-War Planners of 1782 Created Nothing but a ‘Dream World.’” PC (March 13, 1943: 6. “Man Has Always Believed Some Power Controlled His Destiny and That He is Not Responsible for Fate.” PC 20 March 1943: 6. “Americans Need to Discard Their Insane Notion of ‘Race.’” PC 27 March 1943: 15. “Americans Must Once Again Learn that Freedom is Self-Control, Responsibility.” PC 3 April 1943: 6. “American System Points The Way to a Better World in the Future.” PC 10 April 1943: 6. “Every Colored American’s Insistence on Equality Has Historic Importance.” PC 17 April 1943: 6. “In Order to Produce A Better World, We Must Understand Human Energy.” PC 24 April 1943: 6. “The Answer to Any Problem Is Within the Individual Himself.” PC 1 May 1943: 6. “World Future Depends On Complete Acceptance Of Man’s Equality Creed.” PC 8 May 1943: 6. “Freedom Is a God-Given Right for Each Person to Control His Own Energy.” PC 15 May 1943: 6. “There Can Be No Compromise: Man Is Either Free or Not Free.” PC 22 May 1943: 6. “History Proves That Controlled Mankind Dissipates Energy.” PC 29 May 1943: 6. “America Has Proved that Effective Use of Human Energy Leads to a Better World.” PC 5 June 1943: 6. “When Man Discovered His Real Nature, He Created Modern World.” PC 12 June 1943: 6. “America Demonstrates Practical Workings of Living Human Energy.” PC 19 June 1943: 6. “Idiotic Demands Show Americans Do Not Yet Believe Man Is Free.” PC 26 June 1943: 6. “Will Americans Keep the Way to Freedom Open to All Mankind?” PC 3 July 1943; 6. “Pantelleria, An Island in the Mediterranean, Was First of all Race Prejudice.” PC 10 July 1943: 6. “Fight for Freedom and Equality Plunged America Into War.” PC 17 July 1943: 6. “Europeans Believe the Little People Have No Rights That Deserve Respect.” PC 24 July 1943: 6. “Pegler Fights Courageously, But He Does Not Understand What He Is Fighting For.” PC 31 July 1943: 6. “Ignore Your Responsibility and You Will Have a Tyrant in the Form of a ‘Mussolini.’” PC 7 Aug 1943: 6. “Modern Education Ignores Fact That Man Is Own Master.” PC 14 Aug 1943: 6. “America Will Be Saved When the Masses Critically Examine the Spoken Words.” PC 21 Aug 1943: 6. “Humanity’s Problems Can Only Be Solved By Individuals of Moral Worth.” PC 28 Aug 1943: 6. “Americans Ignore Reality In Blinding Attempts to Solve Racial Problem.” PC 4 Sep 1943: 6. “Labor Asked For Security and Now Finds Itself In Slavery Under New Laws.” 18 PC 18 Sep 1943: 6. “Subsidy Payments Will Not Lower the Cost of Living.” PC 25 Sep 1943: 6. “Social Security: A False Principle to Make the Masses of People Docile.” PC 2 Oct 1943: 6. “These Have Proven That All Men Can Live Without War.” PC 9 Oct 1943: 6. “Americans Have Devised Only World-Peace Plan That Will Stop Wars.” PC 16 Oct 1943: 6. “The Worker Who Produces All of America’s Wealth Pays All of the Taxes.” PC 23 Oct 1943: 6. “A Poor, Penniless Negro Orphan Boy, Robert L. Vann Rose to Great Heights Here.” PC 30 Oct 1943: 6. “Schuyler Is Wrong: Our Is Not Based on Moral Corruption.” PC 6 Nov 1943: 6. “Immorality Is a Matter of Individual Choice in Answer to Schuyler.” PC 13 Nov 1943: 6. “Capitalism is Not the Only Realistic Economy That Has Ever Worked.” PC 27 Nov 1943: 6. “Capitalism Has Led the Economic Advance of These United States.” PC 4 Dec 1943: 6. “In Capitalism the Poor Get Richer and the Rich Get Poorer; Here is Proof.” PC 11 Dec 1943: 7. “The Results of Using Individual Self-Control Is Called Capitalism.” PC 18 Dec 1943: 6. “Socialism Does Not Represent the Highest Form of Capitalism.” PC 25 Dec 1943: 6. “What is This—The Gestapo?” National Economic Council, 1943. The Discovery of Freedom: Man’s Struggle Against Authority. John Day Company, 1943.

1944 “Thieves of Bari,” Letter to the editor. Newsweek 22, 20 March 1944: 4ff. “Escape From Regimentation.” Reno (NV) Evening Gazette 6 April 1944: 1. “Rose Lane Says.” Column for the Pittsburgh Courier. “Wrong Concept of is as Old as Time Itself.” PC 1 Jan 1944: 6. “Proper Function of State is to Use Force to Protect Individual in His Freedom.” PC 8 Jan 1944: 6. “Selfishness is the Very Basis of Human Worth and Human Dignity.” PC 15 Jan 1944; 6. “Our Capitalist Economy is Supplying Food, Arms to Win the Present War.” PC 22 Jan 1944: 6. “Good Writers Needed, But Don’t Write a Novel for a Prize.” PC 29 Jan 1944: 6. “A Writer’s Sole Job is to Tell the Truth as He Sees It in the Whole Human Life.” PC 5 Feb 1944: 6. “Young Writers Should Study Hard, Develop Strong Self-Reliance.” PC 12 Feb 1944: 6. “It’s Strange, But True, That Colored Americans Cherish Color Prejudice.” PC 19 Feb 1944: 6. “A National Service Act Will Not Represent Gain, But Would Mean Slavery.” PC 26 Feb 1944: 6. “Soldier Vote Bill Proves it is Our Weaknesses That Make Our Country Great.” PC 4 March 1944: 6. “I’m Being Practical and See the Negro Only as Another Human Being.” PC 11 March 1944: 6. “A Better World Can Be Made by Ordinary People; Trust Their Common Sense.” PC 18 March 1944: 6. “Race Should Be Forgotten in the Writing of Fiction.” PC 25 March 1944: 6. “Color Discrimination Does Not Exist on the Fiction Markets.” PC 1 April 1944: 6. “Capitalism Does Not Cause Economic Cruelties or Injustices.” PC 8 April 1944: 6. “Power of Christianity Can Increase Only by Individual Free Will.” PC 15 April 1944: 9. “Historical Role of Church Was Opposition to Police Power of Pagan State.” PC 22 April 1944: 6. “Using Political Power to do Good Has Always Resulted in Disaster.” PC 29 April 1944: 6. “Patience Can Cause Handicap.” PC 24 April 1944: 2. “Time Coming when Confusion of Thinking About Capitalism Will be Seen as Fantastic.” PC 6 May 1944: 6. “Controlled Society or Planned Economy Leads to Slavery.” PC 13 May 1944; 6. “Nothing but Ghastly Cruelties Can Enforce a Controlled Economy.” PC 20 May 1944; 6. “Capitalism is Nearest to Free Economy Than Man Has Ever Created.” PC 27 May 1944; 6. “Co-Operatives Another Form of Capitalistic Enterprise of Free Man.” PC 3 June 1944; 6. “Do Americans Intend to Go on Acting as Free Persons?” PC 10 June 1944; 6. “Money is Not Capital but the Means of Value in Every-Day Wealth.” PC 17 June 1944; 6. “Man Must Continually Produce to Get Capital and Economic Freedom.” PC 24 June 1944; 6. “Tools of Production Equal to All, But Not capital for Economic Freedom.” PC 1 July 1944: 6. “Communism Conceals Fallacy in Philosophy of ‘Economic Equality.’” PC 8 July 1944: 6. “Christian Socialism is Static Economy that Destroys Human Energy.” PC 15 July 1944; 6. “Capitalism Provides Manufacturing Tolls and Economic Equality.” PC 22 July 1944: 6 “An Island Incident Proves the Merits of Individual Freedom.” PC 29 July 1944: 6. “Capital Wealth and Human Brotherhood, Benefits to Mankind.” PC 5 Aug 1944: 6. “Capital Wealth Must Be Shared and Divided Among Others or Lost.” PC 12 Aug 1944: 6. “Power of Capital Wealth is Not Economic - It is Moral.” PC 19 Aug 1944: 6. “Granting Franchise Raises Production Cost to Consumers.” PC 26 Aug 1944: 6. “Capitalism Does Not Cause Wars, But States’ Economic Monopolies Do.” PC 2 Sep 1944: 6. “Political Power Controls and Protects Human Beings From Atrocious Tyranny.” PC 9 Sep 1944: 6. “No Living Man (Representing the State Should Control Actions of Other Men.” PC 16 Sep 1944: 6. “Men Delegate Their Rights to the State for Self-Protection and Hope of Security.” PC 23 Sep 1944: 6. “Man Can Use Knowledge of Nature to Change World of Human Relationships.” PC 7 Oct 1944: 6. “Our Public Officials are not Overseers; They are Servents.” PC 14 Oct 1944: 6. “We are Prey to Any Demagogue Unless We Know Legal Lines to State’s Lawful Powers.” PC 21 Oct 1944: 6. “Americans Must Not Become Confused Between the State and the Law.” PC 28 Oct 1944: 6. “We, Average Citizens, Create the Tyranny, and Destroy Ourselves.” PC 4 Nov 1944: 6. “Our Officeholders Must Recognize the Fact that They are Not Rulers of Men.” PC 11 Nov 1944: 6. “Law: the Organization of Man’s Natural Rights of Self-Defense.” PC 18 Nov 1944: 6. “Freedom, or Prosperity or Security are Not Rights Obtained from Man.” PC 25 Nov 1944: 6. “All ‘Ghaastly Cruelties’ Against Human Beings Not Product of Capitalism.” PC 2 Dec 1944: 6. “Laissez-Faire Means Unrestricted Rights to Full Production.” PC 9 Dec 1944: 6. “The American Way is the Only Way for a Capitalistic Country.” PC 16 Dec 1944: 6. “Protective Tariff is Use of Police Force to Rob All the People.” PC 23 Dec 1944: 6. “Intellectuals Have Never Given World the Theory of Capitalism.” PC 30 Dec 1944: 6.

1945 “Compulsory Military Training: Rose Wilder Lane says Force Won’t Keep the Peace.” WD 1945: 29ff. “Rose Lane Says.” Column for the Pittsburgh Courier. “We Take our Ideas of Capitalism from European Nations.” PC 6 Jan 6 1945: 6. “People Attack Capitalism Through Misunderstanding.” PC 13 Jan 1945: 6. “Nations of Freedom of Most Modern ‘Thinkers’ a Delusion.” PC 20 Jan 1945: 6. “American School System Copy of German - What Can We Expect?” PC 27 Jan 1945: 6. “Rationing is a Form of Tyranny: Governmental Control of Peoples.” PC 3 Feb 1945: 6. “Collier’s Argument for Military Conscription Described as Idiocy.” PC 10 Feb 1945: 6. “Authority as Submitted to in Catholic Church is True .” PC 17 Feb 1945: 6. “Pressure Groups Uphold the State - are Foes of Capitalism.” PC 24 Feb 1945: 6. “State is Nothing but Physical Force Used Upon Person.” PC 3 March 1945: 6. “Guns Cannot Produce Wealth nor Morality nor Freedom nor Happiness.” PC 10 March 1945: 6. “Policy of All Statesmen is to Extend Police Power of the State.” PC 17 March 1945: 6. “Stalin’s Views on Capitalism Restricted to Asiatic and European Experience.” PC 24 March 24 1945: 6. “Communists and Fascists Have Same Aims, Differ Only as to Methods.” PC 31 March 1945: 6. “Production of Free Men Played Vital Pert in Stopping the Germans at Stalingrad.” PC 7 April 1945: 6. “Belief in Dictators is Same as Belief in Power of Fairies.” PC 14 April 1945: 6 “Initiation of Stalin’s Police in United States Cause of Current Meat Shortage.” PC 21 April 1945: 6. “Communists’ Methods Make Them Tyrants and Soviet Workers Slaves.” PC 5 May 1945: 6. “How Will Men Live, When they Do, in a World of Liberty and Law?” PC 19 May 1945: 6. “In Time Nearly Everyone Will Know that All Men are Born Free and Equal.” PC 26 May 1945: 6. “A Laissez Faire World Will Limit Police Power to Equal Justice Via Law.” PC 2 June 1945: 6. “Politicians Run Our Postal Monopoly for Benefit to Their Party.” PC 9 June 1945: 6. “In All the World There is No Book With an Idea on World of Free Persons.” PC 16 June 1945: 6. “To Build Peaceful Human World Big Men Must Have an Idea What they Want.” PC 23 June 1945: 6. “Increase in Amount of Freedom Causes Increase in Number of Human Lives.” PC 30 June 1945: 6. “How Seven Million Human Beings Live on a Small Island Covered in Cement.” PC 7 July 1945: 6. “Interdependence of All Workers in Capitalistic System is Described.” PC 14 July 1945: 6. “Motives of Free Enterprise, Whatever They Are, Create Jobs for Others.” PC 21 July 1945: 6. “Observations on the Function of Greed in the Capitalistic System.” PC 28 July 1945: 6. “Mrs. Lane Curious as to How Capitalist Turns Labor Into Cash.” PC 4 Aug 1945: 6. “Capitalist Can’t Rob Workers in an Economy Where the Worker is Free.” PC 11Aug 1945: 6. “Difficult to Convince Socialists that Capitalism, Through Competition, Serves Him.” PC 18 Aug 1945: 6. “Thrilled by Chance to Spend a Dollar Without Having to Get Permission to Do So.” PC 25 Aug 1945: 6. “Danbury’s New Building Regulations Handicap Citizens of Modest Means.” PC 1 Sep 1945: 6. “Danbury’s New Zoning Rule Indicates How Difficult It Is to Fight for Freedom.” PC 8 Sep 1945: 6.

1948 “Hopes Brightened by Three Letters to the Editor.” PC 28 Feb1948: 7.

1950 “Who’s Rude?” Letter to the editors. Saturday Evening Post 223 16 Dec 1950: 4, 6.

1954 Give Me Liberty (reprint, Longmans, Green, 1936). The Claxton Printers, 1954.

1956 “Dramatic Story Tells of Town’s Fight for Liberty, part II.” The Lima News 1 Oct 1956: 18. “Dramatic Story Tells of Town’s Fight for Liberty, part III.” The Lima News 3 Oct 1956: 26. “Dramatic Story Tells of Town’s Fight for Liberty, part IV.” The Lima News 3 Oct 1956: 34. “Dramatic Story Tells of Town’s Fight for Liberty, part V.” The Lima News 5 Oct 1956: 51.

1958 Letter to the Editor (about governmental controls). The Lima News 19 May1958: 11.

1959 Introduction, The Nature of Man and His Government by Robert LeFevre. Caxton Printers, 1959.

1960 “Come Into My Kitchen.” Woman’s Day Oct 1960: 60-61ff. Letter to the Editor (about communism). Colorado Springs, Colorado, Gazette Telegraph 2 Jan 1960: 5. “The Story of American Needlework.” Woman’s Day (Feb 1961: 40-41ff.

1961 “The Story of American Needlework, 1: Crewel.” WD March 1961: 57-61ff. “The Story of American Needlework, 2: Patchwork.” WD April 1961: 36-41ff. “The Story of American Needlework, 3: Cross-Stitch.” WD May 1961: 34-37ff. “The Story of American Needlework, 4: Hooking.” WD Sep 1961: 15-20ff. “The Story of American Needlework, 5: Knitting.” WD Oct 1961: 76-79ff. “The Story of American Needlework, 6: Appliqué.” WD Nov 1961: 56-61ff. “The Story of American Needlework, 7: Crochet.” WD Dec 1961: 60-66ff.

1962 “The Story of American Needlework, 8: Quilting.” WD Jan 1962: 29-32ff. . “The Story of American Needlework, 9: Embroidery.” WD Feb 1962: 44-47ff. “The Story of American Needlework, 10: Weaving.” WD March 1962: 52-57ff. “The Story of American Needlework, 11: Needlepoint.” WD April 1962: 29-33ff. “The Story of American Needlework, 12: Candlewicking.” WD May 1962: 36-39ff.

1963 Woman’s Day Book of American Needlework. Simon & Schuster, 1963.

1965 “Aug in Viet Nam.” Woman’s Day Dec 1965: 33-35ff.

1971 The Discovery of Freedom: Man’s Struggle Against Authority (reprint). Arno Press, 1971.

1973 The Lady and the Tycoon: Letters of Rose Wilder Lane and Jasper Crane (edited by Roger Lea MacBride). The Caxton Printers, 1973.

1983 Travels with Zenobia: Paris to Albania by Model T Ford, A Journal by Rose Wilder Lane and Helen Dore Boylston (edited by William Holtz). University of Missouri Press,1983.

1991 Dorothy Thompson & Rose Wilder Lane: Forty Years of Friendship. Letters, 1921–1960 (edited by William Holtz). University of Missouri Press, 1991.

1993 The Discovery of Freedom: Man’s Struggle Against Authority (reprint). Fox and Wilkes, 1993.