Pearsons Magazine (US) [v40 #5, March 1919] (15¢, 48pp, large flat) Many of the contents bear no author credit but I suspect they are almost all editorially written. [MA]
Pearsons Magazine (US) [v42 #10, August 1919] (15¢, 48pp, large flat) The volume numbering is as shown on the contents page but should still be vol. 40. Advertising is back in this issue. [MA]
435 · Five World-Shaking Events · Frank Harris · ar
436 · Memories of Swinburne, Morris and Whitman · Ernest Rhys · ar
438 · The Infamous Blockade: Who Is Responsible? · Frank Harris · ar
439 · The Infamous Night Court · Frank Harris · ar
441 · The New German Ambassador · Frank Harris · ar
442 · Pitiful · John Galsworthy · pm; also reproduced facsimile of letter from Galsworthy.
443 · Memories of Jugo-Slavia [Part 2 of ?] · Evarist Arz · ar
446 · A Great Letter from Miss Goldman · Emma Goldman · lr; really a letter thanking Harris for various books and praising them with copious notes by Harris.
448 · The Brutality of U.S. Militarism · Anon. · ar
461 · Two True Poets: A Man and a Woman · Anon. · ar; about J. C. Squire and Nora Bomford, probably by Frank Harris.
463 · How These Communists Love ne Another! · Frank Harris · ar; really a response by Harris to a refutation of a previous response by Max Eastman.
465 · The new York Dope Clinic [Part 1 of ?] · Anon. · ar
467 · Three or Four Books to Read · Frank Harris · br
470 · Through the Editors Eyes · Frank Harris · cl
472 · Letters to the Editor · Readers · lc; these are often long letters which, with Harriss response, are mini-articles in their own right.
Pearsons Magazine (US) [v44 #12, October 1919] (15¢, 48pp, large flat) Another peculiarity in the volume numbering, which should still be volume 40. [MA]
529 · The English Wilson and the U.S. Senate · Anon. · ar
530 · High Prices and Government Prosecutions · Anon. · ar
Pearsons Magazine (US) [v45 #3, January 1920] (15¢, 48pp, large flat) By now the magazine was becoming full of small articles which were little more than Harriss comments upon recent news developments. All appear anonymously but they are clearly by Harris. Ive excluded the minor ones and list only those of significant length. [MA]
673 · Roosevelt on the Germans · Frank Harris · ar
Pearsons Magazine (US) [v48 #3, March 1922] (15¢, 48pp, large flat, cover by John Decker) This issue is on better quality coated stock and is better laid out. There is a stronger element of fiction and less sensationalized articles. [MA]
Pearsons Magazine (US) [v48 #10, October 1922] (15¢, 48pp, large flat, cover by Hugo Gellert) With this issue Alexander Marky becomes Editor and Publisher. [MA]
The New Pearsons Magazine (US) [v49 #6, June 1923] (25¢, large flat, cover by Hugo Gellert) Now published by the Modern Press Corporation. Marky is still editor, with associate editors, James Fuchs, Alfred B. Kuttner and Elsa Gidlow. [MA]
7 · His Britannic Majestys Opposition · Warre B. Wells · ar
9 · European Notes: The Crucifixion of Danzig · Frank Harris · ar
11 · Those Wicked German Millionaires · Anon. · ar
Pearsons Magazine (US) [v50 #1, January 1924] (25¢, large flat, cover by Marshall Glasier) Now published in Chicago, with Marky again listed as both Publisher and Editor and Guido Bruno as Associate Editor. Stanton Coblentz is listed amongst other Staff Contributors. [MA]