| November, 1891 | |
| A Paradise of Gamblers | Edgar Fawcett |
| Protection or Free Trade—Which? | Hon. Henry Cabot Lodge, M. C. |
| Bismarck in the German Parliament | Emilio Castelar |
| The Doubters and the Dogmatists | Prof. James T. Bixby, Ph.D. |
| The Sioux Falls Divorce Colony | James Realf, Jr. |
| The Woman Movement | Lucinda B. Chandler |
| New Testament Symbolisms | Prof. S. P Wait |
| The True Politics for Prohibition and Labor | Edwin C. Pierce |
| Sunday at the World’s Fair | Wm. H. Armstrong |
| Turning Towards Nirvana | E. A. Ross |
| The Heart of the Woods | Will Allen Dromgoogle |
| Pharisaism in Public Life | Editorial |
| Cancer Spots in Metropolitan Life | Editorial |
| The Saloon Curse | Editorial |
| Hot Beds of Social Pollution | Editorial |
| The Power and Responsibility of the Christian Ministry | Editorial |
| What the Clergy Might Accomplish | Editorial |
| Index to the Fourth Volume of The Arena | |

Many religious journals throughout the country have poured eulogiesupon the pious head of our Postmaster General because of his raidagainst all letters bearing the least uncanny relation to thatabhorred criminal body, the Louisiana Lottery. In one sense thisaction is not ill-advised; the national laws against gambling aredistinct, and even if they were unjust their existence would be noexcuse for their infringement. The highly moral action of Mr.Wanamaker, however, happening as