CONTRIBUTORS TO THE SEPTEMBER NUMBER 
Hjalmar Branting, leader of the Socialist party in Sweden, for the second 
time prime minister of his country, and the first Socialist in any country to hold such 
a position under a parliamentary system of government, won during the World War 
an international position which gives his words unusual weight. In 1921 the Norwe¬ 
gian Storting awarded him one half of the Nobel Peace Prize, the other half being 
given to the secretary of the Interparliamentary Union, Mr. Christian L. Lange. 
Ricard Paulli is assistant librarian in the Royal Library at Copenhagen. He 
is editor of Danske Folkeboger published by the Danske Literaturselskab and author 
of a bibliography on the printer and engraver Lorentz Benediclit, who lived and 
worked in Denmark in the latter part of the sixteenth century. 
Ingve Hedvall, representative of the Review in Stockholm, is a contributor to 
Swedish newspapers, particularly on subjects relating to the theatre on which he is 
an authority. 
John G. Holme has several times written articles for the Review. 
Skuli Johnson is professor of classics at Wesley College in Winnipeg and is a 
Canadian of Icelandic lineage. He contributed an essay on the sonnets of Gunnar 
Gunnarson to our Book Number in 1920 . 
Ingvald T. Braaten has just returned from a year of study in Norway as 
Fellow of the Foundation. 
