Iss CHAMBERLAYNE'S SCHOOL FOR GIRLS HE MITCHELL MILITARY BOYS' SCHOOL Massachusetts. VIRGINIA Virginia College For YOUNG LADIES, Roanoke, Virginia Spring term opens Jan. 12, 1909. One of the leading Schools for Young Ladies in the South. Modern building. Campus of ten acres. HOLLINS INSTITUTE Founded 1842. Regular college and elective courses. Music, Art and Elocution. Large and efficient faculty. Beautifully situated in the Valley of Virginia. Sulphur and Chalybeate Springs. Early application neces sary. Matty L. Cocke, President, Box 308, Hollins, Virginia. STUART HALL Formerly Virginia Female Institute. Church School for Girls in Blue In answering advertisements please mention SCRIBNER'S MAGAZINE Twenty-second year under same headmaster. Military organization. Gymnasium and Swimming Pool. Your Boy and Our School" is a little book which will interest parents, no matter where their sons are educated. John G. MacVicar, A.M., 22 Walden Place, Montclair, New Jersey. 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Extensive Grounds. Location unsurpassed. Suburbs of Baltimore. Spacious buildings, completely equipped. Conducted by School Sisters of Notre Dame. Charles Street Avenue, Baltimore, Maryland. MARYLAND COLLEGE For Women. In suburbs of Baltimore. Preparatory and College Courses with degrees. Elocution: Art: Splendid School of Music: Healthful Climate. Beautiful Campus. Outdoor Sports. Great Improvements in Buildings. Enlarged Courses and Faculty. Non-sectarian. $400 to $550. Catalogue. Address Rev. Charles W. Gallagher, D.D., Box G, Lutherville, Md. MISS BAIRD'S SCHOOL For Girls. 35th year. Intermediate, College Preparatory and WYKEHAM RISE A Country School for Girls. Miss Davies, Principal. INGLESIDE Washington, Connecticut. A School for Girls. Second half year begins February 4th, 1909 MISSOURI BLEES MILITARY ACADEMY Write for beautifully illustrated catalog. Macon, Missouri. FOREIGN TRAVEL SCHOOL THE THOMPSON-BALDASSERONI Sails Oct. 6th with Principal for ninth school year of travel and study MISS THORNBURY'S SCHOOL For Girls. 33 Rue Francois Ier Champs Elysees, Paris, France. A BICYCLE TRIP THROUGH ENGLAND. TEACHERS' AGENCY The Pratt Teachers' Agency 70 Fifth Ave. Recommends teachers to colleges, public and private schools. Be a Salesman Earn a good salary, $1,000 to $10,000 a year and expenses. Enter the most pleasant, and best paid profession in the world, where you are paid all you earn, where there is no limit to your earning power. Be a producer, the one man the firm must have. We will teach you to be a salesman by mail in eight weeks and assist you to secure a posi tion with a reliable firm, through our Free Employment Bureau. Hundreds of our Graduates placed in good positions. We always have plenty of good openings with leading firms all over the country. Over 500,000 Traveling Salesmen employed in the United States and Canada. 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Curtis, and will welcome another group accompanying an article by him that will appear in the February number. In writing of "The Indians of the Stone Houses," he describes the homes and the people of the great Southwest; the tribes who for years beyond any positive record have dwelt in Arizona and in New Mexico, and that represent in the minds of many students the oldest civilization of our continent. Away back in the sixteenth century the early Spanish explorers marvelled at the civilization and the wonderful cliff-dwellings of these desert tribes. They have lived for centuries preserving their own customs, ceremonies and religious beliefs, and though today most of them have embraced Christianity, they still revere their old gods, and paganism goes hand in hand with the new worship. est qualifié pour traiter d'un sujet aussi complexe. Remontant aux sources mêmes de la nation américaine en Angleterre, en France et en Hollande, il étudiera les influences qui ont aidé le developpement du génie americain, il suivra la trace de ce génie dans la littérature en s'arrêtant à loisir sur les grands écrivains du XIXe siècle, en indiquant les tendances des écoles de ces Edward S. Curtis Henry van Dyke, who will contribute a poem on Milton to the February number, is now in Paris delivering the Hyde Lectures before the Sorbonne, a course founded some years ago for the purpose of establishing a better understanding between the people of France and America. Previous American lecturers have been Professor Barrett Wendell, Professor George Santayana, Professor Archibald Carey Coolidge, and Professor S. B. Baker. The general subject of Dr. van Dyke's lectures is "The Spirit of America," and the following announcement, taken from a little booklet in French sent out by the Sorbonne, gives an interesting summary of their purpose: "Orateur, littérateur, poète, le conférencier derniers temps. Sans trop sortir de son cadre, le conférencier étudiera le mouvement d'éducation sociale qui, selon lui, semble placer le peuple américain en face des problèmes particuliers qu'il a eus à résoudre ou qu'il est appelé à solutionner." Some of the topics which Dr. van Dyke will take up are: "The Soul of a People"; "Self-Reliance and the Republic"; "Fair Play and Democracy"; "Will Power, Work and Wealth"; "Common Order and Social Co-operation"; "Personal Development and Education." A cablegram from P. is to the New York Times gave the following account of the impression created by the first lecture: "Dr. Henry van Dyke of Princeton University, who succeeded Prof. Baker of Harvard as the Hyde lecturer at the Sorbonne, opened his series of lectures this evening before a brilliant audience, which included, in addition to the student body, many of the most prominent Americans in Paris and distinguished French literary men. "Dr. van Dyke outlined the scheme of his lectures, the general theme of which is 'The Spirit of America.' His subject to-night was 'The Soul of a People.' "He said that, in order to understand the American people, it was necessary to study their origin and to ascertain from what blending of 29 |