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Parables of Life

By HAMILTON WRIGHT MABIE. "The same wholesome philosophy which characterizes al his other works is found here-alike the same forceful and delicate description, the same fresh ness and true helpfulness. ... The book may be characterized as eleven visions or wordpaintings, each setting forth, in a somewhat mystical way, some great fundamental truths of life."-The Interior. Prose poems in the author's inimitable style, scholarly and gracef. touched with nature love, gentleness, and subtle thought.”—Town and Country. Mr. Mabe speaks to the heart direct-to the heart that knows sorrow and loss and misgiving—and his message soothes and comforts and strengthens. His parables set the life of to-day in the light of the great To-morrow, and we can read and understand. . . . A book to delight the eye and refresh the soul."-The Christian Guardian. Price $1, net. (Postage, 10 cents additional.

Seen by the Spectator

BEING A SELECTION OF RAMBLING PAPERS FIRST PRINTED IN THE OUTLOOK UNDER THE TITLE THE SPECTATOR. “A handsomely printed volume whose pages record the wide-awake impressions of a wide-awake man upon various aspects in modern life. . . . The Spectator's volume is a rare book, in the reading of which a great deal of solid enjoyment may be taken."Boston Transcript. "The book is thoroughly delightful, for the Spectator makes you fee that you are his personal friend and that he is thinking of you and you only as he amusing rambles with his pen "-Boston Herald. "Having read the first two papers, it is safe to say that the reader will finish the book."-The Churchman. "We close this delightful book with reluctance. It is just the companion for a quiet day; and its wisdom and serenity and gentie gayety give to it a peculiar charm which will keep the Spectator's memory alive long after we have closed his volume and taken up again the somewhat monotonous burden of our daily lives.”—Charleston News and Courier. Price $1, net. (Postage, 12 cents additional.)

Folk Tales of Napoleon

Napoleonder, from the Russian. The Napoleon of the People, from the French of Honoré de Balzac. Translated with an introduction by GEORGE KENNAN. "The French tale is full of the ignorance and swagger of a soldier of the Empire, while the Russian story is a literary gem-a marvelous blend of imagination, superstition, thought, and the Russian peasant's not irreverent familiarity with Deity. Two more sharply contrasted sketches of one man would be hard to find."-The Era. "For pith and humor, for broad humanity of feeling, and for genuine interest to folk-lorists, the tale [Napoleonder] is of uncommon merit."-The Critic. These two stories, developed from the peasant life and peasant imagination, are most suggestive, and are delightfully translated by Mr. Kennan. The Russian story particularly seems to me to reflect the genius of the Russian peasant, and its publication is, therefore, a real service to the student of literature."-HENRY S. PRITCHETT, President of the Mass. Institute of Technology. Price $1, net. (Postage, 10 cents additional.)

The Philippines

The First Civil Governor. By THEODORE ROOSEVELT. Civil Government in the Philippines By WILLIAM H. TAFT. "Governor Taft's paper gives the reader a better grasp of the Philippine situation than can be secured from any other statement ever made."-Topeka Capital. "In temper the essay is as admirable as in clear argument, and a welcome relief tro heated partisan treatment of the subject."-The Advance. Colonel Roosevelt's deserved tribute to Governor Taft is a fitting introduction to the cogent exhibition of what has been accomplished by the United States in the archipelago."-Philadelphia Press. Price $1, net (Postage, 10 cents additional.)

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The Man Without a Country

LIMITED BIRTHDAY EDITION. Dr. Hale's greatest story has been published in a special limited edition of two thousand copies, printed in large type on fine paper with broad margins and bound in red vellum cloth, with a red silk marker. It contains an introduction written for this edition by the author, and a fine portrait of Dr. Hale drawn from life by Alfred Houghton Clark. Price $3, net. (Postage, 10 cents additional.)

THE OUTLOOK COMPANY, Publishers, 287 FOURTH AVENUE, NEW YORK

FOR EARLY PUBLICATION

The Tragedy of Pelée

A NARRATIVE OF PERSONAL EXPERIENCE AND OBSERVATION IN MARTINIQUE. BY GEORGE KENNAN. Illustrated with Drawings by GEORGE VARIAN and Photographs by the Author. This account of the author's experiences and observations during three weeks spent in exploring the vicinity of the volcano and the ruined city is a vivid and thrilling narrative of absorbing interest. Mr. Kennan is an accurate and judicious observer, and a forceful and picturesque writer. The book makes for the general reader the best obtainable history of what happened in Martinique, and of the scientific causes of the disaster. Price $1.50, net. (Postage 15 cents.)

From Grieg to Brahms

STUDIES OF SOME MODERN COMPOSERS AND THEIR ART. BY DANIEL GREGORY MASON. In a series of essays on Grieg, Dvořák, Saint-Saëns, Franck, Tschaikowsky, and Brahms, Mr. Mason shows how each man has brought to his work his own particluar temperament and conception of his art, how each has contributed some special quality of expression or beauty to modern music. Mr. Mason's essays have received warm commendation from such experienced musicians and critics as Dr. Villiers Stanford, W. H. Hadow, William F. Apthorp, Dr. Percy Goetschius, and Arthur Whiting. Price $1.50, net. (Postage 15 cents.)

The Outlook Story Book for Little People

Edited by LAURA WINNINGTON. A volume of stories and poems and pictures, full of animals, real and imaginary, birds, fairies, and children. Almost every story and poem is illustrated either with photographs or with drawings by F. Y. Cory, F. S. Church, J. B. Graff, Philip R. Goodwin, and others. Price $1.20, net. (Postage 15 cents.)

The Ascent of the Soul

By AMORY H. BRADFORD. The scope of this book is best stated by the author in his opening chapter: "It is my purpose... to attempt to trace some of the steps of what may be called the evolution of the spirit, or, in the light of modern knowledge, the growth of the soul as it moves upward. Given the spiritual being, what are the stages through which he will pass on his way to the goal toward which he is surely pressing?" Dr. Bradford is an unusually clear thinker along theological and philosophical lines, and his treatment of the subject is at once scholarly and in the best sense popular. Price $1.25, net. (Postage 13 cents.)

Religious Life in America

A RECORD OF PERSONAL OBSERVATION. BY ERNEST HAMLIN ABBOTT. In a tour through eighteen States, men and ministers of all denominations and men of no religious faith were talked with, and the book gives in a singularly clear and first-hand way the experiences and conclusions of an open-minded, unprejudiced observer. The personal experiences and the varied circumstances of the different denominations visited give the book an extremely readable quality, apart from the deep interest of the subject-matter. Price $1.00, net. (Postage 10 cents.)

The Story of a Bird Lover

By WILLIAM EARL DODGE SCOTT. The author, who is Curator of Ornithology at Princeton University, and one of the foremost experts in the country on the life and habits of song-birds, has spent many years in the study of the life and character of birds in their out-of-door natural surroundings. The story of his life, of the beginning and growth of his love for birds, of the studies and investigations by which he acquired his extensive knowledge of bird life, is one of unusual interest. Price $1.50, net. (Postage 15 cents.)

THE OUTLOOK COMPANY, Publishers, 287 FOURTH AVENUE, NEW YORK

TIMELY BOOKS-JUST READY

Some Ethical Phases of the Labor Question

By CARROLL D. WRIGHT, U. S. Commissioner of Labor

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By our highest authority on industrial problems and labor conditions, whose judgment is sound and final on matters pertaining to capital and labor.

The Blood of the Nation

By DAVID STARR JORDAN President Leland Stanford Jr. University.

82 pp. 16°. 40 cts. net; postage 5 cts. An examination into the decay of races through the survival of the unfit.

Men and Women

By MINOT J. SAVAGE Author of "Life Beyond Death," etc. 179 pp. 12°. 80 cts. net; postage 10 cts.

A book of vital importance, discussing the respective parts that men and women play in the organization of society.

The Smoke and the Flame

By CHARLES F. DOLE

Author of "The Coming People," "The
American Citizen," etc.

230 pp. 16°. 80 cts. net; postage 11 cts. An entertaining, instructive account of the change in religious ideas from the beginning of the Christian era

Immortality,

and Other Essays

By CHARLES CARROLL EVERETT Late Dean of Harvard Divinity School. 240 pp. 120. $1.20 net; postage 14 cts. Scholarly essays on religious and philosophical subjects, written in an untechnical manner and charming style.

At all Bookstores, or Direct of the Publishers

AMERICAN UNITARIAN ASSOCIATION,

The Copley Prints

are quite out of the class of cheap pictures, and yet are easily within the means of persons of taste who would rather have one or a few really good pictures than a multitude

of the inferior
sorts. They are
chosen by the
most eminent art-
ists for the repro-
duction of their
works, Abbey,
Vedder, La Farge,
Alexander, St.
Gaudens, and the
rest,-and are
everywhere rec-
ognized as the
best art reproduc-
tions made in
America.

There is nothing better for the adornment of one's walls, or for gifts to friends. Obtainable through the art stores, or sent on approval by the publishers. Our new sepia tone as well as our standard grey. Prices 50 cents to $10. This picture of BEATRICE, by Jean Paleologue, is one of a large list of new subjects. Send for our complete catalogue, ilustrated, 10

cents (stamps). Look for our initials in monogram C

on all genuine COPLEY PRINTS.

Beatrice, Copyright 1002 by Jean Paleologue and by CURTIS & CAMERON 21 Pierce Building, Opp. Public Library, BOSTON

B

25 Beacon St., Boston

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The Deaf Can Hear INGLESIDE-A School for Girls

"with their eyes" through our original and successful method of Expression Reading. It is simple, natural, rapid. Instruction personally, or by mail (using our lesson sheets and photographs of the expressions). Defective speech cured. For full information apply to Lillie Eginton Warren, Principal.

New Milford, Litchfield Co., Conn.
School year begins Tuesday, October 7th, 1902.

MRS. WM. D. BLACK. Patroness.

WARREN SCHOOL OF ARTICULATION AND EXPRESSION READING THE WEANTINAUG SCHOOL for BOYS

124 E. 28th St., N. Y.

Branches: Boston, Philadelphia, Washington

want to draw

If you have a liking or a natural
Talent for Drawing, cut this out
mail with your address and receive
our FREE sample Lesson Circular
with terms, and twenty Portraits of
well-known artists & illustrators.

N. Y. SCHOOL OF CARICATURE,
Studio 85 World B'ld'g, New York City.

The Pratt Teachers' Agency 70 Fifth Ave.

Recommends teachers to colleges, schools, and families.
Advises parents about schools.
Wm. O. Pratt, Mgr.

American and Foreign Teachers Agency. Supplies
Colleges, Schools, and Families with Professors, Teachers,
Tutors, and Governesses, resident or visiting, American or Foreign.
Parents aided in
choice of schools.
MRS. M. J. YOUNG-FULTON

23 Union Square, New York City

THE BARNARD CLASSES

College Preparation and Special Courses for Girls, Address Miss OSBORNE, 430 West 118th St., Morningside Heights.

NEW MILFORD, LITCHFIELD CO., CONN. Prepa-
ration for business and College. Rev. F. B. Draper, Head Master.
New Buildings. Modern equipment. Refers by permission to
Mrs. Wм. D. BLACK, Patroness of Ingleside.

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MRS. MEAD'S SCHOOL FOR GIRLS
"Hillside," Norwalk, Conn.
Admits to leading colleges. Special studies for girls who do not go
to college.
Mrs. M. E. MEAD, Prin.

Miss Butts's School for Girls

"LOWTHORPE," NORWICH, CONN.

CONNECTICUT, Stamford. (Near New York.)

The Catharine Aiken Boarding and Day
School for Girls
College preparatory and general courses. For illustrated catalog
address Mrs. Harriet Beecher Scoville Devan, Wellesley A.B.
CONNECTICUT, Wallingford, 23 Academy St.

The Phelps School for Young Girls

will reopen Sept. 24, 1902. Thorough English, Languages, Music.
Individual attention from Primary to College Preparatory Ad-
dress
Miss SARA S. PHELPS KELSEY.
DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA

MRS. HAZEN'S SUBURBAN SCHOOL FOR GIRLS CHEVY CHASE SCHOOL FOR GIRLS

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French the lan

guage of the house. Removed to Woodley Road and Twentieth St.,
Washington, D. C.
Mlle. L. M. BOULIGNY, Principal.
ILLINOIS

HOME The University of Chicago

offers 250 elementary and college courses

STUDY by correspondence in 29 subiecte ses

in.

cluding Pedagogy, Political Economy, History, Sociology, Latin, Spanish, English, Geology, Zoöl

The Harvard School (Military)ogy. Botany, Library Science, etc. Instruction is personal.

LOS ANGELES, CAL. A Classical and English Boarding
School. GRENVILLE C. EMERY, A.M., Head Master. Ref-
erence, Hon. Wм. P. FRYE, Pres. Pro Tempore, U. S. Senate.
CONNECTICUT

CONNECTICUT, Brookfield Center.

ucate,

IF YOU HAVE A YOUNG BOY to ed-
not yet 14, you should read the book of the Master of The Curtis
School. It will show you some things you have not thought of.
Tuition $500,
FREDERICK S. CURTIS.

Credit is granted for college courses successfully completed.
Work may begin at any time. For circular address
THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO (Div. E), Chicago, Il.

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D

FOR

ILLINOIS

MASSACHUSETTS

Boys Rugby School Bradford Academy For Young w

15 Miles from CHICAGO

Prepares boys for all colleges, technical schools, and for business.

Women. Estab lished 1803. Miss Lawn & Knott, A.M., Principal. College preparatory and general course Two years' course for High School graduates. 25 acres of ground golf links, tennis courts, etc. For catalogue and book of view address Bradford Academy, Bradford, Mass

Three buildings, with laboratory, library, and manual training The Browne and Nichols School

equipment. A HOME SCHOOL where boys live with their masters. For catalogue and other information address

WM. R. TROWBRIDGE, Headmaster, Kenilworth, Ill.

KENILWORTH HALL

Boarding School for Girls in Kenilworth, a beautiful suburb of Chicago. Delightful home, thorough instruction. For catalogue, address Mrs. MARY KEYES BABCOCK, Kenilworth.

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Cambridge, Mass. 20th year. Course, 8 years. Classes limited to 15. No subordinate teachers; pupils continuously under head teacher in each department. Exceptional facilities for fitting for Harvard. Illustrated catalogue.

Williston Seminary Tuition $75 per year. Class

ical and Scientific Courses. Gymnasium and athletic field, astronomical observatory: chemical, biological, and physical laboratories. Rev. JOSEPH H. SAWYER, A.M., Principal MASSACHUSETTS, Greenfield. PROSPECT HILL SCHOOL for Girls 35th year. Graduate, elective, and college prepara tory courses. Golf, tennis, and basket ball. Illus catalog. MISS CAROLINE R. CLARK, M.A., Pria

ROGERS HALL
SCHOOL GIRLS

Walnut Hill School for Girls Near Wellesley and Boston. Certificate admits to seven leading colleges. Advanced courses offered. Ample grounds for golf, tennis, basket ball. Catalogue and Views sent on application. Miss CONANT and Miss BIGELOW, Principals. The MacDuffie School Springfield, Mass. Offers to parents the advantages of a good private school in all the studies of a girl's education. Athletic grounds, gymnasium. Illus trated catalogue F. Dr. and Mrs. JOHN MacDUFFIE

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Howard Seminary

For Girls and Young Ladies. Academic, College Preparatory and Special Courses. Efficient corps of teachers Development of the individual pupil is promoted by homelike atmosphere of the school life. Large endowments make low terms possible: $350 to $400. Miss SARAH E. LAUGHTON, Principal, West Bridgewater, Mass.

MASSACHUSETTS, West Newton. The Allen School. 50th year Sept. 24th, 1902. One teacher to six pupils. Training of a cultured home, mental stimulus of a live school. Boys and girls

in separate families. New building Dec. 1st, with gymnasium and

swimming tank. Catalogue. Address HEAD MASTER.

QUINCY MANSION SCHOOL, Quincy Three fine buildings, the Mansion, the Manchester, the Canterbury. Seven acres divided into lawns, gardens, and playgrounds. Fifteen minutes from Boston. Every facility for thorough education. Prospectus sent if desired.

HORACE MANN WILLARD, Sc.D., P. O. Wollaston, Mass.

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