SOUTH AMERICA A Cruise Tour 70 days-$2200 up WEST INDIES Cruises 23 days under Tropical skies $450 up Tours To the ORIENT CALIFORNIA and FLORIDA Tours Including the best there is to see in South America. and the celebrated trip over the Andes. Down the West coast on the luxurious Pacific Line steamer "Ebro "-up the East coast via the Lamport & Holt Line. Seventy days of pleasure on land and sea. An extended program of sightseeing in all the principal cities of South America. January 15th, S. S. Ulua; February 19th, S. S. Toloa, of the Great White Fleet. These new steamers, built for cruising in the tropics, offer the comforts of an ocean liner. Visiting Havana, Santiago, Port Antonio, Kingston, Cristobal, Panama Canal, Port Limon, San Jose and Havana. Honolulu, Japan, Manchuria, North and South China and the Philippine Islands. Sailing from Vancouver January 13; from San Francisco January 24, February 5 and 20, March 16, April 2 and 30, May 28 and June 25; from Seattle March 11. Small parties under personal escort. Write for details. Conducted tours leaving each week from the middle of January throughout the winter to California and Florida. Stopover privilege enabling individuals to return independently or with a later tour. Write for details. AMERICAN EXPRESS COMPANY The Pratt Teachers Agency 70 Fifth Avenue, New York Recommends teacliers to colleges, public and private schools Advises parents about schools. Wm. O. Pratt, Mgr. HIGHER EDUCATION Courses in English, Spanish, Mathematics, Chemistry, Draw ing, Education, Business and in STUDY 35 other subjects are given by cor respondence. Begin any time. The University of Chicago Division 10. Chicago, I WALNUT HILL SCHOOL 23 Highland St., Natick, Mass. A College Preparatory School for Girls. 17 iniles from Boston. Miss Conant, Miss Bigelow, Principals. St. John's Riverside Hospital Training School for Nurses YONKERS, NEW YORK Registered in New York State, offers a 2 years' course as general training to refined, educated women. Require ments one year high school or its equivalent. Apply to the Directress of Nurses, Yonkers, New York. Rhode Island Hospital Training School for Nurses Registered. The Rhode Island Hospital, beautifully located in a spacious park of twenty-five acres, accommodating five hundred patients, offers exceptional advantages for training in all departments. Three-year course. Educational re quirements-two years' High School or equivalent. Modern Nurses' Home with attractive living conditions, thoroughly equipped laboratories, lecture and demonstration rooms, Allowance reading-room, library and recreation room. ample to cover personal expenses. For information apply to Superintendent of Training School, Rhode Island Hospital Providence, R. I. A Cash Offer for Cartoons and Photographs Cash payment, from $1 to $5, will promptly be made to our readers who send us a cartoon or photograph accepted by The Outlook. We want to see the best cartoons published in your local papers, and the most interesting and newsy pictures you may own. Read carefully the coupons below for conditions governing payment. Then fill in the coupon, paste it on the back of the cartoon or print, and mail to us. THE EDITORS OF THE OUTCOOK To the Photograph Editor of The Outlook: The attached photograph is the property of the undersigned and is submitted for publication in The Outlook. Postage is enclosed for its return if unavailable. It is my understanding that The Outlook agrees to pay $3 for this photograph if reproduced as a halfpage cut, or smaller, and $5 if reproduced in larger size than a half page. The enclosed brief account of the object or event depicted you may use as you see fit. To the Cartoon Editor of The Outlook: The attached cartoon is clipped from the .... of the following ...... If this particular clipping is selected for reproduction in The Outlook, I will accept One Dollar as payment in full for my service in bringing it to your attention. I agree that if it is not used it will not be returned nor its receipt acknowledged. Address.... 1 6 TERENCE, THE MAN BY LOUISE AYRES GARNETT Up from the body of Terence, deep buried, The quicken-tree blossoms with fire on its boughs, And Heaven, with glad hospitality, opens The welcoming doorway, her Terence to house. He'll walk into Heaven and all the young angels Will slip off their sandals as fast as they can, And bare their bright heads as they take off their halos To him who has come to them, Terence, the man. Oh, he'll walk into Heaven, Saint Michael will meet him, Will greet him with splendor, salute with his sword; But Brigid, Saint Brigid, will scarce say good-morrow, So busy she'll be with his bed and his board. Sure, darlin', you're weary," she'll breathe like a crooning. Lie down here and rest on the bank of the stream, And Brigid will stir you a bit of fine supping, As hot as your spirit, as rich as your dream." Terence says no, and he turns him away from her, Fires of denial still fierce in his soul, But Brigid, Saint Brigid, she speaks to him tenderly, Cooling the broth she has dipped in his bowl. For shame on you, Terence! Come take a wee sip of this, Take a wee sip from my bright, shining spoon, Else how will the earth-ones find heart to be eating, Thinking you empty as winds of the moon? "They're cooling their broth with the sighs that are shaking them, Making it bitter with salt of their tears. Sure, you and Fitzgerald and Murphy must heed me: There's still a long march up the road of the years. The right or the wrong of your terrible hunger Weighs never a penny with Heaven or me. It's what you've kept lighted, the faith you were wearing, The grit you were bearing, the hope you held free." So Brigid, Saint Brigid, prevails with her wheedlings, And feeds the young rebel and those of his clan. He girds his loins with the dream of the morrow, And Heaven is stronger for Terence, the man. JOHN MARTIN'S BOOK For Children from Three to Ten IS A FORCE FOR GOOD AND HAPPINESS IT IS A LIFETIME INVESTMENT in happiness, good taste, moral sense and ideal thought. It is a book all children need but have never before been given until John Martin developed his book. It is more book than magazine. It is full of pictures in one and two colors (The Regular Price and is crowded with charming surprises. It is a friend who gives the children songs, games, things to do, poetry, fairy-tales, history, nature stories, Bible tales. It sparkles with whimsical FUN and merry nonsense. It holds the very heart of normal and happy childhood. Per Year is $4.00) AN IDEAL CHRISTMAS GIFT THAT LASTS FOURTEEN MONTHS AND LIVES A LIFETIME A LIFE'S LIVING IMPRESSION FOR GOOD SPECIAL OFFER TO THOSE USING THIS COUPON THE OUTLOOK. November 17, 1920. Volume 126, Number 12. Published weekly by the Outlook Company at 381 Fourth Avenue, New York, N. Y. Subscription price $5.00 a year. Entered as second-class matter, July 21, 1893, at the Post Office at New York, under the Act of March 3, 1879 TEACHERS' AGENCIES The Pratt Teachers Agency 70 Fifth Avenue, New York Recommends teachers to colleges, public and private achook Advises parents about schools. Wm. O. Pratt, Mgr. SCHOOLS AND COLLEGES ILLINOIS Vol. 126 November 17, 1920 No. 12 HIGHER EDUCATION . THE OUTLOOK IS PUBLISHED WEEKLY BY THE OUTLOOK COMPANY, 381 FOURTH AVENUE, NEW YORK. LAWRENCE F. ABBOTT, PRESIDENT. N. T. PULSIFER, VICE-PRESIDENT. FRANK C. HOYT, TREASURER. ERNEST H. ABBOTT, SECRETARY. TRAVERS D. CARMAN, ADVERTISING MANAGER. Terence, the Man (Poem). By Louise Ayres Garnett New Members.. The West and South. 485 Contributors' Gallery... 487 Political Courtesies and Suggestions.. 489 Senator Harding and the League of Nations... 489 The Parochial School Question in Michigan.. 489 ....... Where Are the Familiar Faces ?.. 490. Changes in the House.. 490 492 492 492 493 MASSACHUSETTS Training for Authorship How to write, what to write, and where to sell. Cultivate your mind. Develop your literary gifts.Master the art of self-expression. Make your spare time profitable. Turn your ideas into dollars. Courses in Short-Story Writ ing, Versification, Journalism, Play Writing, Photoplay Writing, etc., taught personally by Dr. J. Berg Esenwein, for many years editor of Lippincott's Magazine, and a staff of literary experts. Constructive criticism. Frank, honest, helpful advice. Real teaching. One pupil has received over $5,000 for stories and articles written mostly in spare time-"play work," he calls it. Another pupil received over $1,000 before completing her first course. Another, a busy wife and mother, is averaging over $75 a week from photoplay writing alone.. There is no other institution or agency'doing so much for writers, young or old. The universities recognize this, for over one hundred members of the English faculties of higher institutions are studying in our Literary Department. The editors recognize it, for they are constantly recommending our courses. We publish The Writer's Library, 13 volumes; descriptive booklet free. We also publish The Writer's Monthly, the leading magazine for literary workers; sample copy 20 cents, annual subscription $2.00. Besides our teaching service, we offer a manuscript criticism service. 150-Page illustrated catalogue free. Please Address The Home Correspondence School Dept. 58, Springfield, Mass. TRAINING SCHOOLS FOR NURSES St. John's Riverside Hospital Training School for Nurses YONKERS, NEW YORK Registered in New York State, offers a 2 years' coun as general training to refined, educated women. Require ments one year high school or its equivalent. Apply to the Directress of Nurses, Yonkers, New York. 503 By F. M. Davenport Diana's Tenants... 505 By Harold Trowbridge Pulsifer Bhai Bandi. 507 509 .... 512 By Amelia Josephine Burr The Oil-Well Shooters.. By Harry Botsford Current Events Illustrated.. The Book Table: The Americanization of Edward Bok 514 The New Books...... 515 This Week's Outlook: A Weekly Outline Study of Current History..... 516 By J. Madison Gathany How the Square Deal Beat the Strike 518 To Repair Westminster Abbey.. By the Way. 521 523 526 Edgar Lee Masters Author of The Spoon River Anthology Who, continues W. S. Braithwaite in the Boston Transcript "In MITCH MILLER joins those classic an thors who have written immortal stories of American boyhood. . . . The most entertaining picture of boyhood since Tom Sawyer." Illustrated by JOHN SLOAN. Price $3.50 Order of your bookseller, or of NEW YORK THE MACMILLAN COMPANY PUBLIS CONTRIBUTORS' GALLERY MELIA JOSE A PHINE BURR gazes out on Fifth Avenue from her apartment in the Hotel Savoy and writes about India. She has recently returned from a trip. around the world, and "Bhai Bandi". is one of the results. e is the author of several volumes of rse and fiction and has been a freent contributor to The Outlook. ROM time to time Harold Trowbridge Pulsifer, of the Outlook staff, has itten for our readers a number of icles on such varied topics as yacht, poetry, politics, fishing, farming, 1 military affairs, and these articles ve all been based upon first-hand berience. Under the title "Diana's Enants" he has now written an article prize-fights as conducted under The tlook's very nose. We hasten to exin that in the present instance his perience was limited to that of an partial observer! OUISE AYRES GARNETT is a dramatist, composer, and poet whose se has frequently appeared in The tlook in recent months. Her poems ich we have published, written in gro dialect, have called forth much orable comment from our readers. the present issue she turns from the erican Negro to Ireland's martyr, are not at all sure (as those who e followed our editorial discussion the Irish question may easily guess) at we agree with Mrs. Garnett's pocal views on this subject, but we ld not resist the appeal of her deiption of Terence's entrance into ven. Mrs. Garnett lives in EvansIllinois. Tthe request of The Outlook, political experts in the far West, rthwest, Southwest, Middle West, far East of this expansive country ours have reported upon the reasons uating the voters in casting their lots in the National election on Nonber 2. Chester H. Rowell is editor the Fresno "Republican," and a mpion of progressive measures. nry J. Haskell is associate editor the Kansas City "Star," and has na frequent contributor to The tlook. Mr. F. Perry Olds is on the ff of the Milwaukee "Journal," and contributed in the past to The tlook. Mr. W.H. Cowles is owner and olisher of the Spokane "Spokesmanview." Mr. Arthur W. Stace is naging editor of the Grand Rapids ress." Mr. Frederick M. Davent is known to our readers as a freent contributor to these pages. |