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The Riverside Pregg

96

MESSRS. HOUGHTON, Mifflin
AND COMPANY ANNOUNCE

THE FOLLOWING

NEW BOOKS:

GREAT SPECIAL SALE

POSITIVELY LIMITED TO NOVEMBER 30

That the American people are quick to recognize genuine merit and to manifest their appreciation by hearty response is amply shown by the present flood of orders for the splendid new and richly illustrated edition of our great Standard Dictionary and Encyclopædia of all the World's Knowledge. From all parts of the country come urgent requests to extend the limit of our Great Special Offer, and in order that none may be disappointed we have decided to make an extension to November 30. This extremely liberal offer is made for the sole purpose of advertising our superb work of general reference. We cannot hope to make money by it. for the low prices, on such very easy terms, barely pay for paper, printing, and binding, saying nothing of the original outlay of over $750,000.00 for the work of editors, artists, and engravers; but the immense amount of talk created will help to make known and popularize that greatest of all modern and entirely up-to-the-times household reference libraries, the

Christianity and Social ENCYCLOPAEDIC DICTIONARY

Problems

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UNTIL NOVEMBER 30 this truly marvelous work will be furnished any reader of this announcement on receipt
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WE CHALLENGE COMPARISON WITH ALL THE WORLD!

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This Superb

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Genuine Triumph of Art! with its magnificent array of chromatic plates in 17 COLORS, dozens of single and double page engravings in delicate monotone, and 3,000 artistic text illustrations.

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REMEMBER! This great work is not for sale in any book-store and can be obtained only from us or our authorized representatives, who will show their credentials.

More than $750,000 Required to Produce this Work

IT IS THE LATEST AND BEST DICTIONARY of our language. Each legitimate English word is exhaustively treated as to its origin, history, development, spelling, pronunciation, and various meanings.

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THIS GREAT BARGAIN.-Send $1.00, and the entire four handsome volumes, bound in cloth, will be forwarded. Every month thereafter send $1.50 for twelve months, making a total payment of $19.00 (regular price of this style, $42.00). If Half-Russia style is desired, the monthly payments are $2.00 until $25 00 is paid (regular price of this style, $52.50). If Full Sheep style is wanted, monthly payments are $2.50 until $31.00 is paid (regular price of this style $60.00). The first payment in any case is only One Dollar. To any one wishing to pay all cash we allow a discount of ten per cent., and furnish the book-case free of charge; otherwise, the book-case is $1.50, which must be paid in advance. This allowance is practically cost of keeping the account if purchased on monthly payment plan. We always recommend the Half-Russia binding as the most serviceable. (When ordering, be sure to mention style of binding wanted.) Understand, the complete set of four volumes is sent after the first payment of $1.00, which gives you the use of them for a year while paying the remainder at the rate of only a few cents a day. All freight or express charges must be paid by the purchaser. That you will be entirely satisfied is shown by our willingness to send you a valuable set of books for only $1.00. We refer to any Bank, any Newspaper, or any Commercial Agency in Philadelphia. Agents Wanted. Mention this paper. Books Guaranteed as Represented or Money Refunded if Returned within 10 Days

there shortly after, quoted from Beecher Patriotic SYNDICATE PUBLISHING CO., 234 S. Eighth St., Philadelphia

Addresses 99 part of a Thanksgiving Address in 1877 on
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Dr. Martin was the first President of the Tungwen Kwan (College of Foreign Knowledge), founded by the Chinese Government for the education of Chinese youth. He continued in that position for twentysix years. Previously he was first a missionary and then an attaché of the U. S. Legation.

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Volume 54

The Outlook

A⚫Family Paper

Saturday, 10 October, 1896

HEN Tennyson died, there were two English poets whose genius would have kept alive the greater traditions of the laureateship-Swinburne and William Morris. Morris has now gone to join his illustrious contemporary. Born at Walthamstow, in Fssex, in 1834, the son of a business man, educated in a school presided over by a Scotchman, who described him as a rollicking boy, William Morris began early to take an interest in art and all that concerns art. In 1852 he entered Exeter College at Oxford, at a time when the religious atmosphere had many elements which affiliated it with medieval art. Morris came early under the influence of the painters of the Pre-Raphaelite school, and was drawn especially to the study of the art of the Middle Ages. He contributed a few poems to the "Oxford and Cambridge Magazine," which, like its predecessor, "The Germ," was the organ of the young movement. After leaving the university he studied architecture, and in turn painting and decoration. In 1857, in company with several leading artists, he assisted in the painting of the walls of the Oxford Union Hall. In 1858 he made his first mark as a poet by the publication of "The Defense of Guenevere, and Other Poems." Three years later he became interested in the business of designing and manufacturing stained-glass windows, mosaics, wallpapers, and artistic furnishings, and the group of men of whom he was one in this practical way did a great deal to ennoble and enrich English domestic life. This work will be be described (with several illustrations) in an article called "A Visit to William Morris's Factory," to be printed in the October Magazine Number of The Outlook. Morris's bestknown work, "The Earthly Paradise," appeared in 1868. To these earlier works must be added a long list of volumes in prose and verse; books of art study, translations, poems, and those charming romances of an older time, "The Glittering Plain," "The Wood Beyond the World," which are notable, as has been said, for the presentation of beautiful things in a beautiful way. Mr. Morris had been for a number of years associated with the Socialist movement in England, being convinced of the economic soundness of that movement and of its artistic necessity, and being also strongly moved by a deep and passionate sympathy with the humbler phases of human experience. He was a man of exquisite artistic feeling, whose work often has a kind of beauty which suggests detachment from the problems and questionings of modern life; but he was a Socialist of a pronounced type, and a practical worker in his profession of great effectiveness. His courage was unquestioned, his scorn of conventionality unconcealed, his love of beauty, next to his love of his fellows, the supreme passion of his life. "The Earthly Paradise" is the best known of Mr. Morris's works, and has won for him the title of "the nineteenth-century Chaucer," but the resemblance between the younger and the elder poet was a very superficial one. Mr.

66

Number 15

Morris, although a narrative poet, had the manner of an idylist.

A great deal has been said for many months past in the newspapers about the treaty obligations of the Turkish Government which have not been fulfilled, and the failure to fulfill which makes it possible for the Great Powers to interfere in the Government of the Turkish Empire without incurring the responsibilities of arbitrary or revolutionary action. The "Evening Post" of this city has recently reprinted a section from the Berlin Treaty, and another from the Anglo-Turkish Convention, which not only show exactly the nature of these Turkish promises and afford a standard of measurement of willful and murderous unfaith to the Great Powers to which these promises were made, but also, as it seems to us, show very clearly England's responsibility to the Armenians. Under the Berlin Treaty "the Sublime Porte undertakes to carry out, without further delay, the improvements and reforms demanded by local requirements in the provinces inhabited by the Armenians, and to guarantee their security against the Circassians and Kurds. It will periodically make known the steps taken to this effect to the Powers, who will superintend their application." Under the Anglo-Turkish Convention the Sultan "promises to England to introduce necessary reforms, to be agreed upon later between the two Powers, into the Government and for the protection of the Christians and other subjects of the Porte in these territories; and, moreover, to enable England to make necessary provision for executing her engagements, his Imperial Majesty the Sultan further consents to assign the island of Cyprus to be occupied and administered by England." It must further be remembered that on the basis of this treaty England objected to Russian intervention. These facts not only confer the right, but impose on England the duty, of doing all that is in her power to protect the Armenians from the most cruel massacres in modern history. The failure of the Powers to compel the Turkish Government to keep its promises made in behalf of its subject peoples makes each of these Powers particeps criminis in the most terrible and repulsive of modern tragedies.

These facts furnish the historical basis for Mr. Gladstone's speech at Liverpool on the Armenian question, which, as reported in full in last week's "Independent," is seen to be more significant than it appeared to be from the cable dispatches, on which our paragraph of last week was based. He declares in emphatic terms that "the guilt of massacre rests upon the Turkish Government," and that "the Sultan has added massacre to massacre;" he traces the history of past treaty relations, showing clearly Turkey's solemn obligation to introduce into Armenia effective reforms and England's undertaking in return to defend Turkey in Armenia against unjust aggression from Russia; he points out as a result that England has both a solemn

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