TRINITY COLLEGE Offers graduate and undergraduate courses in all departments of Literature, History, Science and Philosophy. Every advantage is offered and the best Christian influences are brought to bear in shaping character and preparing young men to meet the duties and responsibilities of life. The equipments are complete and the advantages are superior. TRINITY COLLEGE HAS THE LARGEST Lectures are from time to time delivered before the student body by men well equipped in their line of work. The students are kept in touch with the world's work, and those things are encouraged which develop men morally, mentally, and physically. For catalogue and further information, address, W. P. FEW, President, Durham, N. C. WHERE WILL YOU SEND YOUR BOY TO SCHOOL? No parent will consider this question carelessly. ::::::::::::: THE TRINITY PARK SCHOOL seeks to meet these requirements. It is a college The Capital of a bank, together with the Surplus and Profits, and the character and ability of the men who manage it, represent the protection afforded patrons. Every person desires security for his money. This bank with its Capital and Surplus amounting to over $500,000.00 and its able management affords greater protection than any other bank in Durham county. YOUR ACCOUNT INVITED THE DURHAM & SOUTHERN RAILWAY Offers the very best service to shippers and receivers of freight to and from Eastern, Western and Southern Points, and Durham, N. C.. Apex, N. C., Dunn, N. C., and intermediate stations. This Company also offers Very Attractive Passenger Facilities and Schedules to all points in the Southern States and Eastern points in North and South Carolina. For further information apply to BURKE HOBGOOD, Soliciting Freight and Passenger Agent DURHAM, NORTH CAROLINA OUNDED in 1892, The Sewanee Review has steadily and consistently maintained its policy, announced in the first issue, of being a serious literary and critical journal. Avoiding all temptation to court wider popularity through mere timeliness in its articles, it has ever sought to serve as a repository of the literary essay and the critical review. For the past ten years the magazine has drawn its. contributions from a wide extent of country, representing thirty-eight states of the Union as well as England and Japan. New York leads with a total of thirty-three contributions out of a total of two hundred and sixtyfour; but nearly forty-five per cent have come from the South, so that the magazine has contributed its share towards helping to encourage and develop independence of thought, to mould public opinion, to raise the standards of taste and literary expression, and to reflect the best tendencies in the culture and the life of the Southern people. Though not unnaturally a large majority of the contributors have come from the colleges, The Review has not been merely an academic organ, but has covered a broad field of literature, art, history, economics, theology, and current questions, and has always tried to approach these subjects in a dignified manner, free from prejudice and undue partisanship. The Sewanee Review is conducted by members of the Faculties of the University of the South, Sewanee, Tennessee, but has no official connection with the University. The South Atlantic Quarterly The Spirit of Youth in Arms WALTER GRAHAM Western Reserve University When the sinister shadow of Teuton ambition fell across the sunshine and beauty of the world, men and women who had been benignly dreaming about universal brotherhood could see nothing but darkness in the human outlook. Was this the fine fruit of all the centuries of effort and culture? The apostasy of a great people, renowned for the very things which make life worth living and the soul of man reach upward, was a powerful argument to prove the deterioration of human nature. Faith in all that was good seemed slipping away. Stunned by the German policy of deliberate frightfulness, many people for a time found it impossible to perceive in the future anything but disaster. Yet the very blankness of despair was the surest ground of hope. Sharp reactions. against the horror and inhumanity of war were the best evidences of how far the race really had advanced. Prodigious possibilities gleamed in the way the world met the crisis and the ghastly revelation. Brighter than everything else was the spirit with which Youth threw itself into the struggle. From farm and factory and school the young men of nations went forth to match themselves with this evil power that was bestriding the world like a colossus. Greybeards plotted. They were sad. Death was in their wrinkled eyes. |