. The Open court. Luzon (Philippine Islands)By Dr. CARL WILHELM SEIDENADEL THIS Grammar, the first of the hitherto unexplored idiom of the BontocIgorot, contains the results of a scholars independent and uninfluencedresearch; it is based entirely upon material collected direcdy from thenatives lips. An extensive Vocabulary (more than four thousand Igorot words)and Texts on Mythology, Folk Lore, Historical Episodes and Songs are includedin this book. It will be of particular interest to Linguists, Ethnologists andComparative Philologists to whom the author furnishes an abundance of reliablemate


. The Open court. Luzon (Philippine Islands)By Dr. CARL WILHELM SEIDENADEL THIS Grammar, the first of the hitherto unexplored idiom of the BontocIgorot, contains the results of a scholars independent and uninfluencedresearch; it is based entirely upon material collected direcdy from thenatives lips. An extensive Vocabulary (more than four thousand Igorot words)and Texts on Mythology, Folk Lore, Historical Episodes and Songs are includedin this book. It will be of particular interest to Linguists, Ethnologists andComparative Philologists to whom the author furnishes an abundance of reliablematerial and new theories about the structure of Philippine Languages in exhaustiveness this monumental work surpasses the Grammars of any otherPhilippine Idiom treated before. 550 pages in Quarto. Illustrated. Edition limited to 1200 copies. Printedfrom type on fine paper and elegantly bound. ;^ (20s). THE OPEN COURT PUBLISHING CO. 378 388 Wabash Avenue, CHICAGO Send for complete illustrated HIS HOLINESS POPE PIUS X. riiiitisiiirir to Ill Ofiin Court. The Open Court A MONTHLY MAGAZINE Devoted to the Science of Religion, the Religion of Science, andthe Extension of the Religious Parliament Idea. VOL. XXIV. (No. 5.) MAY, 1910. NO. 648. Copyright by The Open Court Publishing Company, 1910. MODERNISM IN AMERICA. BY AN AMERICANIST. FATHER Tyrrell, less than a year before his too early death,said, speaking of Modernism in America: I cannot under-stand America. With its freedom and intelligence, its representa-tives ought to be in the forefront of the Modernist movement. YefModernism has produced there hardly an echo. The Church inAmerica is asleep; and I can conceive nothing that will awaken it,but the production of some book native to the soil, which will raiseso loud a cry of reform that all who have ears must hear. The disappointment expressed in these words has been feltand uttered by practically all the leading Modernists of his visit here two y


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade188, booksubjectreligion, bookyear1887