. Crisis. estudied in Paris at the Julian Academy andunder Henry 0. Tanner. Three of his paint-ings Avere accepted at the Salon des BeauxArts at Toquet. He returned to America MENOFTHE MONTH LffUfTTMFR-ll after fifteen months and then went back toFrance, where he was successful in havinga picture hung at the great spring salon atParis. This was purchased by the ArgentineRepublic and is called La Pauvre November, 1912, Mr. Scott brought backto the United States twenty-six large andmany small paintings. All but two of thelarger paintings have been sold, one beingbought by the Herran


. Crisis. estudied in Paris at the Julian Academy andunder Henry 0. Tanner. Three of his paint-ings Avere accepted at the Salon des BeauxArts at Toquet. He returned to America MENOFTHE MONTH LffUfTTMFR-ll after fifteen months and then went back toFrance, where he was successful in havinga picture hung at the great spring salon atParis. This was purchased by the ArgentineRepublic and is called La Pauvre November, 1912, Mr. Scott brought backto the United States twenty-six large andmany small paintings. All but two of thelarger paintings have been sold, one beingbought by the Herran Art Institute of In-dianapolis for their permanent exhibit. He has just completed three mural paint-ings for the Felsenthan School in Chicago,and has commissions to paint several in theIndianapolis public schools. When theseare finished he expects to return to Europe,this time to attempt to win a medal in thegreat salon at Paris, an honor which isvery much sought, and wliich but very fewsucceed in LA PAUVRE VOISINE. 224 THE CRISIS A GREAT TEACHER. T SAAC NEWTON KENDALL, first presi--*- dent of Lincoln University, Pennsyl-vania, died reeentlj at the age of was founded as Ashman In-stitute in 1854. On the day Lincoln wasassassinated President Kendall was on hisway to take charge of the institution, and itwas named after the great , under Kendall, developed as a cen-ter for the training of ministers and forhigher education. It has a good endowment,and perhaps the one word of criticism ofDr. Kendall and his associates is that theyhave never trained a NegTo whom theythought worthy of teaching at Lincoln. Thisfault will, we trust, soon be remedied, andat any rate the memory of this good anddevoted man will live long in a thousandlives. A MAKER OF MEN. JE. MOOKLAND was born on a farm inOhio. He was educated in the publicschools of his native State, at the North-western Normal University, Ada, 0., andat Howard University. His first public


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, booksubjectafrican, bookyear1910