BRITISH SYRIAN SCHOOLS, 1872.

BEIRUT.
No. Established. Name. Scholars. Teachers.
1 1860 Training Institution, 92 16
2 1863 Musaitebeh, 85 3
3 1868 Blind School, men & boys, 16 2
4 1868 Blind girls' School, 11 1
5 1860 Boys' School, 85 5
6 1861 East Coombe, 120 4
7 1860 Elementary, 30 2
8 1872 Es-Saifeh, 100 4
9 1860 Infant School, 125 3
10 1860 Moslem, 50 4
11 1860 Night School, 5
12 1863 Olive Branch, 85 4
DAMASCUS.
13 1867 St. Paul's, 170 6
14 1869 Blind School, 15 1
15 1870 Medan, 80 2
16 1867 Night School, 30 1
LEBANON.
17 1863 _Ashrafiyeh_, 53 3
18 1868 _Ain Zehalteh_, 50 2
19 1869 _Aramoon_, 40 2
20 1863 _Hasbeiya_, 160 3
21 1867 _Mokhtara_,
22 1868 _Zahleh_, 75 4
TYRE.
23 1869 Girls' School, 50 2
Totals, 1522 79
Bible Women, 7

MISS TAYLOR'S SCHOOL FOR MOSLEM GIRLS.

This worthy Christian lady from Scotland is doing a quiet yet most effective work in Beirût, with which few are acquainted, yet it is carried on in faith from year to year, and the fruits will no doubt appear one day, in a vast reformation in the order, morality and general improvement of the Moslem families of Beirût.

Ever since the days of Mrs. Sarah L. Smith, and Mrs. Dr. Dodge, Moslem girls have been more or less in attendance upon the schools of the Syria Mission, but the purely Moslem schools of Miss Taylor and of the British Syrian Schools are making a special effort to extend education into every Moslem household.

This school was opened in February, 1868, for the poorest of the poor. It received the name of "The Original Ragged school for Moslem Girls." No one is considered as enrolled, who has not been at least three weeks in regular attendance. The number already received has reached very near five hundred, all Mohammedans, except five Jewish and fifteen Druze girls. Native teachers are also employed, and the pupils are taught reading, writing, geography, and arithmetic. The principal lesson-book is the Bible. The early history of this institution is replete with interest; but it has attracted little public notice hitherto. It has always been a prudential question whether it would not be wiser to proceed with its work in a quiet unobtrusive way, so as not to awake fanatical opposition. But steady and appreciative friends have stood by it from the beginning, and those who know the school best have commended it most earnestly.

CHURCH OF SCOTLAND SCHOOL FOR JEWISH GIRLS IN BEIRUT.

This school has been in operation since 1865. Although established originally for Jewish girls alone, of whom it frequently had fifty in regular attendance, it has also had under instruction, Greek and Moslem girls.

Three European teachers and two native teachers have been connected with it, under the supervision of the Rev. James Robertson, Pastor of the Anglo-American congregation in Beirût.