37) 



THE RACES OF MAN : A SKETCH OF ETHNOGRAPHY 

 AND ANTHROPOLOGY. ByJ. DENIKER. With 178 Illustrations. 6s. 



"Dr. Deniker has achieved a success which is well-nigh phenomenal. . . . The 

 well-chosen and carefully-executed illustrations greatly enhance the value of the 

 work, which we do not hesitate to pronounce the best small treatise on its subject 

 which has appeared of recent years in our language." British Medical Journal. 



(38) 



THE PSYCHOLOGY OF RELIGION. AN EMPIRICAL 

 STUDY OF THE GROWTH OF RELIGIOUS CONSCIOUSNESS. By 

 EDWIN DILLER STARBUCK, PH.D., Assistant Professor of Education, 

 Leland Stanford Junior University. Second Edition. 6s. 



" There is here, in the patient gathering and careful consideration of the subjective 

 facts of religious life, the foundation of a new body of knowledge which will find its 

 place in psychological science and bear practical fruit in religious education and in 

 theology." Psychological Review. 



(39) 



THE CHILD : A STUDY IN THE EVOLUTION OF MAN. 

 By Dr. ALEXANDER FRANCIS CHAMBERLAIN, M.A., PH.D., 

 Lecturer on Anthropology in Clark University, Worcester, Mass. 

 With Illustrations. 6s. 



"The work contains much curious information, and should be studied by those 

 who have to do with children." Sheffield Daily Telegraph. 



(40) 



THE MEDITERRANEAN RACE. By Professor SERGI. 



With over 100 Illustrations. 6s. 



" Obviously all this requires a great deal of proving ; we can only say that Professor 

 Sergi, both in this and in other books, brings forward large quantities of new 

 evidence which may be refuted, but cannot be ignored." Times. 



(41) 

 THE STUDY OF RELIGION. By MORRIS JASTROW, JUN., 



PH.D., Professor in the University of Pennsylvania. 6s. 



" It is no hasty compilation, nor is it an attempt to throw into popular form the 

 contents of better books. It provides precisely the kind of introduction which most 

 people need to the comparative study of religion as a factor in the evolution of human 

 thought and culture." Manchester Guardian. 



