mae UNIVERSITY OF: CHICAGCG “PRESS 
Tables of Phonetic Changes 
Arranged by FRANCIS A. WOOD, Assistant Professor of Germanic Philology 
in the University of Chicago 
8 pages, 8vo, paper; net 20 cents, postpaid 21 cents 
HESE tables are the result of the author’s experience in teaching Germanic phi- 
lology. Finding that the average student in Germanics knows very little of Ger- 
manic phonology and nothing at all of the phonology of other Indo-European languages, 
he has arranged in this convenient form the principal phonetic changes that obtain through- 
out the Indo-European group. The pamphlet should prove useful to many teachers. 
-Egoism: A Study in the Social Premises of Religion 
By LOUIS WALLIS 
136 pages, 16mo0, cloth; net $1.00, postpaid 1.07 
N this interesting little book the author has a double object: first, to show that egoism 
is the chief factor which must be taken into account in sociological study; second, to 
apply this to the historical criticism of the Bible. The book is original and stimulating. 
va scholarly work.””—Columbus Dispatch. “Mr. Wallis has produced a text which will be 
“A bright ae intelligible, not only to scholars, but to non-tech- 
ght and readable book.” —The Observer. nical readers. Apart from its purely philosophic 
shi volume forms a valuable"summary of the value, it has a broad interest and instruction, an 
7 ject of the religion of Israel.”—Boston Evening _ there are parts of it more enthralling than romance.” 
ranscript. —North American. 
Russian Reader 
By PAUL BOYER and N. SPERANSKY, of l’Ecole des Langues Orientales, 
Paris, France; adapted for Englisli-speaking Students by SAMUEL 
NORTHRUP HARPER, Associate in the Russian Language and Literature 
in the University of Chicago 
396 pages, 8vo, cloth; net $3.00, postpaid $3.20 
0 the rapidly increasing number of students desiring a first-hand knowledge of Russian 
language and literature this should prove a valuable aid. It is designed for those 
who have already mastered the alphabet and the rudiments of the grammar. The texts 
for reading and translation have been accented throughout, and are all drawn from the 
works of a single author, Count Leo Tolstoy, as presenting the best models of the language 
aS actually spoken. The stories are profusely annotated. A syntactical Appendix of sixty 
Pages, a Russian and an English Index, and a full Vocabulary complete the volume. 
The College Course in the Principles of Education 
4 JOHN A. MacVANNEL, Adjunct Professor of the Philosophy of Education 
in Teachers College, Columbia University 
58 pages, 8vo, paper; net 25 cents, postpaid 28 cents 
A DISCUSSION of the problem: What should constitute a college course in the prin- 
ie ciples of education, its relation to cognate subjects, its limits, and the more important 
ces of material? After an introductory survey, the pamphlet treats in three parts of 
“ 
The Foundations of Education,” “The Course of Personal Development,” and ‘‘ Educa- 
tion in the 1.” 
