NEW BOOKS 



How the Bible Grew. By Frank G. Lewis, Crozer Theological Seminary. 240 

 pages, cloth; $1.50, postpaid $1.65. This is the first single work to record the 

 growth of the Bible from its beginning up to the present time. It answers many 

 questions about the Bible. 



Problems of Fertilization. By Frank R. Lillie, University of Chicago. To be 

 published May 27. 270 pages, cloth; $1 . 75, postpaid $1 .90. As the problem of fertili- 

 zation deals with the union of male and female sex elements, which forms the beginning 

 of each individual's life-history, it has important bearings upon the problems of 

 heredity. It also has close relations to several Other fundamental biological problems. 



Readings in Industrial Society. By L. C. Marshall, Professor of Political 

 Economy and Dean of the School of Commerce and Administration, University 

 of Chicago. 1,106 pages, cloth; $3.50, postage extra (weight 4 lbs.). 



Published in the series Materials for the Study of Btisiness. This book furnishes a 

 foundation for a thorough understanding and intelligent handling of industrial ques- 

 tions. The fact that all phases of the subject are discussed, each by an expert in 

 his particular line, renders the volume tinexcelled in usefulness. 



The Nature of the Relationship between Ethics and Economics. 



By Clarence E. Ayres, Instructor in Philosophy, University oi Chicago. 72 pages, 

 ' paper covers; 50 cents (postpaid 54 cents). 

 Philosophic Studies, No. 8. An analysis of the underlying conceptions of the nature 

 and function of the sciences under consideration. 



The Living Cycads. By Charles 'Joseph Chamberlain, University of Chicago. 

 170 pages, cloth; $1.50, postpaid $1.65. The latest addition to the "University of 

 Chicago Science Series.' ' Professor Chamberlain has carried on investigations of qycads 

 for a period of fifteen j'^ears,. during which time he visited Mexico, Cuba, Australia, and 

 Africa. Ninety-one illustrations. 



The Spread of Christianity in the Modern World. By Edward Caldwell 

 Moore, Harvard University. To be published about June i. 240 pages, cloth, 

 $2.00, postpaid $2.15. The book gives a survey of the expansion of Christianity 

 since the beginning of the modern era, about 1757, and depicts the movement against 

 the background of general history. 



The New Orthodoxy. By Edward S. Ames, Associate Professor of Philosophy, 

 University of Chicago. 138 pages, cloth; $1 .00, postage extra (weight 12 oz.). 

 A popular, constructive interpretation of man's religious life in the light of the learn- 

 ing of scholars and in the presence of spiritual heroes. 



The Life of Paul. By Benjamin W. Robinson, Professor of New Testament Litera- 

 ture and Interpretation, Chicago Theological Seminary. 264 pages, cloth; $1.25, 

 postage extra (weight i lb. 4 oz.). 



A popular biography of Paul in close relation with the life of his time. In Paul is 

 seen the same spirit which today impels men to start out for other lands to give their 

 all that the nations may have liberty and light. 



THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO PRESS 



CHICAGO ILLINOIS 



