ii SCIENCE—ADVERTISEMENTS 
‘‘A Noble Vision of the Meaning of History” 
BOOKS BY PROFESSOR CARL HEINRICH CORNILL 
THE PROPHETS OF ISRAEL. Popular Sketches from Old THE RISE OF THE PEOPLE OFISRAEL. In “ Epitomes 
Testament History. Translated by S. F. Corkran. $1.00 of Three Sciences: Comparative Philology, Psychology, 
net. Paper, 30 cents. and Old Testament Hisiory.’’ H.H.Oldenberg, J. Jastrow, 
ae USNS OF sag Gis ee te panne eo one C. H. Cornill. Cloth, 50 cents net. (2s.6d.) 
Harliest Times to the Destruction of Jerusalem by the Ro- E OL ENT. Paper, 2! Nts.[B: a 
mans. Translated by W. H. Carruth. Cloth, $1.50. (7s.6d.). HANES) USE RISE COVGID) MEISHSANNEISTS per,2 ce ok 2? 
ARTICLES BY CORNIEL 
The Education of Children in Ancient Israel. Monist. The Psalms in Universal Literature. Open Court, 
Vol. XIII., p. 1. Vol. XII., No. 507, p. 440. 
The New Bible and the Old. Monist. Vol. X., p.441. Scienceand Theology. OpenCourt. Vol. XI.,No.488,p.35. 
The Polychrome Bible. Monist. Vol. X., p.1. The Song of Songs. Open Court. Vol. XII.,No.505,p. 371. 
TX PROFESSOR CORNILL we have one of the most scholarly professors of Old Testament Theology, and at the same time 
@manof unusual] devotion and Christian piety. Among the higher critics he is recognized as a Jeader, and_having at- 
tained his results almost in spite of his own preferences, presents them with great delicacy and with unusual sympathy 
for the traditional interpretation. 
‘« An accomplished and conscientious scholar, and of a truly religious spirit.”— The Outlook.4 
“‘Tt is good that the church should take an interest in the past and especially good when the present is so full of piess- 
ing questions and living issues. There have been times when the church has bee prone to live too much on the past but 
those were not times when the significance of that part was most clearly understood ; it was not the living past to which 
intelligent homage was paid but a dead past jetrified int) hard dogmas that were worshiped. In our own time it is from 
the men of ‘science’ even more than from the theologians that the message concerning the meaning of the past has been 
expressed with greatest force. It is possible for us al] now to take a large, comprehensive view of great world-movements.”” 
—PROFESSOR W. G. JORDAN, Queen’s University, Kingston, Ontario, in the Biblical World. 
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SECCND EDITION, NOVEMBER, 1910 
AMERICAN MEN OF SCIENCE 
A BIOGRAPHICAL DIRECTORY 
EDITED BY J. MicKEEN CATTELL 
A Biographical directory requires revision if it is to maintain its usefulness. Nearly a third of the names in. the 
present edition are new, and the fees which appeared in the first division have in nearly every case been revised. The 
amount of work required to prepare the revision has been as great as that given to the first edition. There has been no 
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make the book as complete and accurate as possible. There are of course omissions, if only because some men will not 
reply even to repeated requests for the information needed. The thousand leading men of science have been again selected 
by the methods that were used before, and stars have been added to the subjects of research in the case of 269 new men who 
have obtained places on the list. The editor's object in selecting this group 0’ scientific men has been to make a study of 
the conditions on which scientific research depends and so far as may be to improve these conditions. ‘There are printed tn 
an appendix the two statrstical studies that have been made.—From the Preface to the Second Edition. = 
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