Mk. MACLEHOSE, GLASGOW. 15 
STANLEY, Dean—THE BURNING BusH. A Sermon preached 
before the Glasgow Society of the Sons of Ministers of the 
Church of Scotland. By the Very Reverend ARTHUR 
PENRHYN STANLEY, D.D., Dean of Westminster. 8vo. Is. 
STEWART—THE PLAN oF ST. LUKE’sS GOSPEL ; A Critical 
Examination. By the REv. WILLIAM STEWART, M.A., 
D.D., Regius Professor of Biblical Criticism in Glasgow 
University. 8vo. 3s. 6d. 
STORY—CREED AND ConDUCT: Sermons preached in Ros- 
neath Church. By the REV. ROBERT HERBERT Srory, 
D.D., Minister of the Parish. Crown 8vo. 7s. 6d. 
‘* Characterized throughout by profound earnestness and spirituality, and 
written in a style at once graceful, clear, and nervous. Dr. Story has made 
a well-timed attempt to widen the theology, and at the same time to deepen 
and intensify the religious feeling of his countrymen.”-—Scotsman. 
STORY—ON Fast Days; With reference to more Frequent 
Communion, and to Good Friday. By the REV. ROBERT 
HERBERT SToRY, D.D., Minister of Rosneath. 8vo. Is. 
‘* A thoughtful and earnest discussion of a most important question.”— 
Edinburgh Courant, ‘' A very able pamphlet.” —G/lasgow Herald. 
VEITCH—THE HIsTORY AND POETRY OF THE SCOTTISH 
BORDER, THEIR MAIN FEATURES AND RELATIONS. By 
_ JOHN VEITCH, LL.D., Professor of Logic and Rhetoric in 
the University of Glasgow. Crown 8vo. tos. 6d. 
“This is a genuine book. We can heartily recommend it to three classes 
of readers—to all who have felt the power of Scott’s ‘Border Minstrelsy’ 
(and who with a heart has not ?), to all who care to visit and really to know 
that delightsome land, for no other book except the ‘ Border Minstrelsy ’ 
itself will so open their eyes to see it; to all dwellers in the Borderland who 
wish to know, as they ought to know, what constitutes the grace and glory 
of their Borderland.”"—Contemporary Review, 
“‘ We feel as if we were hearing the stories, or listening to the snatches of 
song among the breezes of the mountains or the moorland, under the 
sun-broken mists of the wild glens, or the wooded banks of the Yarrow or 
the Tweed." — 7imes, 
“*The fullest, most thorough, and most deeply critical work on Border 
history and poetry that we have.” —British Quarterly Review, 
