THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO PRESS 





and other themes of equal importance are discussed informally 

 and in such a way as to arouse the keenest interest on the part 

 of boys. This long-needed book will be useful, not only in the 

 Sunday school, but in day-school and Association classes. It is 

 the first book in the field to start with a recognition of the boy's 

 point of view. 



These volumes are now in press : 



The Sunday -School Building and Its Equipment. By Herbert F 



Evans. 



i6mo, doth; 75 cents, postage extra (weight 12 oz.) 



With the modern reorganization of the curriculum of the 

 Sunday school there has come an urgent demand for adequate 

 housing of the school; and the author in this book answers the 

 question as to how buildings should be constructed for Sunday- 

 school use, and how old buildings may be remodeled at a moder- 

 ate expense. It is the most recent practical discussion of 

 Sunday-school architecture. 



Graded Social Service for the Sunday School By William N, 



Hutchins. 



i6mo, cloth; 75 cents, postage extra (weight 12 oz.) 



A highly suggestive discussion of the question as to what 

 may be done in the Sunday school to convert its social teaching 

 from theory into practice. As the outcome of a wide study of 

 present activities the author presents a varied program of possi- 

 bilities, from which teachers and workers may select according 

 to the conditions in their own schools. 



The Weather and Climate of Chicago. (Publications of the Geo- 

 graphic Society of Chicago.) By Henry J. Cox, Professor of 

 Meteorology, United States Weather Bureau, and John H. 

 Armington, Local Forecaster, United States Weather Bureau. 



396 pages, 8vo, cloth; $3.00, postage extra (weight 3 lbs. 1 oz.) 



This book, of general interest because of its character and 

 authority, will naturally be of peculiar interest to residents of 



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