Tee UNIVERSE? Y OF - CHLCAGO PRES 
Industrial Insurance in the United States. By Charles Richmond 
Henderson, Professor of Sociology in the University of Chicago. 
448 pages, 8vo, cloth; net $2.00, postpaid $2.19 
This is the first authoritative treatment of a much-discussed 
question. The introduction contains a summary of the European 
laws on workingmen’s insurance; the text describes the various 
forms of social insurance known in the United States and Canada. 
Illustrations of the movement are given in chapters on municipal 
pension plans for policemen, firemen, and teachers; also the 
military pensions of the federal government and southern states. 
The appendix supplies bibliography, forms used by firms and 
corporations, text of bills, and laws on the subject. 
Chicago Tribune. Industrial Insurance comes at a most opportune time. 
World To-Day. No man in our country is doing more for the scientific pres- 
entation of social service than Professor Henderson. 
Standard. No one who desires to be informed on this subject, which bids 
fair to become a burning political issue, can afford to be without this 
valuable work. 
The Armenian Awakening. By Leon Arpee. 
240 pages, r2mo, cloth; net $1.25, postpaid, $1.36 
Beginning with the “Dark Ages” of Armenian history, the 
author traces the religious attitude and the struggles of this people 
from the time of the introduction of Christianity into their midst 
by Gregory the Illuminator. As he tells us, tradition represents 
the apostles Thaddeus and Bartholomew as having labored among 
them; so that while the Greek church prides itself on its orthodoxy, — 
and the Roman church on its catholicity, the Armenian church 
prides itself on its apostolicity. 
It is a matter of common knowledge to all who are familiar — 
with the Armenian struggle for religious freedom, that political : 
forces have been a strong factor in the persecution to which this — 
people has been periodically subjected. All the sidelights which — 
the condition of European politics could throw on the situation — 
have been employed by the author, and his sympathetic treatment — 
leaves the reader with a clear understanding of the various motives — 
for the frequent outbreaks against the Armenians, which have 
aroused the Christian world. 
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