Late UROL LY: OF CHICAGO PRESS 
Jerusalem in Bible Times: An Archaeological Handbook for 
Travelers and Students. By Lewis Bayles Paton, Ph.D., 
D.D., Professor of Old Testament Exegesis and Criticism 
in the Hartjord Theological Seminary. 
150 pages, 12m0, flexible covers; net $1.00, postpaid $1.09 
This book is the outcome of Professor Paton’s studies in the 
archaeological history of Jerusalem during his residence there as 
director of the American School of Oriental Study and Research. 
He found that no book gave a clear and succinct account of modern 
excavations and discoveries at a moderate price. Professor Paton 
identifies Bible sites with their modern names, locates the temple, 
the numerous ancient walls, and historic springs, pools, hills, 
and valleys. Sixty-seven charts and illustrations make the 
descriptions lucid and interesting. 
Christian Register. A trustworthy statement of known facts respecting 
Jerusalem. 
Springfield Republican. The amazing feature of the volume is the amount 
of illuminating material compressed in so small a volume, the design 
evidently being to give the largest amount of information at the lowest 
possible cost. 
Fragments from Graeco-Jewish Writers. By Wallace Nelson 
Stearns, Ph.D. 
135 pages, 12mo, cloth; net 75 cents; postpaid 83 cents 
In this carefully arranged collection Dr. Stearns has fulfilled 
with distinction his purpose of presenting in easily accessible 
form the fragments of a few Palestinian writers whose literary 
remains are not common property. After discussing Eusebius 
and the “‘Praeparatio Evangelica’”’ he takes up the fields of his- 
tory, philosophy, and poetry. The extracts from historians 
include fragments of Demetrius, Eupolenius, Artapanus, Aristeas, 
Malchus, and Thallus; of the poets: Philo, Theodotus, and 
Ezekiel; of the philosophers, Aristobulus. The book presents 
every evidence of scholarly care in its preparation and is provided 
with a bibliography, a chronological table of authors, and exhaus- 
tive footnotes. 
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