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D. APPLETON & CO.'S PUBLICATIONS. 



HE CLAIMS OF CHRISTIANITY. By Wil- 

 liam Samuel Lilly, Honorary Fellow of Peterhouse, Cam- 

 bridge ; author of " The Great Enigma," etc. 8vo. Cloth, 

 $3-50. 



"A book which has divided attention with Benjamin Kidd's 'Social Evolution.' 

 The author's aim is not that of a theolo^n, but rather that of what may be termed the 

 student of events ; in other words, his book deals with Christianity as a fact in the 

 world's history. ... In this volume these claims of Christianity are considered, first 

 as regards the two other creeds besides the Christian which claim universality — Bud- 

 dhism and Islam — and then as affecting and affected by civil society in the middle ages 

 in the epoch of the Renaissance and the Reformation, and in this new age." — Neiv 

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HE GREAT ENIGMA. By William Samuel 

 Lilly.' 8vo. Cloth, $4.00. 



" This volume is delightfully complete in the whole and in the parts, in form and 

 substance. . . . The author has finished his sentences and his argument, and rounded 

 up his work with an ideal index and a full summary of his line of tliought, a very great 

 aid to the ordinary reader in the attempt to master an extended and subtle discussion. 

 He has his reward in the effectiveness of the book, which is a strong, ingenious, and very 

 destructive inquiry into the current atheistic and agntistic philosophies as religions. 

 . . . He makes no extravagant claim for the Bible nor for Christian theology, and he 

 does not lay so much stress on the postulates and conclusions of Christian science or 

 Christian philosophy as the supreme needs and responbihilities of human life. . . . 

 We understand that Mr. Lilly is a Roman Catholic. There is nothing in his book to 

 suggest any Roman limitations to his Catholic faith. He has done great good service 

 to the cause of right thinking and right living." — New York Independent. 



"HY NOT AND WHY. Short Studies in Church- 



manship. By the Rev. William Dudley Powers. Second 



edition. i2mo. Paper, 50 cents. 



" ' Take heed unto thyself and to the doctrine.' An admirable gentleness and 

 broadness of spirit characterize this little work, whose author is the well-known and 

 much-esteemed rector of St. Andrew's Church, this city. . . . There is not a sen- 

 tence between the covers which does not breathe of charitableness toward those who 

 hold beliefs other than the writer, and love toward all faith that :s earnest and honest, 

 under whatever name," — Richmond Times, 



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'HY WE BELIEVE THE BIBLE. An Hour's 



Reading for Busy Peopk. By J. P. T. Ingraham, S. T. D. 



i5mo. Cloth, 60 cents. 



" Dr. In^:Taham has here attempted to give in the categorical form a very con- 

 densed summary of the reasons for receiving Holy Sciipture. It is impossible, in a 

 work of this scope, to do more than to state dogmatically conclusions and facts. This 

 has been fairly done in the volume. ... It prepares the ground for honest inquiry, 

 and will enable any one whose general belief has been disturbed to see where the 

 difficulty lies.'' — Tke Ckurckman. 



" Our author is practical ; he does not take up with theories. He has produced a 

 book that pastors and teachers will find of great use. It will be helpful lo hundreds 

 of young men, and save them from misconceptions."— 5a/tfw/or5 American. 



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