HISTORY OF MISSIONS. 
Large Crown 8vo, Cloth Extra, Price 5 s. 
“Foreign Missions after a Century .” 
By Rev. JAMES S. DENNIS, D.D., 
Author of “ Christian Missions and Social Progress.” 
With Introduction by Rev. T. M. Lindsay, D.D. 
“By those who want to know all about Foreign Missions, and want to be 
sure that they are not imposed upon, this book will be most welcome.”— 
Expository Times. 
“Should find a place in every Congregational library, and on the book¬ 
shelves of students and all interested in missions.”— Liverpool Daily Post. 
“Presents the facts in a very telling way, and thus furnishes a most 
powerful incentive to increased missionary effort. Altogether, his work is a 
valuable one.”— North British Daily Mail. 
‘' The whole subject is reviewed in a broad and comprehensive manner, 
the reader obtaining a realistic conception not only of what is being accom¬ 
plished evangelically, but of the educational, literary, medical, and industrial 
aspects of the work.”— Dundee Advertiser. 
“ The book is an able and frank statement of the reasons for missions 
and the difficulties that lie in their way—the ablest and frankest I have seen. 
Missionaries abroad and men at home will heartily welcome the chapter which 
deals with the controversies of Christianity with opposing religions. The final 
summary of success is carefully stated and reliable. And the literature of the 
subject is full and scholarly. Take the book as perhaps the most authoritative 
handbook to missions we have received.”— Su?iday School. 
“Though written primarily for an American audience, they deserve equal 
attention here, and the views presented are drawn from a wide and compre¬ 
hensive view of the subject. It is certainly a book that scientific students of 
missionary work should not overlook.”— Ecclesiastical Gazette. 
“ It contains a well-balanced and temperate survey of the present position 
and relations of the missionary enterprise. The book is well worth reading 
by the student of missions, or indeed by anyone who wishes a judicious and 
appreciative estimate of the present position and the complex task of the 
missionary enterprise of the Church of Christ.”— United Presbyterian Record. 
“A very lucid and attractive book.”— Sunday School Chronicle. 
OLIPHANT, ANDERSON & FERRIER, 
ST. MARY STREET, EDINBURGH; 
21 PATERNOSTER SQUARE, LONDON, E.C. 
