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NON-CIRCULATING

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Reviewed by Preservation 1987

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MRR

UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN

3 9015 03014 1967

1

A MONTHLY MAGAZINE OF RELIGION AND THEOLOGY.

EDITED BY

EGBERT C. SMYTH, WILLIAM J. TUCKER, J. W. CHURCHILL, GEORGE HARRIS, AND EDWARD Y. HINCKS,

Professors in Andover Theological Seminary, with the aid and hearty coöperation of all the other Professors.

The Andover REVIEW addresses the religious public. It treats with ability, learning, and candor those questions which specially appeal to religious readers, and is heartily welcomed by all who wish the best and freshest thought on matters of the deepest interest.

In Theology the REVIEW advocates Progressive Orthodoxy, and discusses with reverent freedom the important subjects which challenge the attention of the religious world. It is wholly unsectarian.

The REVIEW has very valuable departments of Archæological and Geographical Discoveries, Theological and Religious Intelligence, Editorial Papers on Current Topics, and careful Book Reviews.

THE WRITERS for the REVIEW are the leading clergymen and scholars in various religions denominations.

"In these days when a coarse and blatant infidelity is too often opposed by nothing stronger than a weak religionism, it is refreshing to read a religious periodical like 'The Andover Review.' It is at once a manly organ of essential orthodoxy, and an honest exponent of the legitimate conclusions of modern religious thought.... The editorial articles of The Review' are admirable, while its book-notices are careful and discriminating." -New York Tribune.

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"With the October number the Andover Review' reaches high-water mark. . . . Altogether, this number, in its choice of topics and their readable quality, meets the ideal of a popular religious magazine."— Vermont Chronicle.

"It is not too much to say that it is the best of the Reviews now published in this country."— Missionary Record (St. Louis).

PRICE.

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30 CENTS A NUMBER; $3.00 A YEAR.

New Subscribers for the ANDOVER REVIEW for 1885 will receive FREE the numbers for November and December, 1884, on application.

N. B. Copies of Vol. I., bound, can be had for $2.50. The two bound volumes of the REVIEW for 1884, and the numbers for 1885, will be furnished for $7.00. Or, the numbers for the two years will be supplied for $5.50.

The Publishers of the REVIEW will bind the numbers of Vols. I. and II. for $1.00 a volume, or will for this sum supply bound volumes in exchange for the numbers in good condition, and pay express charges or postage one way. The numbers can be returned by subscribers at the rate of 1 cent for 4 ounces or fractional part thereof.

CLUBBING RATES.

The ANDOVER REVIEW and ATLANTIC MONTHLY, a year..

The ANDOVER REVIEW and QUARTERLY or Edinburgh ReviEW

These three REVIEWS

$6.00

6.00

9.50

Postal Notes and Money are at the risk of the sender, and therefore remittances should be made by money-order, draft, or registered letter, to

HOUGHTON, MIFFLIN AND COMPANY,

4 PARK STREET, BOSTON, MASS.

THE

POPULAR SCIENCE MONTHLY.

CONDUCTED BY E. L. AND W. F. YOUMANS.

THE POPULAR SCIENCE MONTHLY for 1885 will continue, as heretofore, to supply its readers with the results of the latest investigation and the most valuable thought in the various departments of scientific inquiry.

Leaving the dry and technical details of science, which are of chief concern to specialists, to the journals devoted to them, the MONTHLY deals with those more general and practical subjects which are of the greatest interest and importance to the public at large. In this work it has achieved a foremost position, and it is now the acknowledged organ of progressive scientific ideas in this country.

The wide range of its discussions includes, among other topics:
The bearing of science upon education ;

Questions relating to the prevention of disease and the improvement of sanitary conditions;

Subjects of domestic and social economy, including the introduction of better ways of living, and improved applications in the arts of every kind;

The phenomena and laws of the larger social organizations, with the new standard of ethics, based on scientific principles;

The subjects of personal and household hygiene, medicine, and architecture, as exemplified in the adaptation of public buildings and private houses to the wants of those who use them;

Agriculture and the improvement of food-products;

The study of man, with what appears from time to time in the departments of anthropology and archæology that may throw light upon the development of the race from its primitive conditions.

Whatever of real advance is made in chemistry, geography, astronomy, physiology, psychology, botany, zoology, paleontology, geology, or such other department as may have been the field of research, is recorded monthly.

Special attention is also called to the biographies, with portraits, of representative scientific men, in which are recorded their most marked achievements in science, and the general bearing of their work is indicated and its value estimated.

Volume XXVI. begins with the November number, but subscriptions may begin at any time. Terms: $5.00 per annum. Single copy, 50 cents.

New York: D. APPLETON & CO., Publishers, 1, 3, & 5 Bond St.

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