SOME NOTABLE BOOKS
ON FOREIGN MISSIONS
FROM THE CATALOGUE OF
OLIPHANT, ANDERSON & FERRIER
100 PRINCES STREET, EDINBURGH
21 PATERNOSTER SQUARE, LONDON

A HISTORY OF MISSIONS IN INDIA. By Julius Richter, D.D. Translated by Sydney H. Moore, Master in the School for Sons of Missionaries, Blackheath. Demy 8vo, with map10s 6d

“Will be indispensable to all students of Indian Missions. It is singularly interesting.”—London Quarterly Review.

THE PEN OF BRAHMA. Peeps into Hindu Hearts and Homes. By Beatrice M. Harband, Author of “Daughters of Darkness in Sunny India,” etc. Large crown 8vo, cloth extra, with Illustrations3s 6d net

HOLY HIMALAYA. The Religion, Traditions, and Scenery of the Provinces of Kumaun and Garhwal. By the Rev. E. S. Oakley, of the London Missionary Society, Almora, Northern India. With 16 full-page Illustrations. Large crown 8vo, cloth extra5s net

DAYLIGHT IN THE HAREM. Papers on Present-day Reform Movements, Conditions, and Methods of Work among Moslem Women read at the Lucknow Conference, 1911. Edited by Annie Van Sommer, A. de Selincourt and S. M. Zwemer, D.D., F.R.G.S. Illustrated, crown 8vo, cloth3s 6d net

CHILDREN OF CEYLON. By Thomas Moscrop. (The Children’s Missionary Series.) Large crown 8vo, with eight Coloured Illustrations, cloth1s 6d net

THE MOSLEM DOCTRINE OF GOD. A Treatise on the Character and Attributes of Allah according to the Koran and Orthodox Tradition. By Samuel M. Zwemer, Author of “Arabia, the Cradle of Islam.”2s 6d net

“A piece of earnest thinking and writing.”—Spectator.