Dial. 38: 272. Ap. 16, ‘05. 130w.

[*] “His plea for less of the mechanical and more of the personal in education is worth the attention of teachers and of all interested in the methods which are at this moment forming the future citizen.”

+ +Ind. 59: 818. O. 5, ‘05. 180w.
R. of Rs. 31: 511. Ap. ‘05. 90w.

King, Henry Churchill. Rational living: some practical inferences from modern psychology, [**]$1.25. Macmillan.

“President King ... has brought together the ‘four great emphases’ of psychological study in popular form, and pointed out their direct practical bearing on the conduct of life. For the satisfaction of those who have not at hand the works of the masters in psychology, he quotes these freely, so that the reader may judge of the adequacy of the grounds on which are based the practical counsels which they suggest for rational living in respect to growth, character, happiness, and influence. In conclusion it is shown that ‘just these ideal conditions to which psychology leads us Christ declares to be actual.’”—Outlook.

[*] “A serious and amazingly comprehensive study.”

+ +Critic. 47: 582. D. ‘05. 100w.

“The peculiar merit of President King’s work is that he has presented the fundamental facts of psychology, together with the practical counsels which they impose for a life in rational accord with our nature, more comprehensively and completely than any preceding writer.”

+ +Outlook. 81: 529. O. 28, ‘05. 200w.

Kingdom of Siam. See Carter, A. Cecil, ed.