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is is practically a collection of illustrations of the effects of sm and other similar phenomena. There is a great deal that erful and which only a short time ago would have been consupernatural.

IN CREATION and ETHICAL MONISM. By Augustus Hopkins Strong. 24 pages. $2.50. Philadelphia: The Roger Williams Press.

-TISM.

rd Trail, The. By W. T. Hale. 75 cents. Cumberland Press, Nashille, Tenn.

s Kingsley. By C. W. Stubbs. Herbert S. Stone & Company, Chicago.

e of the Invisibles. By H. E. Orcutt. 75 cents. Metaphysical Pub. Co., New York.

y of the Jewish People. By Prof. J. S. Riggs. $1.25. Scribner's, New York.

nce of the Zodiac. By Eleanor Kirk. $1.00. Eleanor Kirk, Brooklyn. the Apostate. By D. S Mereshkovski. Henry Altemus, Philadelphia. ry of Past Births. By C. Johnson. 25 cents. Metaphysical Publishing Co., New York.

od of Jesus, The. By A. W. Anthony. $1.25. Silver, Burdett & Company, Boston.

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Through the kindness of Mr. Stanley McCormick the library now has a set of the "Library of the World's Best Literature." A new set of the Century Dictionary has been received from Mr. Anthony Dey, of New York City.

The PARK REVIEW has given a dozen valuable books.

COLLEGE REFERENCE LIST.

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II.

Arnold: Inaugural Lecture.
Lotze: Mikrokosmus VII.
Hegel: Philosophy of History.
Adam: Theories of History.
Flint, intro: Phil. of History in
France.

Lecky: History of European Morals, I.

Fiske: Destiny of Man, Chapters
XI, XII, XIII.
Freeman: Methods.
Droysen: Historik.

Kingsley: Limits of Exact Science as Applied to History [Roman and Teuton].

Schlegel: Philosophy of History.
Comte: Positive Philosophy, VI.
Buckle: Hist. of Civil. in England.
Carlyle: Essays.

Froude: Short Studies.
Emerson: Essays History.
Seeley: History and Politics.
Taine: Introduction to English
Literature.

Harrison: The Meaning of History.

Mace: Method in History, I. Taine: English Literature-Introduction.

Democracy: An Agent in Civilization.

De Tocqueville: Democracy in
America.

Motley: Historic Progress of
American Democracy.
Freeman: Comparative Politics.
May: Democracy in Europe.
Bryce: The American Common-
wealth.

Maine: Popular Government.
Stickney: Democratic

ment.

Govern

Burgess: Political Science and

Constitutional Law. Wilson: The State.

Dean: History of Civilization, IV. Brace: Gesta Christi.

May: Constitutional History of

III. The Forces of Nature-Their Influence on Early Civilization. Buckle: History of Civilization. Mahan: Influence of Sea Power. Bullock: Travels in Mexico. Burckhardt: Travels in Arabia. Forry: Climate of U. S. Montesquieu: Works.

May: Democracy in Europe-Introduction.

Lubbock: Origins of Civilization. Draper: Intellectual Development of Europe, Vol. II, 312.

IV. The Influence of the Revival of
Learning on Civilization.

Symonds: Renaissance in Italy.
Burckhardt: Civiliz. of the Period
of the Ren. in Italy, 2 V.
Grimm: Michael Angelo.

Sismondi: Literatures of Southern

Europe.

Schultze: Philosophy of the Re

naissance.

Gibbon: Vol. VIII, 338.

Hettner: Petrarch and Boccaccio.

Villari: Savonarola and his Times.

Reber: Mediaeval Art.

Scott: Renaissance of Art.
Milman: XIV.

Hallam: Literatures of Europe.
Draper: Intellectual Development
of Europe.

V. Great Men as Factors in Civilization.

Carlyle: Heroes & Hero Worship.
Caesor: Froude, Dodge.

Charlemagne: Holder, Cutts.
Hildebrand: Bowden, Stephens,
Milman's.

Luther: Jacobs, Meurer.

Louis XIV: Hassall, Voltaire,
Pardoe.

Cromwell: Cornish, Church, Car-
lyle.

Washington: Hyde, Irving, Ban-
croft.

Napoleon: Morris, Ropes, Sloane.
Lincoln: Morse, Nicolay and Hay,
French.

Gladstone: McCarthy. William

son.

A QUARTERLY MAGAZINE.

LITERARY, HISTORICAL, PHILOSOPHICAL, EDUCATIONAL.

EDITED BY

PROF. THOMAS GREGORY BURT, M. A.,
History and German, Park College.

PROF. CLELAND B. MCAFEE, PÅ. D., D. D.,
Mental and Moral Philosophy, Park College.

PROF. HENRY S. VERRILL, M. A.,
English Literature and Rhetoric,
Park College.

PROF. J. HAMILTON LAWRENCE, M. A.,
English, Park College.

THE PARK REVIEW is issued in October, January, April, July. The REVIEW absorbs the Library Bulletin and Literary Review and the publications of the Historical Club.

ANNUAL SUBSCRIPTION, $1.00 in advance; single copies. 25c.
ADVERTISEMENTS. Rates will be furnished upon request.

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COMMUNICATIONS intended for the Editorial Department should be addressed, "Prof. T. G. Burt, lock box H, Parkville, Missouri." Those intended for the Business Department should be addressed to "The Review Publishing Company, lock box H, Parkville, Missouri."

In order that THE PARK REVIEW may circulate widely in the literary centres of the central West we will send it for one year to any one interested in its success for 50c.

All subscriptions will begin with the current number.

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e Revolutionary period of our history gave birth to sevphatic statements of the natural rights of man. Banays of the Virginia Bill of Rights, which was adopted e, 1776: "Virginia moved from charters and customs to al principles; from a narrow altercation about facts to the -plation of immutable truth. She summoned the eternal laws 's being to protest against all tyranny."

ne Virginia Bill of Rights contains the following enumeration rights of man: "All men are by nature equally free and inlent and have certain inherent rights of which, when they nto a state of society, they can not, by any compact, deprive est their posterity, viz: the enjoyment of life and liberty he means of acquiring and possessing property, and of purand obtaining happiness and safety. All power is vested in onsequently derived from the people."

Vitn the words of the Declaration of Independence we are all ar: "We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men eated equal and are endowed by their Creator with certain nable rights; that among these are life, liberty and the pur-f happiness. That to secure these rights governments are

We have then an historical as well as a philosophical interest e questions, Has man any natural rights? What are the natrights of man?

In a sense, all man's rights are natural rights. That is, they letermined by the capacities of his nature. I think it may be that man has a natural right to all the liberty that he knows to use. The supreme good for man is the realization of his re, the attainment of all the largest possibilities of vigor and ue of which his nature is capable. It follows then that man's

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