Preface. 'N' sending out the last volume of the year, we wish to IN send with it a few words to our subscribers and friends, not one of whom, we believe, will say that we have failed to fulfil the promise made in the first volume of THE REVIEW in its present quarterly form-April, 1889. We are now giving to the Churchmen in the United States and Canada the most comprehensive ecclesiastical review that has ever been published. We have placed it upon a sound and secure financial basis. We believe that its business management is as good as that of any other periodical in the country. We can add that there has been a steady increase in its subscription list, and that too, chiefly among the laity, the constituency we are most anxious to reach. And we hope that the day is not distant when it will be an exception to find a prominent layman in the Church who is not a subscriber to THE CHURCH REVIEW. Each volume bears witness to the fact that every school of thought in the Church is on an equal footing in the pages of THE CHURCH REVIEW, even to the discussion of the last notable book in Theological literature. THE REVIEW bound up, as it is now, in cloth ought to be in every Sunday School and Parish Library in the Church. Many of the rectors of the large city parishes have already ordered it for that purpose, and we hope others will follow their example. Surely with its new departments of Parish and Sunday School Library Books; Pamphlets, Tractates, Sermons, etc.; Annuals and Books of Devotion; Parish Tracts; The Music of the Church; and the Ecclesiastical Register, it is deserving of such a place in every pari sh. ANDOVER THEOL OCT iv It is to-day the highest authority on the literature it brings under review. As its critical notices will show, a book is read before it is reviewed, and by some one competent to pronounce judgment upon it. Finally it is not the rival of any other periodical in the Church. It stands alone, and at "the head of our American Church periodical literature." This claim may be made with greater assurance to-day than six years ago, when the declaration was made by fifty-nine of the American Bishops over their signa tures. Publisher's Announcement. THE CHURCH REVIEW will be published as nearly as possible in the middle of the months of January, April, July, and October. Each issue will contain 350 pages, and will be sent to regular subscribers on receipt of $4, in advance, for four numbers, or $1, payable on the receipt of each quarterly issue. Bound in Cloth. The annual THE CHURCH REVIEW is now bound in cloth for Private, Sunday School and Parish Libraries, making four beautiful volumes a year. subscription is $5 in advance, for the four volumes, or $1.25, payable on the receipt of each volume. Subscribers can order cloth covers at 25 cents for each quarterly volume. In sending the order for cloth covers, the number of the volume or volumes should be given. Checks, Money Orders, Drafts, etc., CHURCH REVIEW, and addressed to P. O. should be made payable to THE Box 1839, New York City. HENRY MASON BAUM, Editor and Publisher. CONTENTS. I . . . Rev. George W. Shinn, D.D., . 24 NATION, William George Ward and the Oxford Movement, The Island Missionary of the Bahamas, Episcopal Elections and CONSECRATIONS, NECROLOGY, ESTES AND LAURIAT, Famous Etchers; Endymion; Feathers, Furs and Fins.; Little A. J. JOHNSON AND COMPANY, Universal Cyclopædia. CASSELL AND COMPANY, Jonathan and His Continent; Jacques Bonhomme; John Bull on THOMAS NELSON and SONS, Oxford Bibles; Teachers' Bibles. The Afternoon Landscape; Travels in the Altas and Southern THE HENRY G. ALLEN COMPANY, Encyclopædia Britannica. J. B. LIPPINCOTT AND COMPANY, Chambers's Encyclopædia; Worcester's Unabridged Dictionary; |