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'Certainly the most valuable Year-Book published. . . . Range of subjects simply marvellous."'· PALL MALL GAZETTE.

READY IN A FEW DAYS.

HAZELL'S ANNUAL FOR 1889:

A CYCLOPÆDIC RECORD OF MEN AND TOPICS OF THE DAY.

REVISED TO DECEMBER 1888.

FOURTH YEAR OF

ISSUE.

Crown 8vo. cloth, 640 pages, price 3s. 6d.

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HE growing difficulty in the present day, of keeping abreast with the numerous questions-political, social, religious, literary, and scientific-which daily and hourly present themselves to the notice of every intelligent man, renders a work of the nature of HAZELL'S ANNUAL' of supreme importance, and makes it the indispensable and invaluable companion of the hurried reader to whom the pressure of daily life prevents an exhaustive study and examination of the subjects which continually attract the notice, and form the basis of conversation in every class of society.

'HAZELL'S ANNUAL' treats of every subject of the hour, and contains upwards of 3,500 concise and explanatory articles on every topic of current political, social, and general interest referred to by the press and in daily conversation.

Eminent specialists are engaged to write upon the various subjects which come within their purview. All subjects are brought up to date, while a considerable part of the work is entirely new, thus making the 'ANNUAL' a YEARLY record of Men and Things. The information is obtained from the highest and most responsible sources, and no efforts have been spared to make the work thoroughly reliable in all respects.

The low price places it within the reach of all. It remains only to add that the same diligence which the Proprietors have exercised in former editions to sustain its high reputation will be carefully maintained, and it is confidently hoped that the popularity of the ANNUAL will be yet further increased by the present issue.

A four-page Prospectus, containing specimen page, numerous press opinions, and other information, may be obtained for distribution on application to the Publishers.

LONDON:

HAZELL, WATSON & VINEY, LIMITED, 52 Long Acre, W.C.;

AND

HODDER & STOUGHTON, 27 Paternoster Row, E.C.

TWO IMPORTANT WORKS ON JAPANESE

ART

IMPORTANT WORK ON JAPANESE ORNAMENTAL ART

The Ornamental Arts of Japan

Dedicated, by special permission, to His Royal Highness the DUKE OF EDINBURGH, K.G.,
K.T. Illustrated with One Hundred and One Plates-Seventy in Colours and Gold, and
Thirty-one in Monochrome-with general and descriptive text. By GEORGE ASHDOWN
AUDSLEY, Fellow of the Royal Institute of British Architects, Member of the Asiatic
Society of Japan, one of the Authors of the Keramic Art of Japan,' and Author of several
works on Art. Complete in Four Parts, Now Ready.

Conditions of Publication.-The Work, forming Two Handsome Folio Volumes, is issued in Four Parts, inclosed in ornamental cloth Portfolios. The Entire Edition for sale in England and the Colonies is strictly limited to 690 copies. The Author and Publishers bind themselves neither to print further copies nor publish any smaller edition.

(The Artist Proof Edition of 50 copies entirely disposed of.)
General Copies, printed on finest plate paper, only 640 copies printed for
sale in England and the Colonies
In 2 vols. handsomely bound in leather, specially designed by the Author

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£15 15 0
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'We briefly described the first and second instalments of Mr. Audsley's splendidly illustrated book soon after they were issued more than two years and a half ago. It is now complete, and on its superb plates all the resources of MM. Lemercier, of Paris, have been lavished, and the best qualities of the chromo-lithographic and heliogravure processes have been developed in delineating the art of the extreme East,'-ATHENEUM.

'In this splendid work, now brought safely to a conclusion, we have the most perfect view of Japanese Art which has yet been published.'-ACADEMY.

As might be expected, the most attractive and perhaps the most important part of Mr. Audsley's book consists of the illustrations, excellently chosen, and printed in colours in the most beautiful manner by M. Lemercier, of Paris.' TIMES."

IMPORTANT WORK ON JAPANESE PICTORIAL ART

The

Pictorial

Arts

of Japan

Illustrated with Eighty Plates, executed by Chromo-Lithography, Photogravure, and Native
Engravings on Wood and Copper, and a large number of Woodcuts, &c., printed in the body
of the Work, with general and descriptive text by WILLIAM ANDERSON, F.R.C.S., late
Medical Officer to H.M.'s Legation in Japan; Author of 'A Descriptive Catalogue of the
Collection of Chinese and Japanese Pictures in the British Museum' (in the press), and
Articles on Pictorial and Glyptic Art in the Handbook for Japan' &c. The Complete
Work, in Four Parts, Now Ready.

Conditions of Publication. The entire English and American Edition is limited to 1,100 copies (100 artists' proof copies and 1,000 ordinary copies). The Publishers bind themselves neither to print further copies nor publish any smaller edition. The Work is supplied at the following prices :

Artists' proof copies, Plates printed on finest Japanese paper, numbered
and signed by the Author...

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(Only a few copies of this Edition now remain.)

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'A book to cherish as a work of art as well as a book to read. The issue for England and America is limited to eleven hundred copies a hundred "artists' proof" and a thousand "ordinary" and, as the publishers bind themselves not to produce a cheap edition, to its other shining qualities there will be added that of rarity. What is more to the purpose is that its illustrations alone are enough to make it priceless.'-SATURDAY REVIEW.

'The admirers of Japanese art will find in the present work a most complete and instructive, as well as a most interesting, treatise on the subject. . . . The chromo-lithographs especially are worthy of the highest praise, and are rivalled only by the finest efforts of Messrs. Goupil.'-MANCHESTER GUARDIAN.

London: SAMPSON LOW, MARSTON, SEARLE & RIVINGTON, LIMITED,

St. Dunstan's House, Fetter Lane, Fleet Street, E.C.

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THE NATIONAL TEMPERANCE PUBLICATION DEPOT,

33 PATERNOSTER ROW, LONDON, E.C.

The NATIONAL TEMPERANCE LEAGUE'S ANNUAL for 1889. With a Portrait of the late JOHN ANDREW, Esq., and Sketch. Ninth Year.

Edited by ROBERT RAE. Paper cover, 18.; cloth lettered, 18. 6d.

THE CASE

IN THE PRESS.

FOR TOTAL

TOTAL ABSTINENCE.

Being the First of the Joseph Sanders Prize Essays on Total Abstinence.

By W. J. LACEY, Esq.

Crown 8vo. cloth boards, gilt, price 38. 6d.

HANDSOMELIFE-SIZE PORTRAIT OF THE LATE

JOHN B.

GOUGH.

By ARMSTRONG, of Boston.

Executed in the highest style of Lithographic Art. Size 22 by 28, price 6d.; Mounted copies with Facsimile Autograph, price 18.

Early application is requested as the supply is limited.

AVONDALE PRIORY: a Temperance Tale. By Mrs. LUCAS SHAD

WELL. Cloth boards, gilt, 1s. 6d. Illustrated.

A PREY TO THE ENEMY: a Story of To-Day. By Mrs. DUGDALE.

With Three Illustrations. Cloth boards, gilt, 1s. 6d.

SOUTHWOOD; or, Winning Others by the Power of Example.

CATHERINE STURGE. Cloth boards, gilt, 1s. 6d.

THE NATIONAL TEMPERANCE MIRROR :

AN ILLUSTRATED MONTHLY MAGAZINE FOR THE HOME
Price 1d., or free by post for 18. 6d. per Year, payable in advance.
Volume VIII., 1888, is now ready.

CIRCLE.

By

Containing 284 fcp. 4to pages, toned paper, with 24 Illustrations. In ornamental paper boards, 18. 6d.; cloth boards, illustrated, gilt back and side, 28.; ditto, bevelled cloth boards and gilt edges, 28. 6d.

ABBREVIATED OPINIONS OF THE PRESS.

'Really good pictures, stories, pieces suitable for recitations and music mark it as a very store-house for boys and girls who want serviceable material for memory's garden, and for the entertainment of young and old.'

SON OF TEMPERANCE.

"The National Temperance Mirror" makes a good show in its yearly volume. It emphasises the importance of temperance in a hundred different ways, and with much skill.'-BRADFORD OBSERVER.

"The National Temperance Mirror " is a perfect mine of readings and recitations for Band of Hope Meetings, together with material for speeches.'-CHRISTIAN WORLD.

Will prove immensely helpful to temperance advocates.'-THE REFORMER.

To teachers and Band of Hope assistants it presents many useful attractions in the shape of readings, dialogues and recitations.'-FAMILY CHURCHMAN.

ENVELOPE SERIES OF TEMPERANCE TRACTS. For Select

Distribution. By Sir H. THOMPSON, Dr. B. W. RICHARDSON, Ven. Archdeacon FARRAR, Sir WILLIAM GULL, Lady
JOHN MANNERS, Lady JANE ELLICE, &c. Packets, 1 and 2, assorted, 6d. each.

FACT, FUN, AND FICTION.

'STRICTLY CONFIDENTIAL,' and other Original Temperance

Readings in Prose and Verse. With a Portrait of ERASMUS DARWIN, M.D., with a Memoir by JOHN PEARCE. (Being EVANS'S TEMPERANCE ANNUAL for 1889). Thirteenth Season. Illustrated, 6d. ; cloth, 1s.

A New and Complete Catalogue of Temperance Literature, Revised to Date, will be sent free on application to the

NATIONAL TEMPERANCE PUBLICATION DEPOT,

33 Paternoster Row, London, E.C.

SAMPSON LOW, MARSTON & CO.'S

NEW BOOKS OF TRAVEL AND ADVENTURE.

TENT LIFE IN TIGER LAND: being Twelve Years' Sporting Reminis. Į cences of a Pioneer Planter in an Indian Frontier District. By the Hon. JAMES INGLIS Minister for Public Instruction, Sydney, N.S.W. ( MAORI '), Author of 'Our New Zealand Cousins,' &c. 1 vol. royal 8vo. with numerous Coloured Illustrations, cloth, 183. "Tent Life in Tiger Land" is the best book of hunting adventure we have seen for many a long day. Imarine Allan Quatermain in real life, and you have Mr. Inglis. His stories of what he and his friends actually did in the jungles of an Indian frontier district outdo in graphic power and exciting adventure anything that Mr. Rider Haggard has imagined. The book........ will come very near being the favourite gift-book for boys this Christmas.' PALL MALL GAZETTE. 'A very interesting volume. Mr. Inglis, who is very well known under his pseudonym of “Maori," recounts a large number of exciting and often dangerous adventures in search of big game...... Mr. Inglis's book is full of hunting stories, and is altogether one of the most exciting volumes of adventures with wild beasts which have appeared for some time.'-ST. JAMES'S GAZETTE.

THE KINGDOM OF GEORGIA: being Notes of Travel in a Land of Women, Wine, and Song; to which are appended Historical, Literary, and Political Sketches, Specimens of the National Music, and a Compendious Bibliography. By OLIVER WARDROP. With numerous Illustrations and Map, Demy 8vo, cloth, 14a.

NEW ZEALAND OF TO-DAY, 1884 TO 1887. By JOHN BRADSHAW, late Chairman of the Canterbury Farmers' Co-operative Association, Anthor of *Nes Zealand as It Is,' Raphael ben Isaac,' &c. With Maps. Demy 8vo. cloth, 148.

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KAIPARA; or, Experiences of a Settler in North New Zealand. Written and Illustrated by P. W. BARLOW. Crown 8vo. cloth, 68.

'What Mr. Barlow says about sport in Kaipara, New Zealand forests, Kauri gum, and the labouring man settler is altogether to the point and well worth reading. His story of the pious man's cow, with its spirited sketch, and the twe drawings of a county council meeting and a gum digger's holiday are decidedly humorous.'-SATURDAY REVIEW. 'Intending emigrants in particular would do well to take advantage of the experiences recorded in its pages. GLASGOW HERALD.

AROUND THE WORLD ON A BICYCLE. BY THOMAS STEVENS. The SECOND PART, From Persia through China, and Home to San Francisco.' Numerous illustrations, demy 8vo. cloth, 168.

'Mr. Stevens has a ready pen, he writes brightly, and has kept his eyes open, as was indeed essential during his long ride. His book, with its admirable illustrations, is far more entertaining and "informing" than the majority of travellers' tales, and its sketches of the ways and manners of Orientals of many varieties are drawn and coloured with | intelligence.'--MORNING POST.

We have read this volume with keen zest and pleasure. It is deeply interesting, and tells us much about countries little known; much, indeed, that has not been told before. The daring wheeler records his experiences and adventures with such simple, straightforward, aud unaffected manliness, that it is not until the reader stops to think, that he perceives the courage displayed, the extent of the undertaking, and the alarming nature of the dangers encountered." LAND AND WATER.

Part I. San Francisco to Teheran,' can still be obtained, price 16s., with over 100 Illustrations, of which the GUARDIAN says:

We have found Mr. Stevens' adventures very amusing......But it was on his travels through wilder regions that Mr. Stevens encountered the adventures which make his book worth reading.'

THE QUEEN'S HIGHWAY FROM OCEAN TO OCEAN. By STUART CUMBERLAND, F.R.G.S., Author of The Rabbi's Spell' &c. New Edition, with an additional Chapter. Crown 8vo. cloth extra, 7s. 6d.

LORD DUFFERIN, LORD LORNE, LORD LANSDOWNE, LORD WOLSELEY, LORD KNUTSFORD, Mr. GLADSTONE, Mr. JOSEPH CHAMBERLAIN, and other eminent anthorities have read The Queen's Highway' and warmly recommend it as a work of great national importance. The Queen's Highway' is the only work which accurately and fully describes the Dominion of Canada from the Atlantic to the Pacific strand.

ON A SURF-BOUND COAST; or, Cable-laying in the African Tropics. By A. P. CROuch. New Edition. Crown 8vo. cloth, 58.

Mr. Crouch's description of the places he visited and of the machinery and work of cable-laying are of sufficient interest to win his book acceptance among readers who like to get information about strange places and processes in an unconventional form. Mr. Crouch writes fluently, without any special attempt at literary grace of style, but with a slight directness of statement which makes his narrative easy to read.'-SCOTSMAN.

'An unusually gay, pleasant book to read.'-ECONOMIST.

"On a Surf-bound Coast" is a capital book of its kind, and the reader will find on almost every page something to attract and amuse him.'-ELECTRICIAN.

London: SAMPSON LOW, MARSTON, SEARLE & RIVINGTON, LIMITED,

St. Dunstan's House, Fetter Lane, Fleet Street, E.C.

SAMPSON LOW, MARSTON & CO.'S

LIST OF NEW GIFT-BOOKS

BY POPULAR WRITERS, SUITABLE FOR YOUNG PEOPLE.

These Books by Miss Alcott, Mrs. Whitney, and others, are well adapted for Girls, for School Prizes, &c.

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Like the Standard Books for Boys,' the earlier issues of this series created a very popular demand. Their reception has quite justified the high encomiums passed upon them by the Press generally. Altogether this series is one of the best possible selections from the various works of the distinguished Authors. It comprises books which the SATURDAY REVIEW describes as 'perhaps

THE BEST OF THEIR KIND

for the present generation.'

London: SAMPSON LOW, MARSTON, SEARLE & RIVINGTON, LIMITED, St. Dunstan's House, Fetter Lane, Fleet Street, E.C.

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