English Cathedrals Illustrated Second and Revised Edition

Part 24

Chapter 241,812 wordsPublic domain

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By MARY SPENCER-WARREN.

The Princess of Wales: A Biographical Sketch.

With Portraits of the Princess at various periods, and Illustrations from Photographs taken in Denmark, and at Sandringham, Marlborough House, &c. With 53 Portraits and Illustrations. Crown 8vo, cloth extra, 5s.

“An excellent biography ... narrated with admirable simplicity and lucidity.”—_Westminster Review._

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By H. W. WEGUELIN, F.R.H.S.

Carnations and Picotees for Garden and Exhibition.

With a Chapter concerning Pinks. Crown 8vo.

* * * * *

By F. WILKINSON, F.G.S.

The Story of the Cotton Plant.

With 38 Illustrations. Cloth, 1s.

“All that is known of the origin of the cotton plant, of its cultivation and plantation life, of the pests that infest it, and the countries where it is reared.... The survey is wide and complete, and the story evolved therefrom is throughout most interesting.”—_North British Advertiser._

THE LIBRARY OF USEFUL STORIES.

PRICE ONE SHILLING EACH.

=The Story of Life’s Mechanism.= By H. W. CONN. With 50 Illustrations.

=The Story of the Wanderings of Atoms.= By M. M. PATTISON MUIR, M.A.

=The Story of Ice in the Present and Past.= By W. A. BREND. With 37 Illustrations.

=The Story of Eclipses.= By G. F. CHAMBERS, F.R.A.S. With 19 Illustrations.

=The Story of the British Race.= By JOHN MUNRO. With 4 Maps.

=The Story of the Mind.= By Prof. J. M. BALDWIN.

=The Story of Geographical Discovery: How the World Became Known.= By JOSEPH JACOBS. With 24 Maps, &c.

=The Story of the Cotton Plant.= By F. WILKINSON, F.G.S. With 38 Illustrations.

=The Story of Religions.= By the Rev. E. D. PRICE, F.G.S.

=The Story of Photography.= By A. T. STORY. With 38 Illustrations.

=The Story of Life in the Seas.= By SYDNEY J. HICKSON, F.R.S. With 42 Illustrations.

=The Story of the British Coinage.= By G. B. RAWLINGS. With 108 Illustrations.

=The Story of the Potter.= By C. F. BINNS. With 57 Illustrations of Ancient and Modern Pottery.

=The Story of Germ Life: Bacteria.= By H. W. CONN. With 34 Illustrations.

=The Story of the Earth’s Atmosphere.= By DOUGLAS ARCHIBALD. With 44 Illustrations.

=The Story of the Weather.= By G. F. CHAMBERS, F.R.A.S. With 50 Illustrations.

=The Story of Forest and Stream.= By JAMES RODWAY, F.L.S. With 27 Illustrations.

=The Story of the Chemical Elements.= By M. M. PATTISON MUIR, M.A.

=The Story of Extinct Civilizations of the East.= By R. E. ANDERSON, M.A. With Maps.

=The Story of Electricity.= By J. MUNRO. With 100 Illustrations.

=The Story of a Piece of Coal.= By E. A. MARTIN, F.G.S. With 38 Illustrations.

=The Story of the Solar System.= By G. F. CHAMBERS, F.R.A.S. With 28 Illustrations.

=The Story of the Earth in Past Ages.= By H. G. SEELEY, F.R.S. With 40 Illustrations.

=The Story of the Plants.= By GRANT ALLEN. With 49 Illustrations.

=The Story of Primitive Man.= By EDWARD CLODD. With 88 Illustrations.

=The Story of the Stars.= By G. F. CHAMBERS, F.R.A.S. With 24 Illustrations.

⁂ _Other Volumes in the Press._

THE SIXPENNY SERIES OF COPYRIGHT BOOKS.

By RUDYARD KIPLING.

=Departmental Ditties=, and other Verses.

BY H. RIDER HAGGARD.

=She.= A History of Adventure.

=Jess.= A Story of the Transvaal.

By Mrs. HUMPHRY WARD.

Robert Elsmere.

The History of David Grieve.

By A. CONAN DOYLE.

Adventures of Sherlock Holmes.

Memoirs of Sherlock Holmes.

The Sign of Four.

The Exploits of Brigadier Gerard.

By BEATRICE HARRADEN.

Ships that Pass in the Night.

By MAXWELL GRAY.

The Silence of Dean Maitland.

By GEORGE MEREDITH.

The Ordeal of Richard Feverel.

With an Introduction by CHAUNCEY M. DEPEW.

=A Yankee Boy’s Success.= Being an Account of how an American Lad worked his way through Europe. By H. S. MORRISON. With Seven Illustrations.

By the Late W. E. GLADSTONE.

=The Impregnable Rock of Holy Scripture.= A Series of Old Testament Studies.

ADOPTED BY THE SCHOOL BOARD FOR LONDON

=Tit-Bits Copy Books.= In Fifteen Books, containing 24 pages. Price 2d. each.

A New Series of Copy Books designed to produce a clear, bold, and rapid writing. There are no flourishes or fanciful peculiarities. The style is simple, uniform, and entirely without exaggerations. The slope is 15° from the vertical. There are at least two headlines on every page, so that the risk of the scholar copying his own writings is reduced to a minimum.

Great care has been taken in the preparation and arrangement of the headlines. In the earlier books the elements and combinations of letters have been carefully graded. In the higher books the headlines are “Tit-Bits” from the Code Subjects: Interesting Facts; Memorable Dates; Useful Information. The interest in what is being copied will thus be kept alive, and the style of writing will consequently be improved.

=The Golden Rule Readers: Manners and Morals.=

Illustrating and enforcing by means of Proverbs, Maxims, Stories, Examples and Poems, the necessity for habits of punctuality, of good manners and language, the importance of cheerful obedience to duty, of consideration and respect for others, and of honour and truthfulness in word and act, the relation of conduct, thrift, temperance, &c., to success in life.

In Two Books for Standards III. to VI. Book I., 1s. 3d. Book II., 1s. 6d.

=Flashlights on Nature.= By GRANT ALLEN. With 150 Illustrations by FREDERICK ENOCK. Crown 8vo, cloth extra, 6s.

=England’s History, as Pictured by Famous Painters.= Edited by A. G. TEMPLE, F.S.A. Oblong 4to, cloth extra, gilt leaves, 10s. 6d.

=Round the World, from London Bridge to Charing Cross, via Yokohama and Chicago.= Oblong 4to, cloth extra, gilt leaves, 10s. 6d.

=Round the Coast.= Oblong 4to, cloth extra, gilt leaves, 10s. 6d.

=Round London.= Oblong 4to, cloth extra, gilt leaves, 10s. 6d.

=All About Animals.= 260 Illustrations from Photographs by GAMBIER BOLTON, F.Z.S., and others, with explanatory letterpress. Cloth extra, gilt leaves, 10s. 6d.

THE STRAND MAGAZINE.

Announcements for 1900.

TWO GREAT HUMORISTS!

If you want to LAUGH as well as to be interested and instructed read the STRAND MAGAZINE during 1900.

_Several important arrangements have been made for the coming year, especially in the Department of Fiction._

=MR. W. W. JACOBS=, whose “Master of Craft” has provided so much genuine amusement, will follow up his serial with a series of short stories written in his most entertaining style. We are happy to be able to state that we have acquired the entire serial rights in all the fiction which Mr. Jacobs may produce during the next three years.

=MR. F. ANSTEY=, the well-known author of “Vice-Versâ,” &c., will commence in the January Number a Serial entitled “A Brass Bottle”—a story of the most delightful and fantastic humour.

=MR. H. G. WELLS= has written one of his most characteristic serial stories under the title of “The First Men in the Moon.” The wonderful machine which carried the voyagers to the moon, together with description of the planet and its inhabitants, form one of the most absorbing stories which its ingenious writer has produced.

=DR. CONAN DOYLE= will also appear as a humorist. He has written for the January Number a “Last Adventure of Brigadier Gerard,” in which the Brigadier appears, in a vastly entertaining manner, in the character of a fox-hunter.

Numerous Articles of the greatest interest have been specially arranged for.

A Field to Itself.

No Fiction but True Personal Narratives.

Photos of the Characters.

Unique Articles.

Strange Phases of Life

In all parts of the World.

Astounding Photographs.

Thrilling Adventures.

Has Friends in Every Clime.

You must see a Copy.

Government Officials, Missionaries and Traders, Naval and Military Officers, Travellers on Business and Pleasure, All Contribute.

Narratives and Photos.

Many Magazines But Only One WIDE WORLD.

Published on the 22nd of each month.

6d. Price Sixpence. 6d.

The peculiar and absolutely distinctive character of “=The Wide World Magazine=” is well known to hundreds of thousands on both sides of the Atlantic.

No monthly magazine ever bounded into widespread popularity—and _such_ popularity!—in anything approaching the time. This is the best test of excellence in these discriminating and fastidious days.

You are requested to examine a copy and then compare “=The Wide World=” with all other magazines published in point of SHEER HUMAN INTEREST.

“=The Wide World=” shows you that “Truth is Stranger than Fiction.”

You don’t read Magazines?

Then you are certain to like “=The Wide World=.”

The Only Magazine of its kind in the world. More fascinating than a novel.

More informing than a Text-book.

Remember the 22nd of the Month.

6d. THE WIDE WORLD MAGAZINE. 6d.

“THE KING.”

In news photographs, =THE KING= will be found ahead of its contemporaries. Nothing of importance will happen during the week which will not be fully and strikingly illustrated in its pages—often many days in advance of other sixpenny weeklies. In war, its photographers and correspondents will always be found at the front, and no expense will be spared by =THE KING= to provide its readers with the earliest obtainable photographs of the actual fighting—not fancy drawings, but real photographs.

Not a man or a woman will spring into note who will not be pictured and written about in =THE KING=. It will be live, interesting matter, full of anecdote, crisp and newsy, specially prepared by gossipy and able writers. The pages of personal gossip in =THE KING= will, in short, be a complete guide to men and women of note throughout the year, not only fascinating but reliable, and the attractive way in which the matter is being prepared will appeal to everybody on account of its novelty.

One of the great features of =THE KING= will be a striking department called “The King’s Jester,” in which will be found funny drawings on all sorts of funny subjects by the funniest artists of the day. In it the best work of English, American, and Continental draughtsmen will be represented, at an expense never before undergone by any illustrated paper. Yet “The King’s Jester” is but one department of many in this enterprising paper. It is a “Punch” or a “Pick-Me-Up” thrown in gratis for the amusement of our readers.

In fact, =THE KING= will be found a paper of to-day for the people of to-day. Photographs of current events, smartly published while people are talking of them—photos, and gossip about people in the public eye—stories and articles on new and interesting subjects—and pictures that people want to look at crowded between its two covers. It is the most remarkable sixpenny weekly ever offered to the public, and no money will be spared in the attempt to make it the most graphic, briefest, and most attractive compendium of the world’s doings, week by week.

“THE KING” Will be Published on or about Nov. 23, by GEORGE NEWNES LTD., 7-12 Southampton Street, Strand, W.C., London.