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The Library contains 90,000 Volumes of Ancient and Modern Literature, in various Languages. Subscription, £3 a year, or £2 with Entrance-fee of £6; Life Membership, £26. Fifteen Volumes are allowed to Country and Ten to Town Members. Reading-rooms open from Ten to Half-past Six. Catalogue, new edition, 1875 (1,062 pp.), price 16s.; to Members, 128. Supplement (1875-80) 5s.; to members, 4s. Prospectuses on application.

EXPE

ROBERT HARRISON, Secretary and Librarian.

XPERIENCE accumulated since the time of Benjamin Franklin, proves conclusively that a Conductor made of Copper, of adequate size, is the best of all appliances for the protection of every description of Building from the destructive effects of Lightning.

NEWALL & CO.'S

PATENT COPPE RLIGHTNING CONDUCTOR,

As applied to all kinds of Buildings and Shipping in all parts of the world with unvarying success, is the most reliable, most effective, and cheapest Conductor offered to the public.

SOLE PATENTEES OF UNTWISTED WIRE ROPE.

MANUFACTURERS OF

Iron and Steel Wire Ropes for Colliery and Railway Purposes, Rigging
Ropes, &c.; Gilt and Silver Picture Wire, for Picture Hanging;
Copper, Steel, and Iron Cords, for Sash and Clock Lines;
Fencing Strand, &c.

R. S. NEWALL & CO., 130 Strand, W.C. 36 Waterloo Road, Liverpool; 68 Anderston Quay, Glasgow. MANUFACTORY-Gateshead-on-Tyne

Now ready, Vols. I. and II., imperial 8vo. cloth, 25s. each; or half-morocco, 31s. 6d. each.

THE

IMPERIAL DICTIONARY

OF THE

ENGLISH LANGUAGE.

A Complete Encyclopædic Lexicon, Literary, Scientific, and Technological. By JOHN OGILVIE, LL.D.

THIS

NEW EDITION, CAREFULLY REVISED AND GREATLY AUGMENTED.

Edited by CHARLES ANNANDALE, M.A.

Illustrated by above Three Thousand Engravings printed in the Text.

new Edition will contain about 130,000 words or about 30,000 more than the former edition, 12,000 more than any English dictionary hitherto published, and double those in the latest edition of Dr. Johnson's great work. As a LITERARY DICTIONARY the Imperial Dictionary defines the various meanings attached to words by writers both new and old; explains idiomatic phrases and peculiar constructions; distinguishes obsolete from current meanings and usages, and carefully discriminates between words closely synonymous in signification; while it is enriched with many thousands of illustrative quotations. As a SCIENTIFIC AND TECHNOLOGICAL DICTIONARY it explains a vast number of terms belonging to all branches of science and the arts, many of them of recent introduction, and its Encyclopaedic character enables it to treat these with a fulness similar to that of an Encyclopædia, and to convey an amount of information regarding an infinite variety of topics not usually found in dictionaries. The accurate illustrative engravings, which are intended to supplement the verbal definitions, communicate explanation through the eye in a manner as clear and distinct as it is attractive. The Etymology in this new Edition has been altogether remodelled and brought up to the present state of knowledge on the subject, and the Pronunciation has been inserted throughout.

From the SPECTATOR.

'There are many reasons why this remarkable book should receive at a reviewer's hands a very different fate from that which usually befals new editions. For one thing, a new edition which takes ten years to prepare, the bulk of the articles in which have been completely rewritten, which contains 30,000 words more than its predecessor, and is so far different from it that the treatment of the important subject of etymology is practically revolutionised, must be considered as in effect a new work...... It is only the first volume that is yet before us, but after a careful comparison of it with the original edition, and after testing it in the light of the claims set forth in the Preface, we have no hesitation in saying that it will prove a most thorough piece of workmanship, and that among reference books of its class it will hold the first place, both as an authority and a source of instruction and entertainment.'

From the PALL MALL GAZETTE.

"The etymologies have been rewritten in the light of the most recent researches, and may be accepted as, on the whole, accurate throughout; they are, as a rule, clear and laudably concise. The definitions are specially full, and serve all the purposes of a condensed cyclopædia. Special pains have evidently been taken with this most important part of an English dictionary. We have tested the vocabulary in all directions, and have found nothing of importance wanting. The terms introduced by recent science, and which are so frequently introduced into every-day literature, all are there, so far as we have tested, and their definitions are admirably clear and accurate...... The illustrations, carefully and accurately executed, are a most important help to the understanding of the definitions and descriptions.'

* The Work will be completed in Four Volumes, imperial 8vo. cloth, at 25s. each; or bound in half-morocco, at 31s. 6d. each. Volumes I., and II. are now ready. Vol. III. will be published on July 1st, and Vol. III. on November 1st.

Fully detailed Prospectus, with Specimen Pages, may be had from the principal Booksellers, or will be sent, post free, by the Publishers on application.

London: BLACKIE & SON, 49 & 50 Old Bailey.

NEW EDITION, revised. 8vo. half-bound, 18s.

THE ANNALS OF OUR TIME:

A DIURNAL OF EVENTS, SOCIAL AND POLITICAL, HOME AND FOREIGN, From the Accession of Victoria, June 30, 1837, to the Peace at Versailles, Feb. 28, 1871.

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BY JOSEPH IRVING.

SUPPLEMENT from Feb. 1871 to March 1874. 8vo. 4s. 6d.
SUPPLEMENT from March 1874 to July 1878. 8vo. 4s. 6d.

From the TIMES.'

We have before us a trusty and ready guide to the events of the past thirty years, available equally for the statesman, the politician, the public writer, and the general reader. If Mr. Irving's object has been to bring before the reader all the most noteworthy occurrences which have happened since the beginning of Her Majesty's reign, he may justly claim the credit of having done so most briefly, succinctly, and simply, and in such a manner, too, as to furnish him with the details necessary in each case to comprehend the event of which he is in search of in an intelligent manner. Reflection will serve to show the great value of such a work as this to the journalist and statesman, and indeed to everyone who feels an interest in the progress of the age; and we may add that its value is considerably increased by the addition of that most important of all appendices, an accurate and exhaustive index.'

From the PALL MALL GAZETTE.

A very curious and valuable note-book of events that have happened during the present reign. . . . It is impossible to estimate the labour involved in such a work; but whatever it may have been, Mr. Irving will be rewarded by the gratitude of all persons concerned in the study or discussion of public affairs. His book might be described as the contents of the memory of the best-informed persons of fifty years old and upwards, classified, amplified, and completed. We take leave of Mr. Irving's book with a cordial recommendation.'

From the 'DAILY NEWS.'

It appears to us to be admirably executed-full, yet condensed, clearly arranged, and provided with an ample index. Such a work will be a treasure to all journalists and politicians.'

By the Author of 'The Statesman's Year Book."

THE HISTORY OF LLOYD'S, and of Marine With an Appendix containing Statistics relating to

Insurance in Great Britain.

Marine Insurance. 8vo. 14s.

'A careful and interesting book, which at this moment is very opportune.'-SPECTATOR. 'A thoroughly good work.'-WESTMINSTER REVIEW.

We can safely commend his work as a very able and very interesting history,'

MACMILLAN & CO., London, W.C.

ACADEMY.

Now Publishing, in crown 8vo. price 38. 6d. each.

THE ENGLISH CITIZEN:

A Series of Short Books on his Rights and Responsibilities:

This Series is intended to meet the demand for accessible information on the ordinary conditions, and the current terms, of our political life. Ignorance of these not only takes from the study of history the interest which comes from a contact with practical politics, but, still worse, it unfits men for their place as intelligent citizens. The Series will deal with the details of the machinery whereby our Constitution works, and the broad lines upon which it has been constructed.

The following Volumes are ready :

Central Government. H. D. TRAILL, D.C.L., late Fellow of St. John's College, Oxford.

The Electorate and the Legislature. SPENCER WALPOLE, Author of The History of England from 1815,'

The National Income, Expenditure, and Debt. The Taxpayer and the Ratepayer. A. J. WILSON.

The Poor Law, Rev. T. W. FOWLE.

The State and the Church. By the Hon A. D. ELLIOT, M.P.

In preparation,

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Foreign Relations. By SPENCER WALPOLE, Author of The History of England from 1815.' [In the press.

Local Government. By M. D. CHALMERS.

Justice and Police. By C. P. ILBERT, late Fellow of Balliol College.

The State and Education. By HENRY CRAIK.

The State in Relation to Trade. By T. H. FARRER.

The State in Relation to Labour:
F.R.S.

By W. STANLEY JEVONS, LL.D., [In the press.

The State and the Land. By F. POLLOCK, late Fellow of

Trinity College, Cambridge.

India. By J. S. COTTON, late Fellow of Queen's College, Oxford.

Colonies and Dependencies. By E. J. PAYNE, Fellow of
University College, Oxford.

MACMILLAN & CO., London, W.C.

MESSRS. MACMILLAN & CO.'S PUBLICATIONS.

BY THE RIGHT HON, HENRY FAWCETT, M.P.
A MANUAL of POLITICAL ECONOMY.
Fifth Edition, with New Chapters on the Depreciation of Silver.'
Crown 8vo. 12s.

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SPEECHES on SOME CURRENT POLITI-
CAL QUESTIONS. 8vo. 10s. 6d.

The ECONOMIC POSITION of the BRITISH
LABOURER. Crown 8vo. 58.

INDIAN FINANCE: Three Essays, with
Introduction and Appendix. 8vo. 78. 6d.

FREE TRADE and PROTECTION: an In-
quiry into the Causes which have retarded the general adoption
of Free Trade since its introduction into England. Fourth
and Cheaper Edition. Crown 8vo. 3s. 6d.

'Mr. Fawcett brings to the task not merely the trained skill of an accomplished expert, but an acquaintance with practical politics in which few economists have rivalled him, and a judicial candour in which he has been surpassed by none.'

SPECTATOR

No greater service can be rendered to the cause of Free Trade than a clear explanation of the principles on which Free Trade rests. Professor Fawcett has done this in the volume before us with all his habitual clearness of thought and expression.

BY MRS. FAWCETT.

ECONOMIST.

POLITICAL ECONOMY for BEGINNERS.

New Edition. 18mo. 2s. 6d.

TALES in POLITICAL ECONOMY. Crown

8vo. 38.

ESSAYS on POLITICAL and SOCIAL SUBJECTS. By the Right Hon. HENRY FAWCETT, M.P., and Mrs. FAWCETT. 8vo. 10s. 6d.

BY PROFESSOR CAIRNES.

POLITICAL ESSAYS. 8vo. 10s. 6d.

The CHARACTER and LOGICAL METHOD of POLITICAL ECONOMY. New Edition. 8vo. 7s. 6d.

BY PROFESSOR WALKER.

The WAGES QUESTION: a Treatise on Wages and the Wages Class. 8vo. 148.

MONEY. 8vo. 16s.

MONEY in its RELATIONS to TRADE and INDUSTRY. Crown 8vo. 78. 6d.

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