New Publications of 



TYLSTON & EDWARDS & A. P. MARSDEN. 

 The TRUE STORY of the CHEVALIER D'EON, 



MAN, WOMAN, and DIPLOMATIST. 



His adventures, Experience?, and Metamorphoses at the Courts of 

 Louis XV., Elizabeth of Eussia, arid George III., told- by the aid of State 

 and Secret Papers. By ERNEST A. VIZETELLY. With 16 important 

 Illustrations after Cosway, Angelica Kauffmann, and others. 



500 Copies on Demy 8vo, 15s. net. 

 SPECIAL EDITION of 100 Copies on Large Paper, with Coloured 



Illustrations, 2 2s. net. 



" This is a book to buy. It is good to look at, in large handsome print, with 

 some very adequate and several beautiful illustrations. The student of French 

 history and the student of human nature will each find his account in it. At 

 last Mr. Vizetelly has given us the true D'Eon." Pall Mall Gazette. 



"He (Mr. Vizetelly) has done his deadly work with skill and completeness. 

 His (D'Eon's) life story, too, coloured with incessant intrigue and adventure, is 

 calculated to stimulate the interest which his character arouses." Saturday 

 Review. 



"A very praiseworthy attempt to clear up, once and for all, the mystery that 

 still clings to the name and career of one of the great puzzles of history. . . . 

 Unusually lively reading." The Times. 



" A book to be valued by the bibliophile as well as the scholar." Notes and 

 Queries. 



THE POCKET COUNTY COMPANION, 



In 41 Volumes. Compiled by ROBERT DODWELL. 



Being a Biographical, Historical, and Topographical account, alpha- 

 betically arranged, of the whole of the Counties of England and Wales. 

 A concentration of much that has been previously published, with the 

 addition of private documents, memoirs, monumental inscriptions, 

 family anecdotes, pedigrees, &c. Each volume sold separately, con- 

 taining a Map reduced from the Ordnance Survey. 



In cloth covers, 24mo, 2s. a vol. 



The first two volumes, HAMPSHIRE and LANCASHIRE, now ready, 

 and will be followed by BERKSHIRE and DERBYSHIRE in March, and 

 NORFOLK in May. 



DEVON and 



Tylston & Edwards & A. P. Marsden, 



13, CLIFFORD'S INN, LONDON, E.G. 



TJnrivalled Food for Goldfish and Birds. 



" I beg to say that your Ant Eggs may be used for insectivorous birds just as you send 

 them out. All my soft-billed birds, Nightingales, Willow-wrens, Chiff-chaff*, &c., take 

 them freely, without any preparation, and thrive on them from the nest onwards. I 

 have given them to a Starling and a Bullfinch, with great advantage to the birds. 



"Pekin and Blue Robins, Nonpareils, and Indigo Birds prefer them slightly 

 moistened. In my opinion there is nothing approaching your Ant Eggs in the market. 

 They are simply invaluable to bird-keepers; and, with their aid, the most delicate soft- 

 billed bird can be reared from the nest and preserved in health for a period much 

 exceeding the life of such birds in their wild state. W. T. GREENE, F.Z.S. 



Author of ' Feathered Friends,' &c." 



" I have used your Preserved Ant Fggs for some length of time for Thrushes, Larks, 

 and Lesser- Whitethroat with best results. For Goldfish I find no other food to equal 

 your Ant Eggs. C. H. SWEET (Cage Bird Judge)." 



Willington, Durham. So i d on i y in Eegistered Packages. 



Tins la. (3 Tins 2s. 6d.), and Packets 3d. of Agents, or POST FEEE from Sole 

 Proprietor: E. ROMANS, Llanelly, South Wales. (Refuse Substitutes.) 



