A BOOK ABOUT EVERYTHING, FOR EVERYBODY 



easily accessible. For the first time in the history of this work, thousands of 

 short articles, which give the seeker for information exactly what he wants with- 

 out loss of time, have been included under separate headings. These shorter 

 articles have been written with the same care and with the same fidelity 

 that mark the extended treatment of major subjects which has always given 

 the Encyclopaedia Britannica a reputation for thoroughness and interesting 

 fullness of treatment. The result is an unparalleled union of efficiency for 

 quick and convenient consultation and readableness. 



A feature unique in a work of general reference, and of prime 

 importance to anyone seeking information, is the Index 

 (Vol. 29). This volume contains an analytical alphabetical 

 list of 500,000 references and a classified table of contents, 

 of the 44,000,000 words of text. By referring to this Index, 

 any desired information, the answer to any reasonable 

 question may now be found instantly. The inquirer need 

 never' be at a loss where to find what he wants. To an encyclopaedia an index 

 is as necessary as a directory for the finding of addresses in a large city, yet 

 the Encyclopaedia Britannica is the only work of general reference which is 

 indexed. In other encyclopaedias much information not entered under its 

 own heading and the number of headings is necessarily limited is hope- 

 lessly buried without a clue to aid in. its. discovery. 



Great as had been tne reputation of the Encyclopaedia 

 Britannica as a book of learning, the new Eleventh Edition 

 has achieved the added distinction of being the most practical 

 work of general reference. The common objects and inter- 

 ests of everyday life, the various occupations of men and 

 women, our food and drink, the clothes we wear and all that 

 enters into their making, from raw material to the finished 

 product, our sports and games, from marbles to aviation, the house and all 

 it contains, furniture, carpets, pictures, porcelain, glassware, etc., the garden 

 and its management; in short, everything that can yield the answer to a 

 question or afford practical guidance is in this work. It is typical of the 

 book that the manager of a great tile and pottery factory writes on ceramics, 

 a practising magician of international fame on conjuring, a dog expert on 

 dogs, a golf champion on golf, and a book-binder on book-binding, to cite 

 only a few examples among thousands. 



In the new Encyclopaedia Britannica the owner of the Britannica Year-Book 

 will have a work for useful service in home or office, and for delightful recre- 

 ation, which will prove invaluable with continued possession; he will have, in 

 fact, at his immediate command, the best of all human knowledge to-day on 

 every subject that can fairly be the source of curiosity, require explanation 

 or fall within the scope of efforts at intellectual self-improvement. 



"The greatest and most modern of all instruments of general knowledge." 

 T. P.'s Weekly, London. 



